Eh, all this bickering between the Korea's. Nothing too serious (ie. war) will come of this, I reckon. It's all big talk and some crap flinging, it will die down eventually. As for the US, they should make sure they clean up the mess they've made elsewhere before getting involved in yet another military conflict (should it escalate to that).
Kim Jong Il is so damn dumb leader. He can't take the consuquences of what he has done. If this situation gets any hotter I think there will be a war but not a very large one.
China and America will come between them.
Yeah true, but I doubt that they started a war between them so they would have to settle the situation somehow..
China has been backing up NK for quite a while.
N.Korea have what? 7 nuclear warhead, and very questionable amount of working missles. Half of its people is starving and once foreign aid stops in case of war they are pretty much doomed.
It's just their periodic threat to misbehave in an attempt for us to take them seriously.
China isn't actually backing up North Korea, it's just that for North Korea there's not much country who they have a democratic relationship with and can openly talk to, so China as one of the nearest neighbour and sharing a communist roots has to take a more friendly stature. If things turns sour you can garuntee China wanting no piece of the action.
i've always said "go right ahead", when it comes to north korea... they might have "allies" in china and iran and some of the other neighbouring countries, but america would just destroy north korea.
i must say i'm rather shocked about the turn of events though, i've always assumed their "all-out-war" claims were moot. maybe i was wrong.
The US has 28,000 troops stationed in South Korea, they have been there as a bodyguard since the end of the Korean War. Do you really want the South to be just like the North?
Well, it's not the most eloquently made argument in the history of the world but I tend to agree with the basic sentiment. The US has a clear history of manipulating countries and regimes throughout the world to further its own interests. You could argue a country has the right or even responsibility to do so, but the way it has been done has severely disadvantaged or killed many of the citizens of those countries. Installing dictators who oppress and kill their citizens but have favourable trade policies with the USA, securing supplies of natural resources by force and, perhaps more importantly, choosing to stay away from other situations where they could have intervened but it was not in their interest to do so. These are NOT the actions a superpower should be engaging in.
I didn't say America was unique in this and I would have to agree that other countries have engaged in these practices too. It's just that a lot of people (a lot of them Americans) wonder why the world seems to have such a dislike or even hate for them. Foreign policy history is a good place to start, IMO. Had Korea not been divided into North and South by the USA and Russia and had separate teachings on government from those countries we may not (would not?) be in the situation we are today with such hostility between North and South. I'm not blaming the USA exclusively for this situation, of course, but America's irrational fear of Communism has surely been one of the causes of tension from the early years until now.