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China-Japan-Koreas
Noose tightening on North Korea
2010-07-25
South Korea and the United States are set to start a joint military exercise in the East Sea on Sunday. Washington is preparing to freeze some North Korean assets soon. A U.S.-led multinational naval drill, apparently aimed at stopping North Korea from trafficking weapons of mass destruction, is scheduled for October in the sea off the South Korean port of Busan.

North Korea has no one else but itself to blame if it feels the noose tightening around its neck. It was North Korea that put its head in the noose in the first place when it torpedoed a South Korean warship in the South Korean territorial waters in the West Sea in March, killing 46 aboard.

When the South Korean-U.S. joint military drill starts in the East Sea, North Korea will have to put itself on high alert, diverting resources for a defense posture. This should be painful to the destitute communist state.

The U.S. financial sanctions, now on the drawing board, may prove to be even more damaging. Washington says it will blacklist more North Korean corporations and individuals in two weeks to cut off money flowing into Pyongyang from its exports of weapons of mass destruction and counterfeit products. In October, a multinational naval maneuver will start near Busan under the Proliferation Security Initiative, a global effort to stop the trafficking of weapons of mass destruction.

All the measures are a follow-up to Wednesday’s conference of the foreign policy and defense chiefs from South Korea and the United States, the first such “two-plus-two” meeting designed to demonstrate the commitment of the United States to South Korean security in the face of a military threat from the North.

The two military allies are called on to keep up the pressure until Pyongyang admits to its responsibility for the torpedo attack and vows not to engage in such hostilities again. There is no need for them to rush back to the six-way talks on the denuclearization of North Korea, which Pyongyang recently proposed to reopen -- an apparent move to divert international attention away from the torpedo attack.

Juxtaposed with the enhanced U.S. security commitment is South KoreaÂ’s recent diplomatic defeat at the U.N. Security Council, where Seoul failed to have Pyongyang condemned for its unprovoked act of hostility. With the dust settling from the debacle, it should be worthwhile for Seoul to review what went wrong and seriously consider what needs to be done if it is to avoid a similar fiasco.

At the center of the controversy is not only North Korea but China, which went the extra mile to protect Pyongyang from being censured by the UNSC.
Posted by:lotp

#3  Again, SECSTATE HILLARY > no new talks or progress until Kimmie formally admits its attack on the CHEONAN [+ makes amends].
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2010-07-25 19:49  

#2  I'd say it's time for some NK naval accidents. Two can play at that game and we have the better tech/people. Don't expect Oblahblah to do it, but I would've taken two of theirs out on GP
Posted by: Frank G   2010-07-25 15:31  

#1  How do you "tighten the noose" on these MFs? It's hard to get to the leadership short of dropping a bomb on them. They barely understand it when their people die. Even if you give them a blanket they think that's cool.

Blow up their navy one night and act all shocked maybe?

Blockade seems to me the only thing that might do the trick. Might put the kabosh on their nuclear program, too.

The leaders might understand it better if they felt it on a very personal level. Imagine if all their foreign assets went poof overnight and suddenly they had no place to run when the walls came tumbling down. Imagine then if the walls started to crumble.

But they have nowhere to run to, baby. Nowhere to hide. They're stuck. So they're going to play it to the last card and then kill themselves.

I don't see how we can offer their leadership a sneaky way out of the country in any significant numbers.

The only thing left is to squeeze their food supply at the same time.

Unless we just bomb the crap out of their government buildings and military weapons centers that could be used to suppress the population, and then hope that the people could put it together themselves.

China could save the peoples' butts without even trying really, but then NorK would become part of China, and SKor would have to forget reclaiming their relatives.

What a pain.

Maybe just a few very well placed bombs, with a promise of a few more unless they open up and get with the program.
Posted by: gorb   2010-07-25 15:21  

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