The deployment last week of 15 stealth fighters to South Korea, along with the severing of the American military's only official interaction with North Korea, appears to be part of a new push by the Bush administration to further isolate North Korea despite China's hesitation to join the effort. The deployment, confirmed by the Pentagon on Friday after several news reports, came just after the Defense Department said Wednesday that it was suspending the search for soldiers missing in action since the Korean War.
The search was the Pentagon's only mission inside North Korea and its only formal contact with the country's military. The Pentagon said it acted to ensure American troops' safety in the "uncertain environment created by North Korea's unwillingness to participate in the six-party talks," as a spokesman put it, referring to the lack of negotiations on the North's nuclear arms program over 11 months.
Although senior Pentagon officials say the F-117 stealth fighters are part of preparation for a long-planned training exercise, the show of force comes at a delicate moment both militarily and politically. China, South Korea and some experts in the United States have urged the administration to make a more specific offer to North Korea, laying out what it would get in return for giving up its nuclear arms program. Administration officials, however, have suggested in recent interviews that they are headed toward taking a hard line, cracking down on the North's exports of missiles, drugs and counterfeit currency.
The United States warned its allies this month that the North might be preparing to test a nuclear weapon. Now senior officials say American intelligence agencies are still monitoring several locations in North Korea where a nuclear test might be held, though they readily concede the evidence that the North will proceed with a test is "partial."
[url=http://www.nytimes.com/auth/login?URI=http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/30/politics/30diplo.html&OP=729b5f48/}!uw}Q27L,mQ2BLLj~}~11X}1X}z1}aLUqjq,m}z1Q27qaULZxjQ2AU]Soure[/url]
Stealth Jets Sent to South Korea
Moderator: S2k Moderators
Stealth Jets Sent to South Korea
0 likes
Should any man come against me and rob me, I would consider him an eternal enemy. Why then should any tyrant try to rob this country and blackmail us by threat of force? Never. Never, it is unexcusable. Did Rome capitulate when Hannibal marched through Italy? Why then should we fear this weak and schizophrenic state, governed by madmen at one end and lived in by the most pittied of men in the other?
The people of America would feed all of North Korea if they were not governed by madmen who cannot be trusted even with grain. We would support their industry, we would sit down with them in bilatteral talks, if they were not governed by madmen.
We should make the peace by preparing for war. What we should not do is make a concession. There will be time for concessions, for decency, but strength must be shown first.
The people of America would feed all of North Korea if they were not governed by madmen who cannot be trusted even with grain. We would support their industry, we would sit down with them in bilatteral talks, if they were not governed by madmen.
We should make the peace by preparing for war. What we should not do is make a concession. There will be time for concessions, for decency, but strength must be shown first.
0 likes
- feederband
- S2K Supporter
- Posts: 3423
- Joined: Wed Oct 01, 2003 6:21 pm
- Location: Lakeland Fl
Honestly in my opion its only amout of time before we have another Korean conflict... This is all the practice for . Their armys practice everyday on the invasion of South Korean. They know they would have to though us first. We need to prepare in South Korea it going to happen .When is the question. 

0 likes
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 27 guests