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View Full Version : North Korea Threat 'Very Serious', Says Foreign Secretary William Hague


DerBear
April 7th, 2013, 04:27 PM
I know we've had a similar story a few days ago. However this is a little more current.

Foreign Secretary William Hague has warned that the international community must unite and treat the threat posed by North Korea "very seriously".

Mr Hague told Sky's Murnaghan show that there was a danger of "miscalculation" as Kim Jong-Un's bellicose statements ratchet up tensions on the Korean peninsula.

He was speaking after an American defence official revealed the US has delayed the testing of an intercontinental ballistic missile in an effort to defuse the situation.

Mr Hague said that was a "sensible decision" and said: "One of the dangers is of a miscalculation and the North Korean regime coming to believe their own paranoid rhetoric.

"We have to take this very seriously - this is a regime developing its nuclear weapons in contravention of all international treaties and resolutions."

Mr Hague urged a "calm and united" response to Kim Jong-Un, but said there was no evidence the country was preparing for all-out conflict.

He said: "We have not seen evidence of redeployment or repositioning of troops on the ground.

"All the evidence is that this rhetoric is about the regime in North Korea, just its actions and existence rather than positioning for all-out conflict on the Korean peninsula or elsewhere."

Mr Hague also backed Prime Minister David Cameron's suggestion that North Korea's threats show why Britain must make plans for a successor to its Trident nuclear deterrent.

A Pentagon source said the Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel decided to postpone the long-planned Minuteman 3 launch until next month because of concerns it would exacerbate the crisis.

North Korea's military warned this week it was authorised to attack the US using "smaller, lighter and diversified" nuclear weapons.

South Korean officials said the North has moved at least one missile with "considerable range" to its east coast - possibly the untested Musudan missile, believed to have a range of 1,800 miles.

The US has been carrying out joint military exercises in the area with South Korea involving warships and bombers.

Sky News Asia Correspondent Mark Stone says the postponement of the US missile launch marks a change in approach.

He said: "Two weeks ago the US military was issuing media releases announcing the deployment of B52 and B2 bombers to the region, as a show of strength and North Korea's response was to increase its own bellicose statements.

"China and Russia have collectively called on both North Korea and America to back down and in the past few days there have been signs that the Americans are altering their stance."

Meanwhile, China's Foreign Ministry expressed "grave concern" about escalating tensions on the Korean peninsula and asked for assurances about the safety of its diplomats.

And Chinese President Xi Jinping appeared to up the pressure on Pyongyang when he said in a speech that no country "should be allowed to throw a region and even the whole world into chaos for selfish gain".

North Korea held its most recent nuclear test in February and in December launched a long-range rocket that potentially could hit the continental US.

It has been angered by increasing sanctions and the exercises which are scheduled to continue to the end of the month.

This week, the US said two of its missile-defence ships were being moved closer to the Korean peninsula and a land-based system was being deployed to the Pacific territory of Guam later this month.

And deployment of an unmanned spy plane to northern Japan was brought forward to boost US surveillance after North Korean threats.

Japan will further boost its defences by ordering its armed forces to shoot down any North Korean missile headed towards its territory, according to press reports.

Source: http://web.orange.co.uk/article/news/us_missile_test_delayed_over_north_korea_row

CoolKid97
April 7th, 2013, 08:37 PM
That's some pretty scary stuff! Rumor has it the North Koreans are planning to launch a missile on April 10th. That missile would be able to reach South Korea and Japan. Saw that somewhere on Google News..

NTTHRASH
April 7th, 2013, 08:44 PM
Not shocking. Let me guess, North Korea wants to blow us up, the US throws China's cash at their nuke program, N. Korea moves missiles, the US throws China's cash at their nuke program, and so on. It's the same story every day. My friend had a panic attack the other day because she actually believed that Korea would try to kill us all. I get the feeling that when N.Korea finally does get a nuclear missile, the rocket won't work anyway. And even that's in, what, 25 years? Not to mention that as soon as N.Korea launches anything, the US, India, and most likely Israel will unleash enough nukes to make S.Korea an island named Korea...

That's some pretty scary stuff! Rumor has it the North Koreans are planning to launch a missile on April 10th. That missile would be able to reach South Korea and Japan. Saw that somewhere on Google News..

As long as they remember to put fuel in it.:lol:

Please don't double post, use the "Edit" or "Multi-quote" instead. ~TheMatrix

Lonely teen
April 7th, 2013, 08:59 PM
Yah and i wonder if China will get involved and or Russia WWIII anyone

NTTHRASH
April 7th, 2013, 09:08 PM
Yah and i wonder if China will get involved and or Russia WWIII anyone

Russia will sit there and say "why, I'll bomb the shit out of you later", and China will say "fuck yeah, more money" while the US throws millions and millions of troops in with thousands of bombs until N.Korea gets pissed and fires Nerf balls at US soldiers whilst the UK tries to figure what the hell is going on and then occupies Zambia. For some reason. And they also divide N.Korea into 513 individual countries that the UK governs. Sound about right. Wait! I forgot the evil German dictator, so, some young, power hungry "hero" comes out of the crowd with his cronies and throws Asians in a huge confectionery plant. And all the while the terrorists decide to be peaceful Muslims again.
WWIII in a nutshell.

Bethany
April 7th, 2013, 09:17 PM
I've been reading that China does not support what North Korea's doing now, which makes sense. I think China would like this to blow over - after all, a US and South Korean takeover of North Korea on the border of China would probably make China feel rather uncomfortable.

NTTHRASH
April 7th, 2013, 09:22 PM
Since when do the Chinese give a fuck about anything? I'm not the world's leading expert on anything, but how does it make sense that China would feel uncomfortable if the US took over N.Korea? What are we going to do, ask politely to have them not ask for their money back?

Lonely teen
April 7th, 2013, 09:30 PM
Well in the past China got involved in the Korean war

Bethany
April 7th, 2013, 09:31 PM
Haha, I didn't phrase that well in my post :D No asking politely would occur.

If North Korea were to dissolve and the South Korean government was to unite the Korean Peninsula, this would, I think we can all agree, thanks to SK and the US's relationship, occur with a lot of help and influence from the US. Due to the US and China's competitive relationship, China would not like having a country with a very US-influenced government on its borders. Therefore, I believe China doesn't want conflict to occur, as it would rather have an ally on its borders than South Korea, a US ally.

NTTHRASH
April 7th, 2013, 09:38 PM
Haha, I didn't phrase that well in my post :D No asking politely would occur.

If North Korea were to dissolve and the South Korean government was to unite the Korean Peninsula, this would, I think we can all agree, thanks to SK and the US's relationship, occur with a lot of help and influence from the US. Due to the US and China's competitive relationship, China would not like having a country with a very US-influenced government on its borders. Therefore, I believe China doesn't want conflict to occur, as it would rather have an ally on its borders than South Korea, a US ally.

I have never met one who understands lynchpin theoretics so well.:D

Twilly F. Sniper
April 11th, 2013, 08:31 PM
I agree! Fallout 3 could happen except earlier, with a North Korean nuke.

Bethany
April 11th, 2013, 08:39 PM
CNN's North Korea coverage is driving me up the wall. Two days ago, it was "North Korea missile in place", yesterday it was "North Korea missile ready to fire", and this is all marked "BREAKING NEWS" so you see the North Korean flag and cross your fingers that the Asia-Pacific region is still intact. Plus, they aren't backing up their statements with anything but vague statements from officials. Plus, this is basically the only international thing they're covering right now, and they aren't doing much real reporting, and they're ignoring the elections in Venezuela.

Where are you guys getting your NK coverage? I'm getting it from Al-Jazeera now.

Does anyone else think that CNN's nonstop North Korea coverage is more harmful than informative? It has the potential to create a panic with its nonstop "BREAKING NEWS" nuclear headlines.