Gawdzilla wrote:Deep Sea Isopod wrote:Gawdzilla wrote:
AWWW! Cute Husky!!

Gawdzilla wrote:Deep Sea Isopod wrote:Gawdzilla wrote:
AWWW! Cute Husky!!
The Endangered Wolf Center has the world's largest population of Mexican Grey Wolves. (33 at last count) So anything grey and doggie is "close enough".Deep Sea Isopod wrote:Gawdzilla wrote:Deep Sea Isopod wrote:Gawdzilla wrote:
AWWW! Cute Husky!!
If they have the materials then the rest of it is easy, a boosted fission device with a 50-100kt yield is pretty straightforward from an engineering perspective, a proper 2 stage device would take a bit more work, and probably some testing.Ian wrote:Unless the North has made some major leap in technologyfrom the puny bomb they built a couple years ago, you might not even see it that far away.FBM wrote: I'm about 85~90km away from Seoul, which would most likely be ground zero. Not sure if I could get a decent shot of the mushroom cloud from here. Maybe if I go up to the roof...
Don't Panic wrote:If they have the materials then the rest of it is easy, a boosted fission device with a 50-100kt yield is pretty straightforward from an engineering perspective, a proper 2 stage device would take a bit more work, and probably some testing.Ian wrote:Unless the North has made some major leap in technologyfrom the puny bomb they built a couple years ago, you might not even see it that far away.FBM wrote: I'm about 85~90km away from Seoul, which would most likely be ground zero. Not sure if I could get a decent shot of the mushroom cloud from here. Maybe if I go up to the roof...
How does the world being "scared he's going to" advantage him?Robert_S wrote:I can't imagine he doesn't already know it. He doesn't want to do it, he just wants the rest of the world to be scared he's going to.Gawdzilla wrote:You can't hide tube artillery from "the eyes in the sky". He'll learn this.
Perhaps that's because there is no wisdom in it.The Mad Hatter wrote:lol.
Clearly you don't see the wisdom in using fear against an enemy you can't beat by force of arms.
Maybe "Scared he might" would have been a better way of putting it. But the thing is, if those shells hit Seoul, then there will be massive fucking loss of life. Could the US and/or the South reliably take out all that firepower before hell rains down on a mass of civilians?Toontown wrote:How does the world being "scared he's going to" advantage him?Robert_S wrote:I can't imagine he doesn't already know it. He doesn't want to do it, he just wants the rest of the world to be scared he's going to.Gawdzilla wrote:You can't hide tube artillery from "the eyes in the sky". He'll learn this.
If I'm seriously "scared he's going to", I'm likely to pre-empt the chuckie doll. It is always good to be the first one to know when a fight is starting. And invariably bad to be the second one to know.
It's called 'bluffing'. Sometimes the bluff isn't called, in which case it's a successful strategy.Toontown wrote:Perhaps that's because there is no wisdom in it.The Mad Hatter wrote:lol.
Clearly you don't see the wisdom in using fear against an enemy you can't beat by force of arms.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-10914191North Korea has fired shells into the Yellow Sea near its border with the South, South Korean sources say.
A battery reportedly opened fire around 1730 local time (0830 GMT), directing shells into its own waters.
The firing came just after the end of South Korean-US naval exercises which had provoked warnings of retaliation from the North.
Tension between the two states rose this year after one of the South's warships was sunk.
The South accuses the North of sinking the Cheonan in March with the loss of 46 sailors.
Earlier, the UN reported that the North had agreed to a new meeting on the sinking of the ship.
Colonels are due to meet at the Panmunjom truce village, which straddles the two states' border, on Tuesday.
It will be the fourth round of such talks.
It is not the first time that North Korea has tested its artillery in this way, having sent a similar number of shells into the same waters in January, the BBC's John Sudworth reports from Seoul.
At the time, South Korea and the US reacted angrily.
There is unlikely to be any great alarm from the South Korean public, although perhaps some concern that the displays of military might could lead to a further, dangerous escalation, our correspondent adds.
'Boat seized'
The shelling appears to have begun about half an hour after the naval exercises ended.
"All we know is that North Korea fired artillery rounds into its sea off the west coast, but we have no more details as of now," Lt Cdr Yu Jae-il of the South's joint chiefs of command told Reuters news agency by phone from Seoul.
About 100 shells were apparently fired, falling harmlessly into the sea.
On Sunday, the South accused the North of detaining one of its fishing boats, the Daeseung.
The ship had stopped sending signals after a fishing trip to the Sea of Japan, known in Korea as the East Sea, on Saturday.
South Korea's coastguard said they had learnt that the ship was being investigated by North Korean officials.
They called for a "swift resolution to the matter", and safe return of the vessel and its crew.
Armchair analysis: The timing, 1/2 hour after the exercises ended, was probably designed to make sure the South knew the North could listen in on their radio communications, at the least, and raise the question of whether or not the North still has spies in the upper echelons of the SK military (a couple were recently out-ed).RuleBritannia wrote:North Korea 'fires artillery into Yellow Sea'http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-10914191North Korea has fired shells into the Yellow Sea near its border with the South, South Korean sources say.
A battery reportedly opened fire around 1730 local time (0830 GMT), directing shells into its own waters.
The firing came just after the end of South Korean-US naval exercises which had provoked warnings of retaliation from the North.
Tension between the two states rose this year after one of the South's warships was sunk.
The South accuses the North of sinking the Cheonan in March with the loss of 46 sailors.
Earlier, the UN reported that the North had agreed to a new meeting on the sinking of the ship.
Colonels are due to meet at the Panmunjom truce village, which straddles the two states' border, on Tuesday.
It will be the fourth round of such talks.
It is not the first time that North Korea has tested its artillery in this way, having sent a similar number of shells into the same waters in January, the BBC's John Sudworth reports from Seoul.
At the time, South Korea and the US reacted angrily.
There is unlikely to be any great alarm from the South Korean public, although perhaps some concern that the displays of military might could lead to a further, dangerous escalation, our correspondent adds.
'Boat seized'
The shelling appears to have begun about half an hour after the naval exercises ended.
"All we know is that North Korea fired artillery rounds into its sea off the west coast, but we have no more details as of now," Lt Cdr Yu Jae-il of the South's joint chiefs of command told Reuters news agency by phone from Seoul.
About 100 shells were apparently fired, falling harmlessly into the sea.
On Sunday, the South accused the North of detaining one of its fishing boats, the Daeseung.
The ship had stopped sending signals after a fishing trip to the Sea of Japan, known in Korea as the East Sea, on Saturday.
South Korea's coastguard said they had learnt that the ship was being investigated by North Korean officials.
They called for a "swift resolution to the matter", and safe return of the vessel and its crew.
[img]http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/4 ... _2.gif/img]
Any serious resistance expected?Ian wrote:The real show is on the horizon. The Dear Leader has really been hyping up his third son, Kim Jong-Un, to be his heir apparent. That's when there will be a real geopolitical earthquake. My guess is that China is waiting for KJI to croak so they can finally move in and overhaul Pyongyang before yet another generation of Kims is firmly in place. China's sick of being the default patron to one of the most dysfunctional and volatile counties on earth.
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