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Congratulations North Korea now officially SAFE from USA

obama.bin.laden

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Officially a member of nuclear club now. USA can forget about bullying North Korea from now on. Just like Pakistan & India, the North Koreans are now officially SAFE from the USA claws.
:biggrin:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090525...zZWMDeW5fdG9wX3N0b3J5BHNsawNub3J0aGtvcmVhZGU-


North Korea declares it conducted nuclear test
AP



A man reads a newspaper reporting about North Korea's nuclear test in Seoul, AP – A man reads a newspaper reporting about North Korea's nuclear test in Seoul, South Korea, Monday, May …
By JEAN H. LEE, Associated Press Writer Jean H. Lee, Associated Press Writer – 1 hr 13 mins ago

SEOUL, South Korea – North Korea claimed it carried out a powerful underground nuclear test Monday — much larger than one conducted in 2006 — a major provocation in the escalating international standoff over its rogue nuclear and missile programs.

The regime "successfully conducted one more underground nuclear test on May 25 as part of measures to bolster its nuclear deterrent for self-defense," the country's official Korean Central News Agency said.

Russia's Defense Ministry confirmed an atomic explosion at 9:54 a.m. (0054 GMT) in northeastern North Korea, estimating the blast's yield at 10 to 20 kilotons — comparable to the bombs that flattened Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Hours later, the regime test-fired three short-range, ground-to-air missiles, the Yonhap news agency reported, citing unnamed sources. U.N. Security Council resolutions bar North Korea from engaging in any ballistic missile-related activity.

President Barack Obama called the moves "blatant defiance" of the Security Council and a violation of international law that would only further isolate North Korea.

North Korea's claims "are a matter of grave concern to all nations," he said, calling for international action in a statement from Washington. "North Korea's attempts to develop nuclear weapons, as well as its ballistic missile program, constitute a threat to international peace and security."

The U.N. chief said Monday that if North Korea's claim can be confirmed, its announcement of a second nuclear test would represent "a clear violation" of a United Nations Security Council resolution.

"I sincerely hope that the Security Council will take necessary corresponding measures," U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told The Associated Press, declining to specify what further moves, or sanctions, he would urge the 15 council members to take.

The council scheduled emergency consultations on North Korea's actions for Monday afternoon.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown condemned the test as "erroneous, misguided and a danger to the world."

Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso said the Security Council will meet at 4:30 p.m. Monday in New York (2030 GMT).

"North Korea's nuclear test poses a grave challenge to nuclear nonproliferation and clearly violates U.N. Security Council resolutions," he said in Tokyo. "We are not tolerating this at all."

Even China, North Korea's traditional ally, issued rare criticism of Pyongyang, with the Foreign Ministry saying in a statement posted on its Web site that Beijing was "resolutely opposed" to the test.

Russia said the test violated a U.N. Security Council resolution that requires North Korea to refrain from nuclear tests. Moscow's Foreign Ministry called the test "a serious blow to international efforts" to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons.

North Korea's bold defiance raises the stakes in the standoff over its nuclear program. In the past two months, Pyongyang has launched a rocket despite international calls for restraint; abandoned international nuclear negotiations; restarted its nuclear plants; and warned it would carry out the atomic test as well as long-range missile tests.

The rise in tensions comes amid questions about who will succeed impoverished North Korea's authoritarian leader, 67-year-old Kim Jong Il, who is believed to have suffered a stroke last August. North Korea also has custody of two American journalists — accused of entering the country illegally and engaging in "hostile acts" — who are set to stand trial in Pyongyang on June 4.

"This is a political act more than a military act," said Jim Walsh, an international security expert at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Walsh said domestic factors related to North Korea's political transition were likely the main factor.

Monday's atomic test was conducted about 50 miles (80 kilometers) northwest of the northern city of Kilju, Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Alexander Drobyshevsky said, speaking on state-run Rossiya television.

Kilju, in the northeastern province of North Hamgyong, is where North Korea conducted its first nuclear test in October 2006 in a surprise move that also angered China and drew wide-ranging sanctions from the Security Council.

An emergency siren sounded in the Chinese border city of Yanji, 130 miles (200 kilometers) to the northwest. A receptionist at Yanji's International Hotel said she and several hotel guests felt the ground tremble.

North Korea boasted that Monday's test was conducted "on a new higher level in terms of its explosive power and technology of its control" than in 2006.

Pyongyang is believed to have enough weaponized plutonium for at least a half-dozen atomic bombs. However, experts say scientists have not yet mastered the miniaturization needed to mount a nuclear device onto a long-range missile.

Ten to 20 kilotons would be far more than North Korea managed in 2006. U.S. intelligence officials said the 2006 test measured less than a kiloton; 1 kiloton is equal to the force produced by 1,000 tons of TNT. However, Russia estimated the force of the 2006 blast at 5 to 15 kilotons, far higher than other estimates at the time.

Radiation levels in Russia's Primorye region, which shares a short border with North Korea, were normal Monday several hours after the blast, the state meteorological office said.

A 4.7-magnitude earthquake was registered in northeastern North Korea at 9:54 a.m. (0054 GMT), the U.S. Geological Survey said.

In Vladivostok, a city of 500,000 people about 85 miles (140 kilometers) from the Russian-North Korean border, translator Alexei Sergeyev said he wasn't concerned about the test and doesn't fear North Korea.

"Their nuclear program does not have military aims — their only aim is to frighten the U.S. and receive more humanitarian aid as a result," said Sergeyev.

The reported test-firing of short-range missiles took place at the Musudan-ri launchpad on North Korea's northeast coast, some 30 miles (50 kilometers) from the nuclear test site, Yonhap said. Unnamed sources described it as a ground-to-air missile with a range of 80 miles (130 kilometers).

Japan's coast guard said Friday that North Korea warned ships to avoid waters off the coast near the launch site, suggesting Pyongyang was preparing for a missile test. Yonhap also reported brisk activity along the northeast coast last week.

South Korean troops were on high alert but there was no sign North Korean soldiers were massing along the heavily fortified border dividing the two nations, according to an official at the Joint Chiefs of Staff headquarters in Seoul. He spoke on condition of anonymity, citing agency policy.

The two Koreas technically remain at war because their three-year conflict ended in a truce, not a peace treaty, in 1953.

Tensions have been high since conservative President Lee Myung-bak took office in Seoul in February 2008 saying Pyongyang must fulfill its promises to dismantle its nuclear program before it can expect aid.

South Koreans, meanwhile, were grappling with the suicide two days earlier of Lee's liberal predecessor, Roh Moo-hyun, whose death elicited condolences from Kim Jong Il. Kim held a 2007 summit in Pyongyang with Roh, who championed reconciliation with North Korea.

North Korea had agreed in February 2007 to a six-nation pact to begin disabling its main nuclear reactor in exchange for 1 million tons of fuel oil and other concessions. But Pyongyang abruptly halted the process last summer over a dispute with Washington over how to verify its 18,000-page list of past atomic activities.

Talks hosted by Beijing in December failed to resolve the impasse, and North Korea abandoned the six-nation negotiations last month in anger over the U.N. condemnation of its rocket launch.

North Korea claims it launched the rocket to send a satellite into space; South Korea, Japan and other nations saw it as a way to test the technology used to launch an intercontinental ballistic missile, one capable of reaching the U.S.

___

Associated Press writers Kelly Olsen and Jae-soon Chang in Seoul, Pamela Hess in Washington, Steve Gutterman in Moscow, Shino Yuasa in Tokyo, Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations and John Heilprin in Copenhagen contributed to this report.
 

PAP_Junta

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largeimage.da3c02ede2e3482f9f1a24fc9a9f4f03.south_korea_koreas_nuclear_ljm115.jpg

A man reads a newspaper reporting about North Korea's nuclear test in Seoul, AP
Defying world powers, N. Korea conducts nuke test
AP – 21 mins ago

SEOUL, South Korea – North Korea defied world powers and carried out an underground test Monday of a nuclear bomb Russian officials said was comparable to those that obliterated Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The incident drew condemnation from Washington to Beijing and set the communist regime up for a showdown with the United Nations. Full Story»
 

kingrant

Alfrescian
Loyal
I don't know why the U.S. don't go and bomb the bloody Kim bastard. He is more dangerous than Ahmadinejad. That shows the hypocrisy of the Americans. One rogue doesnt have oil, the other has. One is hated by his people, the other loved.
 

obama.bin.laden

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Loyal
I don't know why the U.S. don't go and bomb the bloody Kim bastard. He is more dangerous than Ahmadinejad. That shows the hypocrisy of the Americans. One rogue doesnt have oil, the other has. One is hated by his people, the other loved.

US have BIG MOUTH and tiny guts as always.

Look at Bush the fucktard!

Koreans learned very smart. They know USA inside out already.

USA can not afford the lives and money in any war further. North Koreans can afford to die 1 or 2 million people. US will shrink back when only 1000 GIs died. When only Obama & his soldiers willing to die by hundred thousand and find the funds to spend in wars like the days of Vietnam, then they are qualified to play against North Korea.

The game is very simple, and failing to understand it just fits the category of STUPIDITY.

People MUST DIE, countries MUST BE ABLE TO AFFORD that, trillions must be spent, if you want to push the world around and tell others what to do. Talks and negotiations are too cheap and meaningless. Have the nuke and missiles then test them and show that there is big bang, and prove that you are ready to see death tolls on both sides.

That is the simplest deal since the beginning of history. And I fuck Noble Peace Price once and for all!
 

obama.bin.laden

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Loyal
That's it! The deal must be RAW! The way to go! Bravo!

This is the way Saddam should had done, and if he did today Iraq will be still a STABLE & STRONG & FREE country, Saddam paid for his mistake by complying to USA. He never made nuke and Bill Clinton + Bush kept insisting and lied about these. Saddam stop making all WMD & let UN checked. His death and destruction of Iraq proved how wrong was he.

Nuke & WMD is the RIGHT & ONLY WAY!

They are Essential to Peace and Stability of a country. Koreans are now safe, both North & South. Because USA can no longer use South Koreans like they did West Germany & South Vietnam & particularly Kuwait & Iran against Iraq. These sucker countries are used and exploited and then betrayed. Now South Koreans are free and safe from the Americans to be used like Iranians against Iraq in Iran-Iraq wars, like Kuwait in Gulf Wars, so on.

Bravo!

Keeping the USA at bay means true peace!

videolthumb.70c1762fae66bca9e3e999d75e77f31d.jpg


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090526...zZWMDeW5fdG9wX3N0b3J5BHNsawNyZXBvcnRub3J0aGs-


Report: North Korea test-fires 2 more missiles


By HYUNG-JIN KIM, Associated Press Writer Hyung-jin Kim, Associated Press Writer – 1 hr 43 mins ago

SEOUL, South Korea – North Korea reportedly tested two more short-range missiles Tuesday, a day after detonating a nuclear bomb underground, pushing the regime further into a confrontation with world powers despite the threat of U.N. action.

Two missiles — one ground-to-air, the other ground-to-ship — with a range of about 80 miles (130 kilometers) were test-fired from an east coast launchpad, South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported, citing an unidentified government official.

Pyongyang also warned ships to stay away from waters off its western coast this week, a sign it may be gearing up for more missile tests, South Korea's coast guard said.

North Korea is "trying to test whether they can intimidate the international community" with its nuclear and missile activity, said Susan Rice, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.

"But we are united, North Korea is isolated and pressure on North Korea will increase," Rice said. On Monday, President Barack Obama assailed Pyongyang, accusing it of engaging in "reckless" actions that have endangered the region, and the North accused Washington of hostility.

Wall Street was lower in early trading as North Korea's actions kept investors on edge.

North Korea appeared to be displaying its might following its underground atomic test that the U.N. Security Council condemned as a "clear violation" of a 2006 resolution banning the regime from developing its nuclear program.

France called for new sanctions, while the U.S. and Japan pushed for strong action against North Korea for testing a bomb that Russian officials said was comparable in power to those dropped on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in World War II.

China said it "resolutely opposed" North Korea's test and urged Pyongyang to return to talks on ending its atomic programs.

Russia, once a key backer of North Korea, condemned the test. Moscow's U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin, the current Security Council president, said the 15-member council would begin work "quickly" on a new resolution.

But many questioned whether new punishment would have any effect on a nation already penalized by numerous sanctions and clearly dismissive of the Security Council's jurisdiction.

"I agree that the North Koreans are recalcitrant and very difficult to hold to any agreement that they sign up to," Britain's ambassador to the U.N., John Sawers, told the British Broadcasting Corp. "But there is a limited range of options here."

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said he felt "frustrated by the lack of progress in the denuclearization process" and said North Korea's only viable option was to return to the six-party talks on disarmament, and continue exchanges and cooperation with South Korea.

Ban, on a visit to Finland, declined to comment on possible further sanctions.

"I leave it to the Security Council members what measures they should take," said Ban, a South Korean who once participated in international negotiations aimed at dismantling North Korea's nuclear program.

South Korea said it would join a maritime web of more than 90 nations that intercept ships suspected of spreading weapons of mass destruction — a move North Korea warned would constitute an act of war.

North Korea's nuclear test raises worries that it could act as a facilitator of the atomic ambitions of other nations and potentially even terrorists.

Its test of a long-range missile in July 2006 and its first nuclear test in October 2006 drew stiff sanctions from the Security Council and orders to refrain from engaging in ballistic missile-related activity and to stop developing its nuclear program.

South Korean spy chief Won Sei-hoon had told lawmakers earlier Tuesday that a missile test was likely, according to the office of Park Young-sun, a legislator who attended the closed briefing.

Yonhap reported that North Korea was preparing to launch a third missile from a west coast site, again citing an unidentified official. It also reported that three missile tests were conducted Monday.

North Korea had threatened in recent weeks to carry out a nuclear test and fire long-range missiles unless the Security Council apologized for condemning Pyongyang's April 5 launch of a rocket the U.S., Japan and other nations called a test of its long-range missile technology. The North has said it put a satellite into orbit as part of its peaceful space development program.

Monday's nuclear test appeared to catch the world by surprise, but Won told lawmakers that Beijing and Washington knew Pyongyang was planning a test some 20-25 minutes before it was carried out, said Choi Kyu-ha, an aide to lawmaker Park.

Won said Pyongyang warned it would test the bomb unless the head of the Security Council offered an immediate apology. Russia said the test went off at 9:54 a.m. local time (0054 GMT Monday, 8:54 p.m. EDT Sunday). Won confirmed that two short-range missile tests from an east coast launch pad followed.

North Korea's neighbors and their allies scrambled to galvanize support for strong, united response to Pyongyang's nuclear belligerence.

Obama and South Korean President Lee Myung-bak "agreed that the test was a reckless violation of international law that compels action in response," the White House said in a statement after the leaders spoke by telephone. They also vowed to "seek and support a strong United Nations Security Council resolution with concrete measures to curtail North Korea's nuclear and missile activities."

Obama also spoke with Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso, the White House said, with the leaders agreeing to step up coordination with South Korea, China and Russia. Obama reiterated the U.S. commitment to defend both South Korea and Japan, U.S. and South Korean officials said.

North Korea responded by accusing the U.S. of hostility, and said its army and people were ready to defeat any American invasion.

"The current U.S. administration is following in the footsteps of the previous Bush administration's reckless policy of militarily stifling North Korea," the North's main Rodong Sinmun newspaper said in commentary carried by the country's official Korean Central News Agency.

In Japan, the lower house of parliament quickly passed an unanimous resolution condemning the test and demanding that North Korea give up its nuclear program, a house spokeswoman said.

"This reckless act, along with the previous missile launch, threatened peace and stability in the region, including Japan," the resolution said.

"North Korea's repeated nuclear tests posed a grave challenge to international nuclear nonproliferation," it said. "Japan, the only nation to suffer atomic attacks, cannot tolerate this." Japan is considering tightening sanctions against North Korea, the statement said.

Russia called the test a "serious blow" to efforts to stop the spread of nuclear weapons and suspended a Russia-North Korean intergovernmental trade and economic commission, apparently in response to the test. The slap on the wrist was a telling indication that Moscow, once a key backer of North Korea, was unhappy with Pyongyang.

Seoul reacted to the nuclear test by signing on to the U.S.-led Proliferation Security Initiative, joining 94 nations seeking to intercept ships suspected of carrying nuclear, chemical and biological weapons, materials to make them, or missiles to deliver them.

North Korea for years has warned the South against joining the blockade. The Rodong Sinmun last week said South Korea's participation would be "nothing but a gambit to conceal their belligerence and justify a new northward invasion scheme."

Joining the PSI would end in Seoul's "self-destruction" it said.

In Beijing, the defense chiefs of South Korea and China held a security meeting Tuesday, and they were expected to discuss ways to respond to the nuclear test, Yonhap quoted a South Korean official as saying.

___

Associated Press writers Kwang-tae Kim and Jean H. Lee in Seoul, Shino Yuasa in Tokyo, Matti Huuhtanen in Helsinki, Finland, and Mike Eckel in Moscow contributed to this report.
 

Lentor

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I don't know why the U.S. don't go and bomb the bloody Kim bastard. He is more dangerous than Ahmadinejad. That shows the hypocrisy of the Americans. One rogue doesnt have oil, the other has. One is hated by his people, the other loved.

that's easy, crazy kim did not go and poke uncle sam ass yet.
not like those pighead terrorist go and crash 2 planes into twin towers and got themselves IRAQ and AFGHAN flattened out.

look at the bigger picture, those crazy islamic pigheads terrorists are more of a threat to uncle sam compared to siao lang kim.
 

tun_dr_m

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Loyal
that's easy, crazy kim did not go and poke uncle sam ass yet.
not like those pighead terrorist go and crash 2 planes into twin towers and got themselves IRAQ and AFGHAN flattened out.

look at the bigger picture, those crazy islamic pigheads terrorists are more of a threat to uncle sam compared to siao lang kim.

To put it clearer this way more bluntly, the standing status of USA is not any better than UK when it just got completely won out by World War 2, just before the entire empire collapsed and all the colonies started to get independent, followed by poor British losing their jobs and savings and gone poorer and poorer, big businesses failing one by one, and then domestic rebels such as Irish Republican Army started to bomb London and everywhere else. This is what the ex-US-empire is currently getting into, it will be quite similar to the collapse of British Empire.

Clear?
 

KuanTi01

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Frankly, I don't understand what the fuss is all about. North Korea has the sovereign right to arm itself with nuclear missiles, considering that it is "surrounded" by hostile neighbours esp. japan who used to be the cruel colonial masters.Save for China and perhaps Russia, the other nations hope to see North Korea implode and disintegrate. In fact the more nuclear missiles that North Korea has the merrier! Who gives the USA the divine right to limit nuclear proliferation when it is itself the largest stockpilist? What a laugh?
A third world war is inevitable!:mad:
 

sand_ban

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Loyal
Frankly, I don't understand what the fuss is all about. North Korea has the sovereign right to arm itself with nuclear missiles, considering that it is "surrounded" by hostile neighbours esp. japan who used to be the cruel colonial masters.Save for China and perhaps Russia, the other nations hope to see North Korea implode and disintegrate. In fact the more nuclear missiles that North Korea has the merrier! Who gives the USA the divine right to limit nuclear proliferation when it is itself the largest stockpilist? What a laugh?
A third world war is inevitable!:mad:

Yes you said it!

North Korea Iran Iraq etc had been used by the USA by dehumanizing & daemonizing them, and then using them to frighten many other coward countries such as Singapore into compliance and obedience, seeking so called protection from the USA.

We are not so foolish, and Washington can go fuck spider!
 

matamafia

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Loyal
It is obvious that North Koreans are pissed by the suicide of their old friend Roh. In these days North & South were close and cooperative. Now this foolish Lee M B from Daewoo ex-CEO eats Ang Moh's shit and hostile their own brother in the north. He imported USA beef and other products face his own farmers and peasants' protests. He foolishly follow Obama & Bush, that's why Korean economy is so broke and collapsing towards bankruptcy.

All the other Asian idiots initially assumed Korean economy will be good under the ex-CEO of MNC Daewoo. It all turned up to be the worst of all, even military dictator presidents & pro-north democrat like late Roh had made economies better than this Lee B M stupid bastard.

FUCK SPIDER!

North Korean is right to do missile tests and nuclear blasting. The are GOOD! They can even do satellite now. Way better than Singapore.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/2009052...Ec2VjA3luX3RvcF9zdG9yeQRzbGsDbmtvcmVhZmlyZXNh


NKorea fires another missile: Yonhap
AFP


NKorea fires another missile: Yonhap AFP/KCNA via KNS/File – An undated photo released from the Korean Central News Agency in January 2009 shows the firing drill …
Tue May 26, 6:55 pm ET

SEOUL (AFP) – North Korea has fired off another missile, the latest in a series since its nuclear test two days ago, South Korea's Yonhap news agency said Wednesday.

The North fired a short-range missile into the Sea of Japan (East Sea) overnight, it quoted a Seoul government source as saying.

"Intelligence authorities are now closely monitoring the situation," the source said.

The communist state fired three short-range ground-to-air missiles from locations near its east coast on Monday, the same day it conducted an underground nuclear test that shocked the world.

It launched two more off its east coast on Tuesday, Yonhap news agency reported. South Korea's military says it does not comment on intelligence matters.

The missiles fired Monday and Tuesday were said to have a range of 130 kilometres (80 miles).

Several times in recent years, the North has test-fired short-range missiles in either the Yellow Sea or the Sea of Japan. The exercises are often staged to coincide with periods of regional tension.
 

Ah Guan

Alfrescian
Loyal
North Korean is right to do missile tests and nuclear blasting

A dictatorship country with succession problem, that now has nuclear launch capability --- I don't see anything "right" about this scenario.

I really don't want to see Kim's sissy successor nuke US because of a shock American Idol result.

And do you know what happened to nuclear warheads after the USSR dissolved? The HK triads bought them from Red Army generals and then sold them to Al Qaeda.

You sense of "right" and "wrong" puzzles me yet again.
 
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