rEvolutionist wrote:I think he would be in favour of peaceful dialogue based around shared concerns and common understandings.klr wrote:Why do you even need to wonder?rEvolutionist wrote:I wonder what Seth thinks the US should do?

rEvolutionist wrote:I think he would be in favour of peaceful dialogue based around shared concerns and common understandings.klr wrote:Why do you even need to wonder?rEvolutionist wrote:I wonder what Seth thinks the US should do?
Airbursts give a lot less fallout, for sure. But not necessarily negligible, in this world of radiation fright.Gawdzilla Sama wrote:Both bombs were air bursts. The shock wave wouldn't have been as effective it if was a ground burst. And there was the issue that the impact might have occurred before the detonation, making for an embarrassing moment as the US asked for its bomb back so they could have a do-over.FBM wrote:If the nuke detonates above-ground, like with Nagasaki (and I think Hiroshima), the fallout is minimal. Maybe even negligible. The problem with fallout comes when the nuke detonates on or near the ground, lifting up massive quantities of irradiated material into the atmosphere. I seriously doubt NK has the refined tech to detonate their nukes above-ground, so fallout would most likely be a big issue for SK and Japan.
But the SK/USFK response wouldn't be so crude. Fallout would be minimal and the least of the worries, I think.
Probably they haven't. Especially, if by "weaponizing" you mean something that can be launched on a rocket. But siomething that could be carried in an airplane and dropped, or just exploded, mid-air. Above SeoulFBM wrote:NK just recently got a barely functional satellite into orbit. Not sure if they've even been able to weaponize their nukes yet.
Sounds like marxism to me.rEvolutionist wrote:I think he would be in favour of peaceful dialogue based around shared concerns and common understandings.klr wrote:Why do you even need to wonder?rEvolutionist wrote:I wonder what Seth thinks the US should do?
Who are you and what have you done with the real CES? I blame parenthood.Coito ergo sum wrote:That is what I think the North Koreans are looking for. Peaceful dialogue and shared concerns. They're not looking to get what they want. They're just looking to be heard and understood.
That's how Obama should commence negotiations with Kim Jong Un: "Un -- I hear you. And your concerns are valid. Tell me more about how South Korea makes you feel..."
SK/USFK monitor all air traffic and have hundreds of fighter jets positioned along the DMZ and around Seoul ready to scramble at a moment's notice, 24/7/365. There's no chance of any NK plane getting anywhere close to Seoul.MiM wrote:Probably they haven't. Especially, if by "weaponizing" you mean something that can be launched on a rocket. But siomething that could be carried in an airplane and dropped, or just exploded, mid-air. Above SeoulFBM wrote:NK just recently got a barely functional satellite into orbit. Not sure if they've even been able to weaponize their nukes yet.![]()
Now you're talking...Or maybe: Smuggle it to a third country. Put it aboard a ship destined for some major US port, and explode it there.
rEvolutionist wrote:I think he would be in favour of peaceful dialogue based around shared concerns and common understandings.klr wrote:Why do you even need to wonder?rEvolutionist wrote:I wonder what Seth thinks the US should do?
If the U.S. were smart, we would immediately react by destroying all North Korean nuclear facilities, with conventional weapons where possible and nuclear weapons where necessary, and using at least one nuke if South Korea wanted it. By avoiding unnecessary civilian casualties, this would avoid ceding the moral high ground to North Korea, while eliminating any further nuclear threat from North Korea and sending a message that we take nuclear proliferation seriously.rEvolutionist wrote:What would happen if say NK launched a small nuke at some smaller town of Sth Korea? Would the US immediately react by nuking pong nang?
I sometimes wonder if the South Koreans don't prefer for the North Koreans to have nukes, since that would mean that Korea would have nukes in the event of reunification. I hope that the U.S. is discouraging this by offering to withdraw all our military and leaving South Korea on its own if it gets nukes.FBM wrote:By the way, there has been scuttlebutt here lately about SK acquiring their own nukes, independent of the US. Just mentioning that to suggest the way the local sentiment is leaning.
This would be a better solution.FBM wrote:Also some news stories about SK asking the US to re-deploy nukes to the peninsula.
"Talk"? Japan's military budget is 97% of Germany's, and half that of China. They aren't the ultrapacifistic culture they pretend to be.FBM wrote:Oh...the new PM, Abe...very right-wing nationalistic. There's been talk recently of Japan re-arming itself.klr wrote:Japan? Good grief. If the Japanese of all people are really inclined to think that way, I'd be very, very worried.
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