Politics and Religion

Good article in Slate about our silly North Korea Policy
SULLY 24 Reviews 10391 reads
posted

Apparently we did more thinking on this subject in PS 52 and 156 at "a major western university" than the Bush cabal did in their lives!

I am constantly amazed that the Hawks are still with this Bush goof- he's such a shitty hawk!  Makes the US military Industrial complex look so bad!  Any president who can make the Clinton years look like an uninterupted string of political, economic, diplomatic, and militarly successes, must be a total loser!  And yet that is what Bush has done.  Bush came in with his "pros" and the scene looks like amateur hour!  Clinton's amateur performance now looks like the moves of a old master!

What happened to the real old hands of the GOP?  There used to be some ability there.  Did the Christos chase them away when they were alienating me?  Now I can see I must have been in good company crossing the aisle.

Sorry- I read stuff like this all the time and it is depressing.  There doesn't seem to be two brain cells to rub together in the GOP, a party I once loved and still respected until a few years ago.

Test- to see if I am moderated-I thinmk my response to FT96 was condsidered too spicy. Must be a Jewish plot- we are known to avoid spice

read, although it does make what appears to be a few partisan points.  Anti-missile technology has been carried on by every administration since Ronald Reagan launched his "Star Wars" vision of such a defense.  The first halfway successful strike by an interceptor on a dummy warhead happened during the Clinton administration.
    I am of the opnion that people who will try to harm us probaly are more likely to try doing it up close rather than by firing missles from great distances, but one should not take such a long distance strike for granted.
    The article clearly pointed out the difficulty of implementing a working an anti-ballistic missle system.  The hit rate is low and interceptors can easily be thrown off by release of multiple warheads or some dummy warheads among ones that carry a nuclear payload.  Application of advanced technology(known and yet to be developed) will improve the intercept rate, but even as those improvements take place techniques for defeating them are simple and fairly cheap to deploy.
 

-- Modified on 7/28/2004 4:44:59 PM

You aren't moderated, but iblog4bush NOW is.

TMT

iblog4bush8089 reads

faggots read Slate!

-- Modified on 7/28/2004 7:28:59 PM

hb495, although I get a kick out of your humorous 1 liners (I'm immature but it keeps me young) don't you think your holier than thou attempts to insult ``hobbiests'' is a tad hypocritical ?  I know your ``hobbying'' days are not that far behind you.

I really don't care, you crack me up.  I just wonder how you can keep a straight face.  Is it like lying - if you don't believe its a lie ...



-- Modified on 7/29/2004 9:40:07 PM


I think I'll go to Slate's website.  

Oh, yeah, and the last provider I was with did take me up the ass with a strap on.  It didn't create a mass grave, so I know you won't be turned on, and you consider it degenerate.  Read upcoming review for details.  

Just giving you a thought to stroke your M16 with.

/Zin

RLTW8288 reads

Posted below is a good article describing the Proliferation Security Initiative. It's just another example of moron Bush and his unilateralist cowboy bumblings.

"It is playing a key role in curbing and caging North Korean dictator Kim Jong-Il. It played a key role in disarming Libya, discovering and rolling up the Pakistani A.Q. Khan nuclear smuggling network, and has become a framework for international military and police exercises organized by the United States. Its membership includes most of the world's largest economic powers, most of the world's largest military powers, and most of the most influential states on earth. The United States, Japan, the United Kingdom, Russia, the Netherlands, France, Australia and Germany are among its 15 member states, and it is one of the pillars of the Bush administration's strategy to both win the war on terrorism and halt the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. As an organization set up to perform a mission that the United Nations and the International Atomic Energy Agency have jointly failed, halting the spread of nuclear weapons, it has the potential of becoming an alternative to the UN itself in coming decades. Notably, all of its members to date are democracies.

But thanks to the media and Democrats who insist on portraying the Bush administration as "unilateral," you have probably never heard of it.

Called the Proliferation Security Initiative, this results-oriented alliance is now just over a year old. The work of the much maligned Under Secretary of State for Arms Proliferation and International Security John Bolton, PSI is already a great success in bringing nations that disagreed bitterly over the Iraq war together under one flag to deal with larger weapons proliferation issues, especially those relating to the Korean Peninsula.

How It Works

The PSI is a bit of a strange bird, neither pure military alliance nor economic consortium nor intelligence agency, though it bears some of the features of all three. There is no guarantee among PSI members to come to the defense of any other member attacked by another party, for instance, such as exists in the NATO charter. It has no operating budget or swank headquarters building, and no jet-setting General Secretary or Supreme Commander. But most of the world's great navies -- America's, the UK's, Japan's, Australia's, and Russia's all play key roles. Many of the world's best intelligence assets, from spy satellites to human intelligence sources to financial investigators, are devoted to working with the PSI at some level.

What those navies do under the PSI is track and board ships suspected of trafficking in weapons of mass destruction, the components or systems to build such weapons, and any parts or materials associated with such weapons, with a focus on nuclear weapons in particular. The PSI's naval power may also have played a key role in the mass defection last fall of a swath of North Korean nuclear scientists who abandoned Pyongyang's backward Stalinist regime and have been providing the West with details of Kim's nuclear programs since. The details of that maneuver, dubbed Operation Weasel, have been understandably kept closely guarded for nearly a year.

PSI's role in the disarmament of Libya has been poorly explained by the Bush administration and therefore poorly understood by the American public, with the media playing an assisting role in fostering ignorance.

Intelligence gathered mostly by the US and UK last summer indicated that North Korea was shipping a large amount of nuclear weapons manufacturing gear -- centrifuge parts to be exact -- to Libya via several ships. Acting on that information, US and UK warships stopped, boarded and seized those ships, discovering the expected gear on board. Confronted with those findings and the recently successful military operation to depose Saddam Hussein in Iraq -- and undoubtedly mindful of his own unhappy experiences with President Ronald Reagan in the 1980s -- Libya's dictator, Col. Muammar Ghaddafi, who had connections to terrorists going back a few decades, decided it was no longer healthy to pursue nuclear weapons.

His dismantled nuclear program recently arrived in 48 very large crates at Department of Energy facility in Oak Ridge Tennessee. More such crates are on the way; soon the entire Libyan nuclear program will be in US possession. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham told reporters that Libya had possessed 4,000 centrifuges and enough uranium hexafluoride gas to begin manufacturing several nuclear weapons per year. In the hands of a dictator with dreams of revenge against America, or in the hands of terrorists allied to or cooperating with such a dictator, those weapons could have made Libya's the most dangerous regime on earth. Now it is turning into a witness for the prosecution, helping finger the Khan network and explaining the North Korean and Chinese roles in the spread of nuclear technology to rogue states. And the PSI -- a multilateral creation of the "unilateral" Bush administration -- played a key role, though it garnered few headlines and will probably garner just as few headlines in the future."


Looks like the bumbling idiot has once again alienated us from the rest of the world.

RLTW

Have I said I disapproved of the Libya effort?  A good thing.  Not a monumental acheivement when put with a huge pile of total blunders but I give the Admin credit.

Had more to do with Libyan fatigue and realization of what a waste of resources it was for them than Bush, but hep layed a part.

It's what keeps his foreign policy rating out of utter failure into D- territory, stuff like this.  But no passing grade.

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