Quote:
Originally Posted by dillfly2000
Think Kim is scared because of the Syria thing? He might have thought it was all talk until then.
Maybe, maybe not
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Maybe this "theater" did specially for him.
Quote:
Originally Posted by MrBaldBastard
says who? the same people that said he didn't have any nukes? or the same ones that said he had no icbms?
My guess straight up would be.. if Russia has it, North Korea has it. Simply because there are too many Russians willing to exchange a bag of potatoes for what ever you want them to get.
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Nuclear NK it is the threat for Russia too. You of course brainwashed but read the press.
North Korea’s Missile Success Is Linked to Ukrainian Plant, Investigators Say - The New York Times
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/14/w...e-factory.html
DID UKRAINE PROVIDE ROCKET ENGINES TO NORTH KOREA FOR ITS NUCLEAR MISSILE PROGRAM?
Did Ukraine Provide Rocket Engines to North Korea For Its Nuclear Missile Program?
How North Korea Built a Nuclear Arsenal on the Ashes of the Soviet Union
Viktor Moisa, a retired rocket scientist, welcomed the North Koreans to his institute in eastern Ukraine just as he would with any other guests. He took them upstairs to the showroom of Soviet satellites and rocket engines, the pride of the institute’s collection. Then they went out to the yard, where an array of parts for ballistic missiles were on display. This was in the early 2000s, well before North Korea would test its first nuclear bomb in 2006. So the visitors’ interest in missile technology did not arouse Moisa’s suspicion. “They came as tourists,” he told TIME on a breezy afternoon last fall. “At least that’s how they presented themselves.”
Did Ukrainian Scientists Arm North Korea'''s Nuclear Power? | Time
Ending Secrecy, Israel Says It Bombed Syrian Reactor in 2007 - The New York Times
Mar 21, 2018 - The destruction of the nuclear plant in 2007 was well known in the rest of the world, but the Israeli news media was banned from reporting on it until now. ... awoke in a kind of time warp to blaring headlines and dramatic video of the destruction of the reactor, which was supplied to Syria by North Korea.
Arguments have also surfaced over whether discovery of the Syrian reactor was an intelligence coup or a failure. The definitive intelligence came so late that Israel had to scramble to destroy the facility before it became operational.Amos Yadlin, the military intelligence chief at the time, told reporters on Wednesday that Israel had only the vaguest idea what was happening until months before the attack. Comparing the effort to a jigsaw puzzle, Mr. Yadlin said, “If you basically say that 1,000 parts are giving you a good picture, in 2006, we had, like, 50 parts, only the first suspicions that there is a nuclear program in Syria.” Mr. Yadlin, who now directs the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv, said that a Mossad operation yielded something like “500 parts of the puzzle.” Then “we immediately understood that we are facing a project of a plutonium nuclear reactor which had only one purpose: to produce a nuclear bomb.” From that point, he said, Israel assessed correctly that it had six to nine months to strike before the reactor became operational.According to in The New Yorker, the breakthrough came in March 2007 when Mossad agents raided the Vienna home of Ibrahim Othman, the head of the Syrian Atomic Energy Commission, and extracted valuable information from his computer.Israeli officials calculated that since so few people in Syria knew of the reactor, if Israel carried out an attack and did not take responsibility, Mr. Assad could deny it had happened and not strike back.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/21/w...r-reactor.html