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David wrote:
I think it's just wishful thinking. China don't know how to handle Kim any more than the US do. They liked having North Korea around back in the day as a bargaining chip, but they've long since lost control of the situation.
NK's Imports in 2015 : $3.5 Bln. China's exports to NK in 2015 : $3 Bln
NK's exports in 2015 : $2.8 Bln. China's imports from NK in 2015 : $2.4 Bln
You can do the percentages. These are the declared figures, so probably finessed down. If they don't know how to handle Kim, I could suggest a way for starters.....
Alternatively, they know damn well what they are doing, in this game.
China placing further sanctions on North Korea will only worsen the situation for the people who are already suffering under Kim, most of whom probably have no real idea of what the rest of the world has to offer as few most likely have access to a free and open internet and have been brainwashed since birth or are scared into submission by a brutal regime.
China most likely is using North Korea as a pawn in a proxy war with the US but such is the unknown with the hermit kingdom can we be certain that they would abandon there nuclear ambition because of Chinese pressure?
^ no easy answers Swoop, but a nuclear armed mafia state with a taste for extortion and no regard for international rules is not really an acceptable outcome either. All pressure short of military force should be brought to bear. China is not helping. It created this monster and it helps sustain it for a reason.
David wrote:Not sure we'll have TV after the apocalypse.
Aw for gawds sake, slap yourself.
Hey, if the prospect of nuclear war doesn't scare you, I'd trade your outlook for mine any day. I just don't know if it's an objectively more reasonable position to take.
The good news is that if the US strikes North Korea or if they attack first, the nuclear warheads deployed from Pyongyang probably won't hit us. The bad news is that any nuclear strikes will have calamitous effects in both the short and long term, not just in terms of the numbers of lives lost in Japan, the Korean Peninsula and elsewhere but also in terms of mass people movements, radiation poisoning and resource shortages.
"Every time we witness an injustice and do not act, we train our character to be passive in its presence." – Julian Assange
David wrote:Not sure we'll have TV after the apocalypse.
Aw for gawds sake, slap yourself.
Hey, if the prospect of nuclear war doesn't scare you, I'd trade your outlook for mine any day. I just don't know if it's an objectively more reasonable position to take.
The good news is that if the US strikes North Korea or if they attack first, the nuclear warheads deployed from Pyongyang probably won't hit us. The bad news is that any nuclear strikes will have calamitous effects in both the short and long term, not just in terms of the numbers of lives lost in Japan, the Korean Peninsula and elsewhere but also in terms of mass people movements, radiation poisoning and resource shortages.
It doesn't scare me, maybe because I grew up during the Cold War and maybe because the best Nth Korea could do is hit Darwin. if they could hit Melbourne I might be a tad concerned.
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
I particularly like the photo of the 20" CRT monitor gaffer taped to an overgrown Mechano set masquerading as a Tractor driving simulator. Some of the others I find, for some reason, depressing.
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.