There
is a noticeable tendency for tensions between Pyongyang and Seoul to flare up
in the spring. Last year North Korea
sealed the border, closed factories in the Kaesong Industrial Zone and
denounced US-ROKA exercises as a provocation.
Said military exercises occur every year. Two years ago, North Korea announced it would
resume nuclear tests, and the US Navy dispatched Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS
George Washington to South Korea in response. Well, last week, on Sunday March 30, North
Korea fired artillery into the ocean, over the armistice line, and the Southern
Navy responded in kind. Then on Monday
March 31 the South Korean Defense Ministry announced they had recovered a
crashed North Korean drone. These events
are nothing new, but later in the week Prime Minister of Japan Abe Shinzo
ordered the Marine Self-Defense Force to patrol the Sea of Japan with an
AEGIS-equipped destroyer and shoot down any North Korean missiles bringing a
new factor into the mix: the Japanese might actually do something. Previously, Japan was the least powerful
party interested in the tension on the Korean peninsula. However, if the Japanese were to actually
shoot down a North Korean device the rest of the region would have to take them
more seriously.
Showing posts with label US Navy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US Navy. Show all posts
Tuesday, April 8, 2014
Thursday, March 13, 2014
3/11 Three Years On Part 3: In Which I Write about Radiation
I said in “3/11
Three Years On Part 1” that I would not write about radiation because enough
people had written about it, and I would rather write about other effects of
the earthquake that I happen to feel personally about. Well, that was before I read anyone else’s
thoughts on the anniversary of the Triple Disasters and changed my mind. I know that the nuclear disaster has
overshadows the others, and I have understood this since March 2011. Hell, that is the reason I initially decided
not to write about Fukushima. But ye gods.
From some of the chatter, and you all know if this applies to you or
not, one would think the nuclear disaster was the only significant consequence
of the earthquake. I believe the nuclear
disaster is the most significant consequence, so I do understand all the
attention it gets. Or rather, I would be
able to if it were not for the sheer ignorance that permeates so much of what
has been written about Fukushima.
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