Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Perhaps North Korea's' Military Could Use Some Rust-eze



The Pentagon in March released a report on the state of North Korea's military. The conclusion reached while the government continues its military first obsession in reality its conventional forces material are rusting away like some many old cars.
The Pentagon released in March its annual North Korean report, a 22-page assessment of the hermit regime's military strategy. The report makes it clear that Pyongyang's ships, planes, and armored vehicles are old and obsolete — and despite North Korea's "military-first" economic strategy, there's no money for upgrades.
The Pentagon is remarkably downbeat on the state of North Korean conventional forces — to the point of being dismissive and repeatedly referring to the North Korea People's Army as "antiquated" and "outdated."

 Remember these are the same bozos that threaten to turn unleash a reign of fire on South Korea and to turn America into a nuclear wasteland.

  Atomic insurance policy
President Kim Jong-un's top priority is his own survival. His regime threatens violence in order to extort concessions from the rest of the world, meanwhile relying on its atomic weapons to deter foreign military intervention.
North Korea conducted its third nuke test in February 2013.
Pyongyang has also invested a lot of time and money in developing ballistic missiles — and for good reason. The new Hwasong-13 intercontinental ballistic missiles, derived from primitive Scud rockets, might in theory be able to reach the United States.
The missiles deliver the nukes that help keep the regime alive "absent normalized relations with the international community," according to the report.
So, as its citizens starve and the economy falls into ruin the king doughnut eater works to insure his and his families survival.



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