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Da-Chief
10-17-2006, 11:01
N. Korea: Sanctions Are War Declaration
Oct 17 9:32 AM US/Eastern
North Korea (http://search.breitbart.com/q?s=%22North+Korea%22&sid=breitbart.com) said Tuesday it considered U.N. sanctions aimed at punishing the country for its nuclear test "a declaration of war," as Japan and South Korea (http://search.breitbart.com/q?s=%22South+Korea%22&sid=breitbart.com) reported the communist nation might be preparing a second explosion.

The North broke two days of silence about the U.N. resolution adopted after its Oct. 9 nuclear test with a statement on the official state news agency, as China warned Pyongyang against stoking tensions.

"The resolution cannot be construed otherwise than a declaration of a war" against the North, the statement said. North Korea is known officially as the Democratic People's Republic (http://search.breitbart.com/q?s=Democratic+People's+Republic&sid=breitbart.com ) of Korea.

The chief U.S. nuclear envoy, Assistant Secretary of State (http://search.breitbart.com/q?s=%22Secretary+of+State%22&sid=breitbart.com) Christopher Hill, said the North's response was "not very helpful."

"I think there is a fundamental misunderstanding about what the international community feels about its actions," Hill said in Seoul after a meeting with his South Korean and Russian counterparts.

Hill said he could not confirm South Korean and Japanese reports that the North may be preparing another nuclear explosion, but said a second test would force the international community "to respond very clearly."

North Korea "is under the impression that once they make more nuclear tests that somehow we will respect them more," Hill told reporters after a meeting with U.S. and Russian counterparts. "The fact of the matter is that nuclear tests make us respect them less."

In its statement, North Korea said it would not be intimidated.

The communist nation "had remained unfazed in any storm and stress in the past when it had no nuclear weapons (http://search.breitbart.com/q?s=%22nuclear+weapons%22&sid=breitbart.com)," the statement said. "It is quite nonsensical to expect the DPRK to yield to the pressure and threat of someone at this time when it has become a nuclear weapons state."

Chun Yung-woo, South Korea's top nuclear envoy, dismissed the statement as "the usual rhetoric that they have been using at the time of the adoption of the Security Council resolution."

China has long been one of North Korea's few allies, but relations have frayed in recent months by Pyongyang's missile tests and the nuclear explosion last week.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao warned Pyongyang against aggravating tensions, saying the North should help resolve the situation "through dialogue and consultation instead of taking any actions that may further escalate or worsen the situation."

The United States pressed on with a round of diplomacy in Asia aimed at finding consensus on how to implement U.N. sanctions on the North. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice (http://search.breitbart.com/q?s=%22Condoleezza+Rice%22&sid=breitbart.com) was expected to go to Japan on Wednesday before traveling to South Korea and China.

Hill stressed that the international community should make the North pay a "high price" for its "reckless behavior."

Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Aso said his government had "information" about another possible blast, and a senior South Korean official said there were signs that the North could be preparing a second test _ but emphasized that it was unlikely to happen immediately.

"We have yet to confirm any imminent signs of a second nuclear test," the official said on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the information.

China, whose support for the measures is key to whether they will have any effect on neighboring North Korea, has begun examining trucks at the North Korean border to comply with new U.N. sanctions endorsed over the weekend.

South Korea has said it would implement the U.N. sanctions, but also has been cautious about allowing sanctions to shake regional stability. Seoul has also indicated that it has no intention of halting key economic projects with the North, despite concerns that they may help fund the North's nuclear and missile programs.

"Sanctions against North Korea should be done in a way that draws North Korea to the dialogue table," South Korean Prime Minister Han Myung-sook said Tuesday, according to Yonhap news agency. "There should never be a way that causes armed clashes."

In Washington, U.S. National Intelligence Director John Negroponte's office said Monday that air samples gathered last week contain radioactive materials that confirm that North Korea conducted an underground nuclear explosion.

In a short statement posted on its Web site, Negroponte's office also confirmed that the size of the explosion was less than 1 kiloton, a comparatively small nuclear detonation. Each kiloton is equal to the force produced by 1,000 tons of TNT.

It was the first official confirmation from the United States that a nuclear detonation took place, as Pyongyang has claimed.

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DevilDoc
10-17-2006, 13:32
Chief,

I was just at a leadership conference this weekend. The Command Master Chief for 4MedBn was there, and he was approached about this very thing. He basically said, pack your bags, have them ready, because we will be heading over there, with about 48 hours notice for our mobilization. Things aren't looking good on that aspect, and it sounds like the MC was right on target. Korea is one COLD place, so hope everyone has a good pair of polypro's packed in their seabags!

Personally, I think this just confirms the suspect of the 3rd World War. It's definately getting closer and closer to being just that.

DevilDoc

DocHayes
10-17-2006, 16:35
Thank god I took the Mountain Medicine Class. Maybe I should look into the Winter Class too.

huskerdoc
10-18-2006, 07:58
Huskerdoc here...new to this site. I think this is a great site for Docs. I'm an ex-doc. Was part of 1/3 out of Hawaii and spent some time in Korea. It can getvery cold there and the terrain isn't very pleasant. I am hoping it doesn't come to conflict there.

DevilDoc
10-18-2006, 17:47
Hey Donnye,

Yeah gear up for the cold! Our Company is actually going through cold weather training in January! YUCK! But it's going to be some well needed training it looks like. Did you go FTS or what happened with that?



HuskerDoc, you are never an "ex" doc, once a doc, always a Doc...ask anyone here! Glad to have you!



DevilDoc

randver
10-18-2006, 22:10
i went to cold weather med back in 98 and loved it. its the best cource i have been in since i joined. as far as going to korea we may get ready to go but i think china will step up and b@#ch (mailto:b@#ch) slap N.korea and make them behave

huskerdoc
10-19-2006, 08:29
Thanx DevilDoc,

I guess I should say I'm ex active duty.

I got on this site wondering if any of my other Doc buddies from the green side were on here. Also, it is nice to talk to other Doc's. I must say at times I do miss it.

docteter3/11
10-19-2006, 14:44
What's up docs? I really like this site, it gives me a chance to keep up on things. This N. Korea situation has me concerned. I was with 3/11 in 29 Palms and we got to do pretty "FUN" stuff. I've been out for 5 yrs now after 10 yrs of service and I'm thinking about going back in. Our Marines are going to need us more than they realize if this s*&t boils to head.



DOCTETER

DevilDoc
10-20-2006, 07:11
DocTeter,

Our Marines have needed since 9/11....that's why so many Doc's are doing 2, 3 and 4 rotations over in Iraq. We'd love to have you back. Good quality Doc's are getting harder and harder to find.

docteter3/11
11-03-2006, 17:20
I'd love to go back too.I have some Marine friends who are thinking the same thing. They dont want to leave their families and they definitely don't want to go to Korea, but duty calls and you know the saying, "Once a Marine always a Marine". If the flag goes up, we're there!

Da-Chief
11-03-2006, 23:05
Rah

HMC