this changes everything
10/8/2006 10:54:01 PM
this changes nothing
10/8/2006 10:55:27 PM
we weren't going to do anything...and never will. Interesting development nonetheless.
10/8/2006 10:59:28 PM
national self determination is on the march
10/8/2006 11:07:35 PM
God damn North Korea you are gonig to make more people hate nuclear power.
10/8/2006 11:08:47 PM
^^ Whose alias are you?[Edited on October 8, 2006 at 11:09 PM. Reason : a]
10/8/2006 11:09:04 PM
was this a test like their missles or was it a successful test?
10/8/2006 11:25:27 PM
10/8/2006 11:25:58 PM
changes the landscape of asianow japan is going to develop them, and change their constitution south korea will develop the bomb cluster fuck down the road
10/8/2006 11:30:42 PM
US GS says they have picked up some seizmic activity.
10/8/2006 11:40:39 PM
China got a twenty minute warning.
10/8/2006 11:43:32 PM
20 bucks says it wasn't a nukeThey prolly crammed as much explosives as they could, dug a hole, and detonated it. OMG SEISMIC ITS A NUKE.And you people are idiots....its obvious North Korea is using this a diversion for their Zerg rush that'll destroy South Korea [Edited on October 8, 2006 at 11:48 PM. Reason : a]
10/8/2006 11:44:43 PM
It wouldn't be too hard to tell if it wasn't a nuke. For one, the gamma and neutron burst is detectable from a hell of a long way away. Also, even smaller atomic blasts are on the order of 1000's of tons of TNT. Even if North Korea did simply bury and detonate 10000 tons of TNT (or less for other high explosives) they couldn't have moved that much without our spy satellites seeing it. And you know we've got our spy satellites on them.
10/8/2006 11:56:20 PM
Confirmed by a "Senior Bush Administration Official." Bomb was not as powerful as they expected.[Edited on October 8, 2006 at 11:58 PM. Reason : Looking for 400 kilotons, but didn't get that.]
10/8/2006 11:57:57 PM
can someone explain to me why its soo hard to make a nuke? seems like after a few people do it you could just copy paste easily as long as you have the materials but theres obviously more to it.why is it so complicated?
10/9/2006 12:02:38 AM
^x6
10/9/2006 12:03:47 AM
Its actually very easy to make a simple nuke...getting the weapon grade uranium and plutonium is a bitch though
10/9/2006 12:04:08 AM
Is it a coincidence that Team America was on Showtime last night?
10/9/2006 12:05:12 AM
japan and china will deal with it.move along, folks.
10/9/2006 12:13:33 AM
korea gs had sesimic activityusgs had no reports400kilotons is like 10x the weapons used in japan and is way more than necessary for a test.[Edited on October 9, 2006 at 12:23 AM. Reason : via per]
10/9/2006 12:15:49 AM
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqcenter/recenteqsww/Quakes/ustqab.phpnow confirmed?
10/9/2006 12:30:10 AM
lmao the picture on foxnews got bigger when the us confirmed itFLASH LIGHTS FLASH LIGHTS. BREAKING NEWS . FLASH LIGHTS FLASH LIGHTS /FOXNEWS
10/9/2006 12:37:53 AM
http://finance.yahoo.com/intlindices?e=asia
10/9/2006 12:40:48 AM
[Edited on October 9, 2006 at 1:17 AM. Reason : looks better]
10/9/2006 1:17:16 AM
10/9/2006 1:29:36 AM
Well, no real surprise, but life in Eastern Asia has certainly gotten a lot more interesting.
10/9/2006 1:42:59 AM
CNN said it was a .550Kton nuke, where Hiroshima was 12.5Kton.I don't think this changes too much either though, except we have to tip-toe around NK a little bit more, and it also gives the Dems an opportunity to criticize Bush for trumping up Iraq, when NK was there spitting in our faces the whole time.
10/9/2006 3:11:16 AM
^Well, it is a failure of Republican policy. I know TGD and others will roundly trumpet this event as an "October Surprise" laden with electoral gifts for the GOP, but -- frankly -- it's just a disappointment. America has, and always has had, leverage in dealing with North Korea.I'm sure North Korea's role is purely strategic. China is not our friend; but, common enemies unite. As long as we stand multi-laterally against refugees flooding that particular border, there is reason to let the Taiwan issue rest another year.And Kim Jong Il is happy to play the pawn -- he is the tail that wags the dog.But ultimately, brinksmanship and balls win out in foreign policy as in other negotiation settings. None such has come from this administration. Must the nukes be of Hiroshima quality before we act? After all -- Iraq has shown us the free-for-all that ensures in a power vacuum. Let's be careful.
10/9/2006 3:17:52 AM
10/9/2006 3:43:21 AM
10/9/2006 3:43:47 AM
From what I understand, it's not too hard to go from a .5Kton nuke to a much more powerful one, once you have the refined material. If we are going to attack, we'd have to hit their production facilities hard in the next week, assuming they don't have another, more powerful, warhead ready to go. I don't see this happening. If our strikes failed, we have a nuclear-capable nest of bees that are pissed off. Remember what happened to Macaulay Culkin in My Girl?
10/9/2006 3:51:26 AM
Who cares if they have a warhead, they can't even shoot a missle over japan. They would have better luck driving the thing to the DMZ and blowing it up there then zerg rushing.
10/9/2006 7:38:47 AM
We just need a good old fashioned preemptive nuclear strike!Well maybe not.
10/9/2006 7:41:52 AM
^^ they'd starve before they got 20 miles into the south...
10/9/2006 8:06:37 AM
It's pretty sad when crazed idiot regimes start using a nuclear bomb as their insurance device against an American attack to "liberate" their population. Then again, when you call them out as an "Axis of Evil" and state your desire to overthrow their government after you did it one of the Axis, it's not like they're gonna stand by and wait for you to come. I don't know what to really think about this. It's not good by any stretch just because of the temperament of the North Korean leadership. Under MAD, we know through history that Kruscshchev was very nervous and unsure about the moves he was making during the Cuban Missile Crisis cause he didn't want to be the one responsible for bringing death to a lot of the world through nukes. Does anyone think Kim Jong Il has such sentiment?
10/9/2006 8:50:46 AM
10/9/2006 9:06:21 AM
10/9/2006 9:09:09 AM
^^Yeah, North Korea's smuggling network is supposed to be fairly impressive. I wouldn't be suprised if this prompts vastly improved radiation detection well before ships reach ports.
10/9/2006 9:12:57 AM
10/9/2006 9:14:41 AM
Not at all.A strong japanese economy is an excellent counterpoint.A nuclear japan re-adopting an aggressive militaristic stance just increases the tension in Asia and makes it all the more likely one person will do something stupid.Grats to the Bush administration for its skillful diplomacy. How in the hell one squanders the global leadership position attained after 9/11 in such a spectacular way is beyond me.
10/9/2006 9:44:45 AM
http://www.wral.com/news/10030088/detail.html
10/9/2006 9:52:35 AM
10/9/2006 9:59:26 AM
^nobody knows where the facilities are.i could see them nuking hiroshima and telling America "we're just trying to be more like you"
10/9/2006 10:18:53 AM
10/9/2006 10:19:19 AM
10/9/2006 10:20:07 AM
10/9/2006 10:32:50 AM
10/9/2006 10:41:03 AM
that was a joke.but long term- i dont see anyway out of this without a war.
10/9/2006 10:48:39 AM
^^^ Invasion or an attack are still highly unlikely; a war in that region would kill millions in the opening week and disrupt the global economy like no other. If North Korea were to be attacked, the first thing they would do is burn Seoul, a city of 14 million to the ground; this would not be difficult since they have thousands of artillery pieces within range of the city, equipped with both conventional as well as chemical and biological shells. North Korea would likely also start dropping chemical and biological warheads using its missile fleet onto Japanese targets; mind you, I don't know how many direct hits they'd score, but for a nation as crowded as Japan, missing Tokyo to blow up Yokohama would still kill thousands and disrupt the global economy. This doesn't even go into a disruption of cargo into and out of the region as North Korean submarines go on the offensive.Also consider that on the border between North and South Korea, they've got about 1.1 million soldiers facing off against each other. The military calculates that the average lifespan of a soldier on the DMZ in the outbreak of war would be about twenty three seconds (plus or minus a minute). Throw in the tens of thousands of US soldiers on the Korean penninsula, horrible mountainous terrain, a North Korean commando force numbering around 100,000, and a freaked out Chinese government, and it's obvious even to the Bush administration that war is not a rational or even fantastic option.No, no one, except maybe the North Koreans (and even that is unlikely since it's a guaranteed end to the regime), is going to deliberatly start a war; that being said, history is full of situations that have escalated irrationally to warfare, but at least for all the major players, they are going to be damn sure that they do everything possible not to cross that line.
10/9/2006 10:49:17 AM
^i see soemthing mor along the lines of n korea constantly calling our bluff with the possibility of war as leverage and we never do anything until one day they take it 1 step too far.
10/9/2006 10:56:56 AM