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North Korea Has Nuclear Deterrant

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Physicist Michio Kaku warns in his book Hyperspace that it is the small countries with nuclear capabilities we have to worry about if we are to survive our discovery of the properties of uranium. The Russians, the US, the UK and a few others have improved radically in their social growth, but not enough in context with the millionfold increase nuclear weapons provide in terms of mass destruction capability. Small countries who have only had the bomb a short time haven't had the social growth needed to keep their fingers far enough away from the buttons.

 

They may see dwindling resources and fewer opportunities for power and advancement as detrimental to their future and are much more likely to feel that their backs are against the wall, with offensive nuclear weapons as their only recourse. Aggressive superpowers are just going to make it more likely that they feel threatened.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/in_depth/world/2003/nuclear_fuel_cycle/mining/default.stm

is quite interseting.

 

not much is heard about north korea because there is little connection with it. north koreans dont know anything about the 'outside' world, and the 'outside' world know little about what happens in the country.

and with nuclear powers, this becomes a major problem.

that picture seems unreal, why is it soooo quiet? (or dark?)

that picture seems unreal, why is it soooo quiet? (or dark?)

Have you ever seen the whole world dark at the same time?????

earthlights_dmsp.jpg

Yeah that's why I thought it was a little more realistic. Presumably that's Pyongyang, which if 60 Minutes is right is the only really developed area in the whole country. (shrug)

who know. maybe they have a curfew, or a blackout every night

i see a light in north korea!

 

can you see it?

 

I see it, but can't make out if it's a 60W or 100W bulb.

north korea isn't highly developed...but they have an army of 6.3 million and nukes, so they are not to be taken lightly

I see it, but can't make out if it's a 60W or 100W bulb.
ROFL!

 

Unfortunately, I think it's the afterglow of 8000 spent nuclear fuel rods.

 

Doesn't it sound like China is a bit peeved with them lately, or is that just for show?

ROFL!

 

Unfortunately' date=' I think it's the afterglow of 8000 spent nuclear fuel rods.

 

Doesn't it sound like China is a bit peeved with them lately, or is that just for show?[/quote']

I think they're peeved too. I think China might put some pressure on them.

China has a lot to lose.....when was the last time you bought anything that wasn't made in china. I don't know what our trade deficit is with China, but it's got to be big.

north korea isn't highly developed...but they have an army of 6.3 million and nukes, so they are not to be taken lightly
But if they don't have China backing them up, their credibility is much less. We just have to hope they're not crazy enough to start something without their bigger, older brother's help.
when was the last time you bought anything that wasn't made in china.

today, actually, but a better question to ask would be "when was the last time you bought something that hadn't come through hong kong?"

 

china probably wont back north korea in a war, even though they have always defended korea like a brother (noryang point ring a bell? how about the korean war?). still, china could easily make the us back off without actually drawing a blade.

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china probably wont back north korea in a war
China have a treaty to protect North Korea. Should anyone attack them, China will join in. This is one of the reasons the US sat in South Korea haven't already attacked.

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