Serious My Ass! Why should Stupid XiJinPing help Enemy US to Restrain Kim Jong Nuke?

nkfnkfnkf

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When bankrupt bagger coward USA is sending Navy Carrier etc to invade and provoke war with Beijing, why should Beijing be helping USA to restrain their own loyal brother NK Kim Jong Nuke, who declared war against USA?

XiJinPing's head must be examined seriously, if he helped again to restrain NK for USA. Suppressing a loyal brotherly ally who had for 3 generations (since grandpa Kim Il Song - papa Kim Jong Il until fatty grandson Kim Jong Nuke) fought the same evil enemy with China side by side, and XiJinPing forgot all the history?! The exact reversed should had been done, that he should past all the phased out old stock DF-21D carrier killer nuke to Kim Jong Nuke. XijinPing got new DF-26 superior ICBM to replace DF-21D. Back NK to overrun entire South Korea, sink every US ships around Japan.

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Solve all the problems at once. Reunification of Taiwan & Koreas.

http://www.todayonline.com/world/latest-north-korea-test-us-again-seeks-elusive-chinese-help


With latest North Korea test, U.S. again seeks elusive Chinese help

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Published: 6:10 AM, September 10, 2016

WASHINGTON - North Korea's fifth nuclear test, its fourth on U.S. President Barack Obama's watch, leaves Washington yet again hoping that Beijing will crack down on Pyongyang.

Given China's longstanding fear of a North Korean collapse that could send thousands of refugees across their 870-mile (1,400 km) border, North Korea analysts said significantly tougher Chinese economic sanctions on North Korea are highly unlikely.

They said the best hope is that China might better enforce or tighten U.N. sanctions by eliminating a loophole that allows Chinese imports of North Korean coal, cutting the remittances of North Korean workers or limiting the work of Chinese factories that process North Korean textiles.

Mark Fitzpatrick, executive director of the IISS-Americas think tank, said it was worth seeing if China might increase pressure on the North in return for the United States and South Korea halting plans to deploy the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) anti-missile defense system designed to protect against North Korea's missile and nuclear threats.

China has said the THAAD system would destabilize the regional security balance without achieving anything to end North Korea's nuclear program.

"We can’t assume that China is going to solve this for us," Fitzpatrick said. "If there was a prospect of a tradeoff I think China would consider it," Fitzpatrick said, referring to introducing THAAD as a bargaining chip.

North Korea conducted its fifth and biggest nuclear test on Friday and said it had mastered the ability to mount a warhead on a ballistic missile, ratcheting up a threat that rivals and the United Nations have been powerless to contain.

Under 32-year-old third-generation leader Kim Jong Un, North Korea has sped up development of its nuclear and missile programs, despite U.N. sanctions that were tightened in March and have further isolated the impoverished country.

There is little scientific evidence to verify that North Korea has perfected the science of creating a nuclear bomb small enough to fit on a ballistic missile, let alone to withstand the physics of atmospheric re-entry.

But analysts said it may be getting closer and its testing of ballistic missiles, including those designed to launch from submarines, accentuates the threat it poses to U.S. allies South Korea and Japan and ultimately the United States itself.

SANCTION LOOPHOLES

U.N. Security Council Resolution 2270, which was passed in March after the North's fourth nuclear test, provided a loophole allowing imports of North Korean coal if such transactions are solely for the North's "livelihood" and will not yield revenue for its nuclear, ballistic missile or other restricted programs.

Mira Rapp-Hooper of the Center for a New American Security think tank said the international community could crack down by limiting Chinese processing of North Korean textiles and by restricting the earnings that North Koreans abroad send home, perhaps by curtailing the number of visas given to such workers.

"I think the fifth test will be an occasion where we can close some of the loopholes of the previous sanctions," said Robert Manning, a fellow at the Atlantic Council's Brent Scowcroft Center on International Security.

He noted that 90 percent of North Korea's trade is with China.

President Barack Obama in March signed into law sweeping new "secondary sanctions" allowing the United States to go after foreign firms that do business with North Korea by effectively barring them from the global financial system, analysts said it was unclear if he would do so before his term ends in January. REUTERS

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like evil US Ass and the good jolly leonGSam, chinks sometimes also need to pretend pretend
to show the world they dislike mass killing in any form. :mad::mad:
 
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XiJinPing better realize that Kim Jong Nuke is the newly reincarnated Chairman Mao! He is the communist world big boss. Better work together and fight together. Finish the Ang Mohs ASAP!
 
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http://www.straitstimes.com/asia/ea...ar-threat-growing-after-largest-test-analysts

North Korea's nuclear threat growing after largest test: Analysts
South Korean activists shout slogans as they hold up banners during a rally held to protest against North Korea's fifth Nuclear test on Sept 10, 2016.
South Korean activists shout slogans as they hold up banners during a rally held to protest against North Korea's fifth Nuclear test on Sept 10, 2016.PHOTO: EPA
Published
1 hour ago

SEOUL (AFP) - North Korea's nuclear threat has grown significantly following its latest and largest nuclear test and a series of missile launches, analysts say, with some South Korean newspapers even theorising about an atomic attack on Seoul.

The South Korean capital stayed calm Saturday (Sept 10), with residents immune to near-daily threats from their neighbour, but newspapers and analysts saw Friday's test as a game-changer.

With a force of 10 kilotons, the blast was two-thirds the size of the atomic bomb that destroyed Hiroshima in August 1945. It took place just eight months after the previous detonation.

More importantly, the North claimed it had successfully tested a nuclear warhead that could be mounted on a missile.

The nuclear programme has been accompanied by a series of ballistic missile launches, including from a submarine.

Given that Friday's test was the most powerful in terms of yield and that the time lapse from the previous test was shortened, "the North's nuclear capability is believed to have been sophisticated to a considerable degree and being developed at an increasingly faster pace," South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung Se told senior ministry officials.

The world must now "cautiously accept the reality" that the North could launch a nuclear attack by missile, said analyst Jeung Young Tae of the Korea Institute for National Unification (KINU), although the range of such a nuclear-tipped missile remained unclear.

The North's announcement of its test indicated they had tested the bomb that would arm their missile units, said Jeffrey Lewis, director of the East Asia Nonproliferation Program at Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey.

"And that's a big deal," he wrote in an article entitled "North Korea's nuke program is way more sophisticated than you think", for the website of Foreign Policy magazine.

"In the past, we've treated North Korean nuclear tests as temper tantrums or political demonstrations."

The North is believed to have succeeded in making nuclear warheads small enough to arm Scud missiles to hit South Korea or Rodong middle-range missiles to attack Japan, Professor Yang Moo Jin of the University of North Korean Studies told AFP.

"But it has not yet completed the re-entry technology needed to develop an ICBM (inter-continental ballistic missile) that could hit Hawaii or the United States mainland," Yang said.

Given the enormous prestige and resources devoted to the nuclear programme, Yang doubts it would vanish even with regime change.

"Having witnessed with alarm what happened to Libya's Moamer Kadhafi and Iraq's Saddam Hussein, North Korea is deadly serious in believing its nuclear weapons are the only guarantee that can ensure its survival against an invasion by the US," he said.

"The nuclear arsenal gives Kim the halo as the country's top military commander and helps tighten his grip on power, both over the party and the military as well," Yang said.

"The North would never give up its nuclear arsenal unless it is guaranteed security, even if the Kim Jong-Un regime collapses and someone else took over."

But Kim is not a madman and is not about to launch a pre-emptive strike, Jeung of KINU told AFP.

"The sole purpose of Kim Jong Un's regime is survival of the regime but nothing more. So they must know very well that any pre-emptive nuclear strike will immediately prompt counter-attacks on North Korea, which will seriously jeopardise the regime.

"They may be reckless but they are not completely insane," Jeung said.

Some South Korean newspapers still flirted with doomsday scenarios.

Up to 235,000 would be killed if a nuclear blast of 10 kilotons occurred in Seoul, Yonhap news agency said, citing research in 2010 by the US think tank RAND Corp.

Top-selling Chosun daily also warned of "total destruction" and compared potential damage to the World War II bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
 
提倡观点:视金胖子为毛泽东再世!看样子太相似。搞核子弹抗击美国的决心也一样!陈毅当年说:当了裤子也要搞出核子弹的决心,现在由金胖子表现出来。
 
Xijinping should just sell 2nd hand missiles to Kim Jong Nuke like Karen Loong Guu Nee. Support him to nuke Americans and Japs, and over run South Korea. Then China will never face problems from USA and Japs again ever. Taiwan unification will be automatically done.

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news...have-conducted-fifth-and-largest/3113106.html


South Korea says North's nuclear capability 'speeding up', calls for action
Posted 09 Sep 2016 09:00 Updated 10 Sep 2016 16:00



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SEOUL: South Korea's foreign minister said on Saturday that North Korea's nuclear capability is expanding fast, echoing alarm around the world over the isolated state's fifth nuclear test carried out in defiance of U.N. sanctions.

North Korea conducted its biggest nuclear test on Friday and said it had mastered the ability to mount a warhead on a ballistic missile, ratcheting up a threat that rivals and the United Nations have been powerless to contain.

The test proved North Korean leader Kim Jong Un was unwilling to alter course and tougher sanctions and pressure were needed to apply "unbearable pain on the North to leave no choice but to change," South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se said.

"North Korea's nuclear capability is growing and speeding to a considerable level, considering the fifth nuclear test was the strongest in scale and the interval has quickened substantially," Yun told a ministry meeting convened to discuss the test.

The blast, on the 68th anniversary of North Korea's founding, drew global condemnation.

The United States said it would work with partners to impose new sanctions, and called on China to use its influence - as North Korea's main ally - to pressure Pyongyang to end its nuclear programme.

But Russia was sceptical that more sanctions were the answer to resolving the crisis, while China was silent on the prospect of a new United Nations Security Council resolution, although state media did carry commentaries criticising the North.

Under 32-year-old leader Kim, North Korea has sped up development of its nuclear and missile programmes, despite U.N. sanctions that were tightened in March and have further isolated the impoverished country.

The Security Council denounced North Korea's decision to carry out the test and said it would begin work immediately on a resolution. The United States, Britain and France pushed for the 15-member body to impose new sanctions.

U.S. President Barack Obama said after speaking by telephone with South Korean President Park Geun-hye and with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Friday that they had agreed to work with the Security Council and other powers to vigorously enforce existing measures against North Korea and to take "additional significant steps, including new sanctions."

LAVROV SEEKS NEW TALKS

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said it may take more than additional sanctions to resolve the crisis, signalling it may prove a challenge for the Security Council to come to an agreement on new sanctions.

"It is too early to bury the six-party talks. We should look for ways that would allow us to resume them," Lavrov said.

The so-called six-party talks aimed at ending the North's nuclear programme involving the United States, Russia, Japan, South Korea, China, and North Korea have been defunct since 2008.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said the United States had repeatedly offered talks to North Korea, but Pyongyang had to accept de-nuclearisation, which it had refused to do.

"We have made overture after overture to the dictator of North Korea," he said, adding that he ultimately hoped for a similar outcome as in the nuclear talks in Iran.

China said it was resolutely opposed to the test but Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying would not be drawn on whether China would support tougher sanctions against its neighbour.

On Saturday, the influential Chinese state-run tabloid the Global Times said North Korea was wrong in thinking building nuclear weapons would provide it more security or prestige in the world.

"Owning nuclear weapons won't ensure North Korea's political security," it said in an editorial. "On the contrary, it is poison that is slowly suffocating the country."

"OUT OF CONTROL"

South Korea's Park said late on Friday Kim was "mentally out of control," blind to all warnings from the world and neighbours as he sought to maintain power. "The patience of the international community has come to the limit," she said.

North Korea, which labels the South and the United States as its main enemies, said its "scientists and technicians carried out a nuclear explosion test for the judgement of the power of a nuclear warhead," according to its official KCNA news agency.

It said the test proved North Korea was capable of mounting a nuclear warhead on a medium-range ballistic missile, which it last tested on Monday when Obama and other world leaders were gathered in China for a G20 summit.

Pyongyang's claims of being able to miniaturises a nuclear warhead have never been independently verified.

Its continued testing in defiance of sanctions presents a challenge to Obama in the final months of his presidency and could become a factor in the U.S. presidential election in November, and a headache to be inherited by whoever wins.

North Korea has been testing different types of missiles at an unprecedented rate this year, and the capability to mount a nuclear warhead on a missile is especially worrisome for its neighbours South Korea and Japan.

The Pentagon did not have evidence that North Korea had been able to miniaturises a nuclear weapon, Pentagon spokesman Gary Ross said. But he added, "given the consequences of getting it wrong, it is prudent for a military planner to plan for the worst."

Jeffrey Lewis of the California-based Middlebury Institute of International Studies said the highest estimates of seismic magnitude suggested this was North Korea's most powerful nuclear test so far.

He said the seismic magnitude and surface level indicated a blast with a 20- to 30-kilotonne yield or its largest to date.

Such a yield would make this test larger than the nuclear bomb dropped by the United States on the Japanese city of Hiroshima in World War Two, which exploded with an energy of about 15 kilo tonnes.

South Korea's military put the force of the blast at 10 kilo tonnes, which would still be the North's most powerful nuclear blast to date.

"The important thing is, that five tests in, they now have a lot of nuclear test experience. They aren't a backwards state any more," Lewis said.

(Additional reporting by Ju-min Park in Seoul, Ben Blanchard in Beijing, Michelle Nichols at the United Nations, Phil Stewart in Oslo, David Brunnstrom in Geneva; Editing Mike Collett-White)
 
As a strategy against Japs Abe clown, Kim Jong Nuke is a perfect counter-measure as well. NK ruler Kim family had properly fixed Japs for 3 generations. Now newly empowered by latest nukes. Xijinping need not even motivate Kim Jong Nuke and automatically he will go after and effectively fix Abe Shinzo.

Why the fuck on earth would Xijinping hold Kim Jong Nuke back, and let Japs an Yankee off from the Pyongyang bite? And free the Yankee and Japs so that they cam turn around to hurt Beijing's bottom line?

Where on earth got fucking logic?

Xijinping is too kind to enemies and too civilized for the good of China. Following the entirely false value of modern civilization foolishly. This is completely suicidal and self-defeating, if he does not wise up ASAP, China will be soon as deeply fucked as USA and EU, in a foolishly self-destructive mistake, they will burry themselves in a deep grave dug by Xijinping.
 
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