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Serious HUAT AH! after a month Kim Jong Nuke finally Implemented by WW3 Nuke Plans

war is best form of peace

Alfrescian
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HUAT AH! after a month Kim Jong Nuke finally Implemented my WW3 Nuke Plans



Seemingly the West are now Panic that about 50 of Kim Jong Nuke's submarines now become INVISIBLE to Western Satellites. I had proposed a month ago approx, that NK subs must go crouching at coast of USA & allies cities, to launch SLBM nukes at point blank distance. Now Kim Jong Nuke adopted my combat strategy it seems. Major Show-Hand style the West are unable to counter.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4408290/Is-Kim-Jong-planning-use-subs-nuclear-attack.html

Is Kim Jong-un planning to use submarines to launch nuclear attack? How 50 North Korean subs 'went missing' sparking panic in Seoul and Tokyo


Fears Kim Jong-un is adapting fleet of subs so they can launch nuclear missiles
It comes two years after 50 North Korean submarines 'went off the radar'
Pyongyang is marking biggest national day called 'Day of the Sun' on Saturday

By Julian Robinson for MailOnline

Published: 10:51 BST, 13 April 2017 | Updated: 11:57 BST, 13 April 2017

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Kim Jong-un is increasing his underwater military capabilities and may even have plans in place to launch nuclear missiles from a submarine, it has been claimed.

There are fears the North Korean dictator is adapting his fleet of subs so they can fire warheads amid heightened tensions with the West.

It comes two years after 50 vessels, which account for 70 per cent of Pyongyang's submarines, disappeared off radar sparking panic in South Korea and Japan in the wake of a tense stand-off with South Korea.
Kim Jong-un (pictured in 2014) is increasing his underwater military capabilities and may even have plans in place to launch nuclear missiles from a submarine, it has been claimed

Kim Jong-un (pictured in 2014) is increasing his underwater military capabilities and may even have plans in place to launch nuclear missiles from a submarine, it has been claimed
There are fears the North Korean dictator is adapting his fleet of subs so they can fire warheads amid heightened tensions with the West

There are fears the North Korean dictator is adapting his fleet of subs so they can fire warheads amid heightened tensions with the West
It comes two years after 50 vessels, which account for 70 per cent of Pyongyang's submarines, disappeared off radar sparking panic in South Korea and Japan in the wake of a tense stand-off with South Korea

It comes two years after 50 vessels, which account for 70 per cent of Pyongyang's submarines, disappeared off radar sparking panic in South Korea and Japan in the wake of a tense stand-off with South Korea

According to the Daily Express, Security expert Bruce Klingner told CNBC: 'We didn't know where they were at the time. One would hope that we would keep very close tabs on those that could launch the submarine-launched ballistic missiles [SLBMs].

'All of that is very worrisome because that may very well have a nuclear weapon someday.'

The subs disappeared from the radar following a military stand-off with the South.

At the time, the South Korean news agency Yonhap yesterday quoted a military official as saying the development was 'ominous' having earlier vowed to 'mobilise all our surveillance resources' to find the vessels.
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Although security chiefs in Seoul later said it had noted the 're-appearance' of a large part of the submarine fleet, the statement suggested that some were still missing four days after they disappeared.

In December, terrifying satellite images emerged sparking fears that North Korea could be on the verge of strikes from a nuclear submarine.

The images, taken from above North Korea’s Sinpo South Shipyard, prompted suggestions that the weapon was preparing to go to sea.

Camouflage netting had been removed and supplies and equipment next to the vessel suggested it could be set to launch.

Expert Joseph Bermudez, from website 38 North, warned at the time: 'These two factors suggest that both craft may have recently been at sea or are preparing to go to sea in the near future.'
US military officials fear North Korea has placed a nuclear test in a tunnel with the potential to detonate it on Saturday. Pictured: North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (left) flanked by vice-chairman of the State Affairs Commission Choe Yong-Hae at an opening ceremony for 'Rymoyong street', a new housing development in Pyongyang today

US military officials fear North Korea has placed a nuclear test in a tunnel with the potential to detonate it on Saturday. Pictured: North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (left) flanked by vice-chairman of the State Affairs Commission Choe Yong-Hae at an opening ceremony for 'Rymoyong street', a new housing development in Pyongyang today
North Korea has launched several missile tests this year, the latest on April 5 when it fired a ballistic missile into the sea off its east coast. It conducted its fifth nuclear test on September 9, 2016 (file picture)

North Korea has launched several missile tests this year, the latest on April 5 when it fired a ballistic missile into the sea off its east coast. It conducted its fifth nuclear test on September 9, 2016 (file picture)

He said that although the secretive state's intentions are unclear, the images suggest that North Korea is now capable of deploying missiles larger than a KN-11 submarine-launched ballistic missile which was tested in August.

It is believed that dictator Kim Jong-un’s nuclear submarine system is inspired by the Golf-class submarines used by the Soviet Union before the fall of the Iron Curtain.

This morning, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said he feared Kim Jong-un 'has a capability' to fire missiles tipped with sarin - the same deadly gas used to kill 87 Syrian civilians in a horrifying gas attack last week.

That atrocity prompted the US to launch a surprise wave of missiles on one of dictator Bashar al-Assad's airbases.

Abe told a parliamentary session: 'There is a possibility that North Korea already has a capability to deliver missiles with sarin as warheads.'

Tensions on the Korean peninsula have escalated over Pyongyang's continued nuclear and missile testing programme, with the United States warning it could take unilateral action and sending a navy carrier group to near the Korean peninsula in a show of force aimed at deterring more tests.

North Korea marks the 105th anniversary of the birth of state founder Kim Il Sung on Saturday, North Korea's biggest national day called 'Day of the Sun'.

Leaders have in the past used the date to carry out weapons tests.

North Korea has launched several missile tests this year, the latest on April 5 when it fired a ballistic missile into the sea off its east coast. It conducted its fifth nuclear test on September 9, 2016.


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war is best form of peace

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https://www.rt.com/news/388373-pyongyang-nuclear-capable-missile/


N. Korea claims latest missile test ‘successful & proves its capability to carry nuclear warheads’

Published time: 14 May, 2017 22:17
Edited time: 15 May, 2017 02:09
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People watch a news report on North Korea firing a ballistic missile, at a railway station in Seoul, South Korea, May 14, 2017 © Kim Do-hoon / Reuters
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Pyongyang has claimed that its medium-range ballistic missile test carried out on Sunday under the supervision of Kim Jong-un has confirmed the “tactical specifications and technical characteristics” of the rocket which North Korea says is capable of carrying nuclear warheads.

North Korea has succeeded in launching its new surface-to-surface missile on May 14, Pyongyang’s official Central News Agency announced.
Read more
FILE PHOTO © KCNA Pyongyang’s ‘unidentified missile’ flies 700km, lands in Sea of Japan

“The test fire was conducted with maximum angle of the projectile’s elevation in consideration of the safety of neighboring countries, with the aim of confirming the tactical specifications and technical characteristics of the new long-range strategic ballistic rockets capable of loading powerful heavy-weight nuclear warheads,” KCNA announced.

According to Pyongyang, the launch has enabled testing in “actual flight conditions” the missile’s “stabilization, structural, pressurization and launch systems,” as well as “reliability of the rocket’s engine” and its integrity “in the harsh reentry environment.”

“The launched rocket flew up to the maximum peak altitude of 2,111.5 kilometers along the scheduled flight orbit and precisely hit the target waters 787-kilometers away,” the communications ministry’s announcement read. The country's leader, Kim Jong-un, led the launch of a new type of rocket, the report noted.

More analysis is needed to verify North Korea's claim that it had successfully test-launched a ballistic missile, South Korea's military said following KCNA's announcement.

South Korea’s military also said earlier that the N. Korean projectile flew around 700 km before falling into the Sea of Japan. However, despite the North claiming it to be a long-range missile, the US military’s Pacific Command, which tracked and analyzed the launch earlier, said it was unlikely that the the fired projectile was an intercontinental missile.

“The type of missile is being assessed and the flight was not consistent with an intercontinental ballistic missile,” Pacific Command's spokesman said.

READ MORE: North Korean rocket flew away from Russia, was no threat – Russian Defense Ministry

The Russian Defense Ministry said the missile flew for 23 minutes before dropping in international waters in the central part of the Sea of Japan. While the projectile landed some 500 kilometers from the Russian coast, the missile test posed no threat to Russia, the military noted.

Kim Jong-un is in 'state of paranoia', US will continue ‘tightening screws’ on N. Korea - UN envoy Haley https://t.co/aLsJeunUzVpic.twitter.com/BZ8CCYB4Xe
— RT (@RT_com) May 14, 2017

After the White House said that North Korea has been a “flagrant menace for far too long,” US ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, said Washington will not negotiate with Pyongyang unless it stops its hostile actions.

“Having a missile test is not the way to sit down with the president because he's absolutely not going to do it,” Haley told ABC's ‘This Week’ when asked about conditions for President Donald Trump's meeting with the North's leader. “I can tell you, he can sit there and say all the conditions he wants. Until he meets our conditions, we're not sitting down with him.”

Late last month, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said the Trump administration is open to direct talks with North Korea as long as the agenda is right. On Saturday, Choi Sun-hee, the North Korean diplomat who manages relations with the US, also hinted that Kim Jong-un might negotiate with Trump's team, “if the conditions are set.”

The latest missile test coincides with rising tensions in the region and a massive American military buildup there. In an attempt to deter Pyongyang from more nuclear and missile tests, the US has sent a group of American warships, led by an aircraft carrier, to the region. It has also been conducting war games with their regional allies. Last month, Washington also positioned elements of the THAAD anti-missile system on the Peninsula.
 
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