Kim Yo-jong Calls for Building More Nuclear Weapons as U.S. Submarine Visits Busan Port
|If anyone cares, Kim Yo-jong is out make nuclear threats again:
Kim Yo-jong, the influential sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, vowed Tuesday to “continuously and limitlessly” bolster the North’s nuclear war deterrent against what it called U.S. threats, denouncing the arrival of a U.S. nuclear-powered submarine in South Korea.
The remark came a day after the 7,800-ton USS Vermont entered a major naval base in Busan, 320 kilometers southeast of Seoul, to replenish supplies and provide rest for crew members.
“The DPRK’s nuclear war deterrent to cope with and contain various threats from outside is bound to be bolstered up both in quality and quantity continuously and limitlessly as the security of the state is constantly exposed to the U.S. nuclear threat and blackmail,” Kim said in a statement carried by the North’s Korean Central News Agency (KCNA).
You can read more at the link.
The Americans should stop being such arses towards South Korea if the US wants South Koreans to help rebuild the US navy to keep up with China’s naval expansion.
1. If America wants South Korea’s help, they will pay for it. South Korea is happy with this arrangement.
2. It appears America doesn’t want to rebuild the navy or keep up with China. The Age of Ships is over. Management knows this. Nobody wants to give up power, so they have to pretend it is not. It will all officially end when the first swarm of something cheap and plentiful sinks a fleet. Then everyone will pretend they didn’t see it coming.
Power will be projected by unmanned hypersonic drones. They will be based on well-protected land and reach anywhere in the world faster than an attack can be launched off a nearby carrier.
If one looks at it the right way, Korea might have been tricked into buying a dilapidated shipyard with little future.
Looks like you’re wrong again Chickenhead.
At the World’s Largest Shipyard, U.S. Courts an Ally to Face Up to China
https://www.wsj.com/world/asia/us-south-korea-shipyard-china-30aa2b11