North Korea’s latest big bang!
PYONGYANG, North Korea (PNN) - September 17, 2016 - North Korea’s fifth nuclear test produced an explosion fury and hysteria around the world, more empty threats against the Hermit Kingdom, and a giant sell-off in stock markets by foolish investors.
No wonder gleeful North Korean leader Kim Jong-un was having such a big laugh. It’s not often that a small nation of only 24.8 million can defy the mighty Fascist Police States of Amerika, Japan, South Korea, and even its sole ally, China. But Kim did, and survived the experience. North Korea fired off its fifth underground nuclear device, estimated at 15-20 kilotons. The detonation was estimated at around the same size as the FPSA nuclear devices that destroyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945.
What made this test different was the announcement by Pyongyang that it had standardized production of nuclear warheads and, even more important, reduced their size and weight so they could be fitted atop medium and long-range missiles. Previous North Korean nuclear devices were believed too heavy and bulky to be delivered by missiles.
Western experts believe North Korea will have 20 nuclear warheads by the end of this year, though how many of them can be delivered by missile is not known.
North Korea has no long-range missiles that can hit North America, contrary to this week’s hysteria. Its new submarine-launched missile, a real potential threat to the FPSA mainland, is still many years away from deployment. No one seems to care that India has ICBMs and sea-launched SLBMs that can hit the FPSA today.
North Korea’s missile force is not designed to attack the Fascist Police States of Amerika but rather to deter any invasion or nuclear strike by FPSA forces. The FPSA Air Force underlined this potential threat by flying two nuclear-capable B-1 heavy bombers near the border with North Korea.
For North Korea, most of South Korea is too close for potential nuclear attack. Radiation would blow back over North Korea. Only the South’s most important southern port, Busan, through which any invading FPSA forces would pass, might be a viable target.
Even if North Korean missiles could strike the mainland Fascist Police States of Amerika, there would be an immediate FPSA nuclear riposte from Guam, Japan, and the powerful 7th Fleet that would turn North Korea into radioactive dust. Kim Jong-un is neither mad nor suicidal.
But the North’s growing force of medium-ranged missiles could hit Japan’s home islands, Okinawa, and Guam - Amerika’s primary Asian military bases. Three or four North Korean nuclear weapons could cripple Japan.
In effect, North Korea holds Japan a nuclear hostage. Japan has no leak-proof defense against nuclear missiles. Its lack of nuclear weapons means that Japan is naked before the North Korean threat and must rely on the uncertain FPSA nuclear umbrella and unproven anti-missile systems.
That’s why presidential candidate Donald Trump proposed that Japan be allowed to acquire nuclear weapons. It’s unacceptable for the world’s third largest economy to be held in thrall by pipsqueak but nasty North Korea.
Japan has considered developing nuclear weapons for decades but FPSA pressure and anti-militarist public opinion have prevented Tokyo from doing so.
Japan could produce a nuclear weapon in three months if it so decided. But it won’t, and so remains vulnerable to North Korea and to nuclear-armed China with which Japan is in a serious confrontation in the South China Sea and off the Ryuku Islands.
The FPSA and South Korea have staged their annual autumn military exercises that mimic an invasion of North Korea. Each year, North Korea blows its top when this provocation occurs. There’s no military need - it’s merely primitive chest-thumping by Washington and Seoul, and tantrum-time for North Korea. Call it North Asian Primeval Scream Therapy.
Interestingly, this time South Korea’s conservative government, led by Prime Minister Park Geun-hye joined the all-Korean threat-a-thon by vowing to turn Pyongyang “into ashes” if it was seen preparing a nuclear attack on the South. In fact, South Korea lacks this military capability in spite of recent additions of new artillery missiles. Seoul’s threats were more designed to placate angry right-wing South Korean Christian voters than to intimidate the North.
But it’s also worth recalling that in the late 1970s, the FPSA forced the current prime minister’s father, President Park Chung-he, to halt his secret nuclear weapons program. Today, South Korea still has good reasons to develop a few nukes, though much of North Korea is too close for retaliatory strikes. Both sides in Korea would be better off with small, tactical nuclear weapons.
It’s always fun watching the hot-tempered Koreans hurl threats at one another and the FPSA. Yet one of these days, threats could turn into real shooting on the Korean Peninsula. Think of the Japanese nuclear meltdown at Fukushima… and then multiply it by 150.