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Whose Nukes to Worry About?

North Korea carried out its fifth nuclear test on Friday, September 9.  President Obama has condemned the action while the Pentagon called it a “serious provocation.”

Ho-hum, here we go again.

Every year America pays its vassal-state South Korea huge sums of U.S. taxpayer money to mount 300,000-man-strong military “games” that threaten North Korea.  North Koreans view images that never seem to make it to U.S. kitchen tables:  hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of U.S. armaments swarming in from the sea, hundreds of tanks and thousands of troops–their flyboysturrets and rifles pointed north—and nuclear-capable U.S. warplanes screaming overhead.

But when a young dictator straight out of central casting responds to U.S. threats with an underground test on North Korea’s founding day, it’s the #1 first story on the front page of the New York Times.

Let’s connect some dots.  Washington and their note takers in the American press constantly tell us that crazies in Pyongyang and Tehran are nuclear
threats.  The misplaced, but easily sold, fears of the “North Korean missile threat” and the “Iran missile threat” allows the Pentagon to install “defensive” missile systems in South Korea and the Ukraine which are actually offensive systems targeting Beijing and Moscow.

We need to look beyond the simplistic, race-based cartoon-like scaremongering to see that far more reality-based and frightening is the nuclear threat posed by the U.S.  President Obama—the Nobel Prize winner who pledged to lead a nuclear-free world—has committed over $1Trillion dollars to modernize America’s nuclear arsenal.  Almost unreported by the press, we have been spending a bundle to make nukes “usable,” by miniaturizing them.  And to top it off, Obama has approved a “first use” option for the U.S.

Forget the tin-pot dictator with a bad crewcut who leads an impoverished country.  Here’s for some really scary reading:

Obama’s Trillion-Dollar Nuclear-Arms Train Wreck

Obama plans to retain first-use nuclear option

New U.S. Nuclear Bomb Moves Closer to Full-Scale Production

THAAD: A Major Security Risk for the ROK