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Thursday, November 30, 2017

The North Korea dilemma and the lesson of Pearl Harbor



The North Korea dilemma and the lesson of Pearl Harbor

Stephen BryenBy STEPHEN BRYEN NOVEMBER 29, 2017

If North Korea launched a missile with a nuclear weapon toward an American city or military installation, how much warning time would the US have? It remains unclear, but with the latest North Korean launch, we can be sure that warning time is decreasing and the threat of war is increasing – perhaps in tandem, as North Korean technological prowess grows.

This is the high-anxiety situation that faces the US President, Secretary of Defense and Joint Chiefs of Staff. It is not new.

The North Korean problem evokes the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941 (December 8 in Japan). In a few days, the United States will remember those who perished on that fateful day 76 years ago. But beyond the memorials, it is worth examining the situation prior to the war and consider lessons that might relate to today’s problem.

In the 1930s, the US was not the dominant force in the Pacific. Our land forces were small and dispersed, and our naval force was made up mostly of old ships that were no match for Japan’s fleet. As the ‘30s and the Japanese threat progressed, Americans became more – not less – isolationist and willing to turn a blind eye to our westernmost holdings.

Congress and the administration, however, were not. In 1934, Congress passed the Vinson-Trammel Act, providing emergency appropriations to build 65 destroyers, 30 submarines, one aircraft carrier, and six cruisers.  In 1937 and 1938, naval expansion received another boost with additional authorizing legislation, and in 1940 Congress passed the Two-Ocean Navy Act – also known as the 70 Percent Act because it increased the size of the navy by 70%. At the very height of the influence of the isolationist America First Committee, Congress nonetheless approved seven new battleships, 18 aircraft carriers, 29 cruisers, 115 destroyers and 42 new submarines. By then, America was expecting big trouble on two fronts and was ready to get ready. But Congress was late – most of these ships would not come online until 1943.

At present, there is no strong Congressional activity, or any proposal from the administration that would upgrade the design of an area-wide explosive vehicle to knock down enemy missiles
If there is an analogy, it is that the United States can see the missile threat from North Korea rising – as it saw the threat from Japan rising – but has not even reached 1934 in planning to meet it.

The US has not developed defenses that can be considered sufficiently reliable or capable against a multiple North Korean missile launch. The US is heavily invested in hit-to-kill technology, meaning the enemy missile would be destroyed by a high-speed projectile that rams it directly. This compares to an area-wide explosion designed to be used against aircraft, exploding relatively near the threat, releasing hard pellets (often made from tungsten carbide) with explosive force that rip up the incoming aircraft.

The benefit of hit-to-kill is that it would cause less collateral damage than using an area-wide explosion in space. The downside is that hit-to-kill is a largely unproven and possibly inadequate missile defense array that does not cover all possible targets and may not work.

At present, there is no strong Congressional activity, or any proposal from the administration that would upgrade the design of an area-wide explosive vehicle to knock down enemy missiles.

There has long been a debate whether Roosevelt “let” the Pearl Harbor debacle happen to provide him with the political room to declare war on Japan, knowing the Axis would also be obliged to declare war on the United States.

Recent research shows that the US government certainly had a plan to be provocative, definitely had enough intercepts to know an attack was coming, and that one of the targets was Hawaii and Pearl Harbor.  
The admiral in charge of the fleet in Hawaii, RA Husband E. Kimmel, and LTG Walter Short, were held accountable, relieved of duty and demoted in rank on December 16, 1941. 
While there is evidence that important intelligence was not shared with them, it is also true that both failed to prepare Pearl Harbor for a possible attack and did nothing to move ships out of harm’s way, or even man anti-aircraft systems and pay attention to radar scans that showed the Japanese air armada heading for them.

The US cannot afford the same failures when the threat is nuclear.

Because of the shortcoming of missile defense and the fact that North Korea seems unresponsive to persuasion in the form of three aircraft carrier task forces and sorties by B-1 bombers off the North Korean coast, President Trump’s options are bleak: wait for a real North Korean attack with the risk of something far worse than Pearl Harbor, or preempt if preparations look threatening. No matter how you look at it, the threat is circa 1941, while our preparations are stuck in the mid-1930s.

Taking a lesson from history, meanwhile, Hawaii is restarting regular tests of its air raid siren system, last heard from during the Cold War.

Stephen Bryen and Shoshana Bryen co-authored this article. Shoshana Bryen is Senior Director of the Jewish Policy Center and has more than 30 years experience as a defense policy analyst.

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Wednesday, November 29, 2017

DPRK missile launch, ‘do all it can’ to prevent escalation UN


After DPRK missile launch, UN political chief urges Security Council to ‘do all it can’ to prevent escalation

Security Council Meeting on Non-proliferation/Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. UN Photo/Rick Bajornas

29 November 2017 – Following the latest ballistic missile launch by the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), which its official media claimed is “capable of striking the whole mainland of the United States,” the top United Nations political affairs official on Wednesday urged Security Council members to unite in preventing an escalation.

“Given the grave risks associated with any military confrontation, in exercise of its primary responsibility the Security Council needs to do all it can to prevent an escalation. Unity in the Security Council is critical,” said Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs Jeffrey Feltman in an emergency meeting – the 13th time the Council has met to discuss the DPRK in 2017.

The UN political chief’s appeal came after Secretary-General António Guterres had earlier “strongly condemned” the ballistic missile launch, which, according to news reports, landed in the Sea of Japan.

A statement issued Tuesday night by Mr. Guterres' spokesman said: “This is a clear violation Security Council resolutions and shows complete disregard for the united view of the international community.”

“The Secretary-General urges the DPRK to desist from taking any further destabilizing steps. [He] reaffirms his commitment to working with all parties to reduce tensions,” the statement concluded.

Solutions to tensions caused by DPR Korea’s repeated missile tests can only be political
 Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs Feltman
In his briefing to the Council Wednesday evening, Mr. Feltman said that, according to the DPRK’s official news agency and various governmental sources, the north Asian country launched a ballistic missile, which it termed an “intercontinental ballistic rocket Hwasong-15.”

The missile was reportedly launched from an area north of the capital, Pyongyang, covering about 950 kilometres (km) and reaching an apogee of around 4,500 km, before impacting into the sea in Japan’s exclusive economic zone, he said.

These parameters indicate that, if flown on a standard trajectory, the missile as configured would have a range in excess of 13,000 km.

This is the DPRK’s third test of a ballistic missile of apparent intercontinental range in less than six months and its 20th ballistic missile launch this year.

The official media claimed the DPRK was now “capable of striking the whole mainland of the US” and that the DPRK had “finally realized the great historic cause of completing the state nuclear force, the cause of building a rocket power.”

The DPRK’s repeated nuclear and missile tests over the past two years have created great tension on the Korean Peninsula and beyond, Mr. Feltman said, stressing that this dynamic must be reversed and the solution can only be political.

Security Council unity would create an opportunity for sustained diplomatic engagement – an opportunity that must be seized in these dangerous times to seek off-ramps and work to create conditions for negotiations, he added.

This morning, Mr. Feltman called a meeting with the DPRK Permanent Representative to the UN to deliver the UN Secretary-General’s message. During the meeting, Mr. Feltman stressed that “there is nothing more dangerous to peace and security in the world than what is happening now on the Korean Peninsula.”

Turning to the humanitarian situation in the DPRK, Mr. Feltman said that the needs are increasing and food security remains a critical concern for 70 per cent of the population. Member States are again reminded of the need to support the life-saving activities carried out by humanitarian organizations in the country.

Also briefing the Council was Sebastiano Cardi of Italy, the Chair of the 1718 DPRK Sanctions Committee, which facilitates implementation of the provisions of all relevant resolutions – from 1718 (2006) to the latest 2375 (2017). He said that following the adoption of resolution 2375 on 11 September this year, which significantly expanded the scope of the sanctions regime, the Committee has been engaged in facilitating implementation of all sanctions measures and is continuing its efforts in this regard.

As of today, the Committee has received 102 national implementation reports on resolution 2270 (2016), 89 on resolution 2321 (2016) and 31 on resolution 2371 (2017). These submission rates are much higher than under previous resolutions regarding the DPRK, he said.

However, he recalled that resolution 2375 (2017) requires all Member States to submit their national implementation reports within 90 days of its adoption, that is by 12 December 2017.

News Tracker: past stories on this issue
Don’t let security crisis overshadow human rights situation in DPR Korea – UN expert

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மாவீரர் தின அமைப்பாளர்கள் மீது பாய சிங்களம் திட்டம்


Tuesday, November 28, 2017

ENB Poster Pope And Miyanmar வத்திக்கான் துரோகம்!


ஈழத்தில் மாவீரர் நினைவேந்தல் நிகழ்வுகள்





கிழக்கில்








வடக்கில்


ஈழத்தில் மாவீரர் நினைவேந்தல் நிகழ்வுகள்

Tuesday, November 28, 2017 - 06:00 தினகரன்

வடக்கு, கிழக்கெங்கும் உணர்வுபூர்வ அனுஷ்டிப்பு

வடக்கு, கிழக்கில் மாவீரர் தினம் நேற்று (27) உணர்வுபூர்வமாக அனுஷ்டிக்கப்பட்டது. வடக்கு, கிழக்கு மாகாணங்களில் உள்ள மாவீரர் துயிலும் இல்லங்கள் மற்றும் பல்கலைக்கழகங்களில் நினைவேந்தல் நிகழ்வுகள் இடம்பெற்றதுடன், உயிரிழந்த உறவுகளை நினைத்து பலரும் கண்ணீர்விட்டு அஞ்சலி செலுத்தியமை உருக்கமான காட்சியாக அமைந்திருந்தது.

மாவீரர் வாரத்தின் இறுதிநாளான நேற்று (27) மாலை 6.05 மணிக்கு சகல துயிலும் இல்லங்களிலும் சுடர் ஏற்றி அஞ்சலி செலுத்தப்பட்டன.

கிளிநொச்சி கனகபுரம், முழங்காவில் மாவீரர் துயிலும் இல்லங்கள், யாழ் கோப்பாய் மற்றும் உடுத்துறை துயிலும் இல்லங்கள், முல்லைத்தீவு தேராவில், முள்ளியவளை, இரணைப்பாலை உள்ளிட்ட மாவீரர் துயிலும் இல்லங்களிலும், மன்னாரில் ஆட்காட்டி, பண்டிவி ரிச்சான் துயிலும் இல்லங்களிலும், வவுனியா ஈச்சங்குளம் துயிலும் இல்லத்திலும், கிழக்கின் வாகரை கண்டலடி துயிலும் இல்லம், திருகோணமலை சம்பூர் ஆலங்குளம் துயிலும் இல்லம், அம்பாறை கஞ்சிகுடிச்சாறு மாவீரர் துயிலும் இல்லங்களிலும் மாவீரர் தினம் அனுஷ்டிக்கப்பட்டன.




முன்னதாக யாழ் பல்கலைக்கழகத்தில் அமைந்துள்ள நினைவுத் தூபியில் காலை அஞ்சலி நிகழ்வுகள் இடம்பெற்றன. விடுதலைப் புலிகளின் தலைவர் பிரபாகரனின் பிறந்தநாளை முன்னிட்டு சுவரொட்டிகள் பல்கலைக்கழக வளாகத்தில் ஒட்டப்பட்டிருந்த நிலையில், நினைவுத்தூபியை சுற்றி மஞ்சள், சிவப்புநிற கொடிகள் கட்டி அலங்கரிக்கப்பட்டிருந்தன. யாழ் குடாநாட்டில் பெய்துவரும் மழையையும் பொருட்படுத்தாது பல்கலைக்கழக மாணவர்களும், பல்கலைக்கழக பணியாளர்களும் நினைவுத் தூபிக்கு வரிசையில் நின்று மலரஞ்சலி செலுத்தினர்.

அதேநேரம், வடமாகாணசபை உறுப்பினர்கள் உள்ளிட்ட குழுவினர் கோப்பாயில் மாவீரர் துயிலும் இல்லம் அமைந்திருந்த பகுதிக்கு அருகில் சுடர் ஏற்றி அஞ்சலி செலுத்தியிருந்ததுடன், இக்குழுவினர் நல்லூர் பின்வீதியில் அமைந்துள்ள திலீபனின் நினைவிடத்திலும் சுடர் ஏற்றி அஞ்சலி செலுத்தியிருந்தனர்.

கே.வசந்தரூபன், பாஸ்கரன், தமிழ்ச்​ செல்வன், சுமித்தி தங்கராசா, எஸ்.ரவிசாந்த்

kopai
கோப்பாய்

chatty
சாட்டி

uduthurai
உடுத்துறை
uduthurai1
வல்வெட்டித்துறை

vvt
kanagapuram
kanagapuram1
கனகபுரம்

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முள்ளியவளை

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முள்ளிவாய்க்கால்

மன்னார் - பெரியபண்டிவிரிச்சான்..

mannar
மன்னார் - ஆண்டாங்குளம் ..

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கஞ்சிக்குடிச்சாறு

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