http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/asiapcf/06/20/guam.wargames.ap/index.html
6/20/2006 3:33:35 PM
6/20/2006 3:41:36 PM
I dunno. Tension related to North Korea has been a lot higher than it is right now. Iran's taking most of the heat these days. Any time you have a military exercise, one of its goals -- in addition to general preparedness -- is to send a political message. I'm not denying that. But I don't think the timing of this one is all that important.
6/20/2006 3:45:35 PM
6/20/2006 3:45:49 PM
last i heard the vietcong were not in north korea with long range missiles, so i dont know what your concern over charlie is about
6/20/2006 3:46:34 PM
6/20/2006 3:48:49 PM
These wargames are not a big deal compared to some of other annual wargames the United States conducts with South Korea, in particular the "Ulchi Focus Lens" Exercise. This massive, annual exercise is at a command level involving all four branches of the United States military and their S. Korean counterparts. Globalsecurity.org calls it the largest computerized military command simulation on the planet. There were also the old "Team Spirit" Exercises which involved live-fire exercises and large troop maneuvers simulating combat against the North Korean military.True, the current wargames in the Pacific are more massive in scale, but the exercises above are specifically targetted at North Korea. Somehow, I don't think the Pacific exercises are going to rattle them anymore than what's already been done.
6/20/2006 4:07:42 PM
Who was that retired General the Army or Marines called out of retirement to play Saddam in one of their war games? It was either pre-Gulf I or pre-Gulf II, the guy basically single-handedly defeated the entire US military in their simulation by not relying on computers and other technology they expected him to use -- so the military scrapped the sim, changed the rules to prevent him from doing it, then ran the simulation again War games are pointless I suspect...
6/20/2006 4:15:52 PM
^^ Thats pretty cool. I dont know much about war games; good info
6/20/2006 5:27:35 PM
they seem like they would have to help tactically, as far as going through the motions...true its pretty much impossible to simulate the emotion but any practice is good
6/20/2006 5:29:26 PM
the last time License to Kim Jong Il made public announcements confirming nuke capabilities, we tested the daisy cutter bomb just to give them a heads up
6/20/2006 6:08:49 PM
6/20/2006 6:32:29 PM
6/20/2006 7:12:01 PM
6/21/2006 9:08:31 AM
^ True. We also let all the relavent nations know in advance that we're going to conduct these exercises, less they see the gathering of the entire Pacific Fleet and panic thinking that we're about to go blow something up. The above mentioned exercise had invited observers from China, Japan, Australia, South Korea, Russia, and Singapore.
6/21/2006 12:50:19 PM