Good cop, bad cop and the atomic bomb

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Have you wondered why our Secretary of State, Rex Tillerson is talking about meeting with the North Koreans and President Trump is threatening nuclear annihilation… both at the same time? Do you wonder why that all we have done in the past is makes lots of noisy threats against North Korea while they retaliate in the same way?

Obviously these threats are dangerous, as either side could get carried away and first strike in the name of peace. That will truly be a disaster and will likely cost many millions of people their lives, plus we’ll have large numbers of people dying from radiation poisoning in southern China, South Korea and possibly Japan, just 650 miles away!

The Chinese, South Korean, Russian and Japanese governments are not happy at that prospect.

So what I think is going on is that we have a good cop, bad cop routine where President Trump is the bad cop, and Rex Tillerson may secretly visit North Korea, as he happens to be in that part of the world, and play the good cop.

He’ll say that our president is unhinged, so North Korea better reach an agreement or else… . Unless we offer a way out, it won’t work. We may never find out, especially if the discussions fail. It will become a top secret, to avoid embarrassment.

What isn’t reported is a major concern because of this story. The North Koreans used to get substantial revenues from mining coal and sending it to China. The essence, is that they are very good at digging tunnels.

I think that it’s likely that they have tunnels under our bases in South Korea and also under Seoul. When and if, we attack them they will detonate some of their 30-60 nuclear bombs in those tunnels and we’ll lose 30,000 American soldiers and sailors plus many millions of South Koreans in Seoul! All in ten seconds. They don’t need missiles. The bombs are almost certainly sitting there awaiting a signal.

Do you think that all of the North Korean’s many nuclear weapons are just sitting on a shelf somewhere, or have been strategically deployed for immediate use if necessary?

I think that our NSA, CIA and other agencies are well aware of this so the stalemate will be just that, a stalemate, and North Korea will finally develop an effective defense against our insane foreign policy… long range ICBMs with pinpoint accuracy.

I doubt that our interceptors will get all of them as they won’t having homing beacons.

I do not think that Kim Jong-un is as stupid and reckless, as the public believes –

1 We are still technically at (undeclared) war with North Korea. There was never a peace agreement, only an armistice or truce.

2 I’m sure that he has a deep underground bunker near the Yalu river across from China so we won’t drop an atomic bomb on him there. The Chinese will not like their citizens across the river vaporized.

FYI, that’s the river that tons of textiles cross over in trucks to North Korea to be made into garments, labeled as “Made in China” and then shipped here as North Korean products are banned. Our government doesn’t officially know.

Watch this BBC report, dated 9/12/17

He has seen how we depose and kill our “friends” such Colonel Muammar Gaddafi.

Colonel Gaddafi gave up his nuclear ambitions after we threatened him. He even allowed our CIA to have a black site in Libya where his people would torture captives on the CIA’s behalf. We then supported the “uprising” and he died. Mrs. Clinton gleefully announced “… we came, we saw, he died!” See the YouTube video below. It’s only 10 seconds.

4 He is confident that the more powerful North Korea is, the less likely that we’ll do a first strike. That’s why he is “threatening us,” not that he would dare a first strike.

On Guy Fawkes night in 1950, President Truman transferred nine Mark 4 nuclear bombs to the Air Force’s 9th Bomb Group in Guam for potential use against North Korea. Fortunately, he didn’t give the order to use them. As of yesterday, North Korea is threatening Guam. They haven’t forgotten.

The North Koreans have long memories and have a deep fear of the United States government. Is it any wonder that other countries don’t trust us either? So let’s hope that we can negotiate our way out of this.

We must.