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Old 06-12-2009, 06:37 AM
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Default S.Korea sends more troops to N.Korea border

SEOUL (AFP) – South Korea has sent hundreds more Marines to its tense border with North Korea, military officials said on Friday as world powers prepared to punish the communist state for its nuclear test.

US intelligence officials believe Pyongyang will respond to the UN Security Council resolution with a third atomic test, according to sources quoted by American TV networks.

More Marines were sent last week to two islands along the disputed Yellow Sea border, the scene of bloody naval battles in 1999 and 2002, a Marine Corps source told AFP.

He gave no figures but Yonhap news agency said more than 600 had been sent to Yeonpyeong and Baekryeong islands to reinforce the present garrisons.

The North followed up its second nuclear test on May 25 by launching short-range missiles, renouncing the armistice on the Korean peninsula and threatening possible attacks on its neighbour.

It is also pressuring South Korean firms at the Kaesong joint industrial estate north of the border -- the last reconciliation project between the two nations -- by demanding huge rent and wage increases.

Fox News said US intelligence officials have warned President Barack Obama that the North would respond to the UN resolution with another nuclear test. South Korea's defence ministry said this was a possibility.

The Security Council was to meet at 11:00 am (1500 GMT) Friday for a likely vote on a draft sanctions resolution agreed by its five permanent members -- Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States -- plus Japan and South Korea.

The text calls on UN member states to slap biting sanctions on North Korea.

They include tougher inspections of cargo suspected of containing banned missile- or nuclear-related items, a tighter arms embargo with the exception of light weapons and new financial restrictions.

Passage is a foregone conclusion after more than two weeks of intensive bargaining.

US ambassador to the UN Susan Rice has said the resolution will signal that North Korea "must pay a price, return without conditions to a process of negotiation and that the consequences they will face are significant."

In addition to its nuclear confrontation the North is bitterly at odds with South Korea's conservative administration, which rolled back the "sunshine" engagement policy followed by previous liberal governments.

On Thursday the North demanded that South Korean firms in Kaesong raise wages for its 40,000 workers to 300 dollars a month from around 75 dollars currently.

It also called for an increase in rent for the Seoul-funded estate to 500 million dollars, compared to the current 16 million dollars for a 50-year contract.

Shocked factory bosses on Friday rejected the demands, saying they already face "unbearable operational losses" due to the soured cross-border relations.

"The Kaesong industrial zone, which was born from the desire for national reconciliation and co-prosperity, now faces a critical moment because of political tensions," the 106 firms at the estate said in a joint statement.

Analysts said they were unsure whether Pyongyang's real aim is to shut down Kaesong or whether it is still open to negotiation.

The impoverished North received 26 million dollars from South Korean firms last year in wages, which are paid to state entities and not to the workforce.

Some analysts say it may be willing to forgo the cash because it fears the effects of exposing its workers to the South Korean lifestyle.

"By making a demand which the South finds hard to accept, Pyongyang seems to be moving to shut down Kaesong, holding the South Korean government responsible for the closure," Yang Moo-Jin of Seoul's University of North Korean Studies told AFP.

At Thursday's meeting Seoul again raised the case of a South Korean manager at Kaesong who has been detained by the North since March 30, but failed to gain access to him.

The man was held for allegedly criticising the North's political system and trying to persuade a female worker to defect.

Pyongyang is separately holding two US women journalists detained along its border on March 17 while researching a story.

They were sentenced Monday to 12 years of "reform through labour" for what state media called an illegal border crossing and an unspecified "grave crime."
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Old 06-12-2009, 08:07 AM
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This is going to flame up soon. I only hope our kids on the front line have a chance to get in a few licks before they get over-run. 32K troops aint much - they better have a good plan should they decide to walk over. I can feel it in my bones and my mouth is dry - I know this is going to get really ugly and very soon.
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Old 06-12-2009, 09:23 AM
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I don't know what NK possibly hopes to gain with such aggressive action. Even China and Russia have warned them not to escalate matters. An attack by NK would lead to retaliation by SK, the US, and Japan. Hell, the Chinese might even jump in and crush that little idiot. Of course if China does that I don't think they would leave NK territory for some time then we'd have a whole new set of problems. It's like that assassin in "The Princess Bride" said: "Never get involved in a land war in Asia."
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Old 06-12-2009, 09:59 AM
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http://wbztv.com/national/north.kore...2.1042177.html

U.N. Imposes Tough New Sanctions On N. Korea

The U.N. Security Council has approved tough new sanctions against North Korea for its recent nuclear test.

The resolution imposes new sanctions on the reclusive communist nation's weapons exports and financial dealings, and allows inspections of suspect cargo in ports and on the high seas.

U.S. deputy ambassador Rosemary DiCarlo said Friday's vote was a strong and united international response to North Korea's unacceptable behavior.
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Old 06-12-2009, 10:52 AM
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Obama: North Korean Treat 'Overblown' by Critics


Dan Garvey
CNR
June 12, 2009

President Obama has earned flak from critics for his so-called inaction against North Korea; now it seems there's a reason why. According to a spokesman for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the President believes that the threat posed by the North Koreans is "overblown."

"The President doesn't want to act either positively or negatively based on the short-term actions by a country," the spokesperson stated. "He also does not want to act on something that he feels has been exaggerated by his political rivals."

When asked what the President thought of the UN resolution to sanction North Korea, he stated that Mr. Obama was "very upset."

Raymond Downing, an adjunct professor at Princeton, tried to explain the President's actions. "It is very clear to see a connection here," he said. "During the lead up to the Iraq war, President Obama did not join the public and start blindly accusing Iraq of so-called weapons of mass destruction. In the end, he was right to vote against the war.

"The same is happening now," Downing continued. "The right is calling bloody murder over North Korea launching their weapons, when the real threat is not what they say. The President is right to look at the situation in every way he can.

"It's his responsibility," he concluded.

In a circular distributed by White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs, the rationale was made more clear.

"The President will always try to understand all sides of a conflict; it is a stated goal that he has made while a candidate and as President. To abandon it now would be wrong.

"It is also clear that the United States' actions against North Korea can only be so much," the classified memo continues. "We cannot invade the North because of a few provocative actions, and we must always give nations a chance to redeem themselves. In truth, the North has done nothing to warrant substantial penalties."

Despite the President's claims, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates disagrees. According to one of his press representatives, "Mr. Gates believes that the threat posed by North Korea is a real one, and that to allow them to continue on their destructive path unabated could prove disastrous.

"It is the hope of Mr. Gates that the President will come to the same conclusion that he has come to," the press rep also stated.


http://jumpinginpools.blogspot.com/2...rblown-by.html
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