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  • 26
    Apr
    2013
    12:39am, EDT

    The art of war goes on display in South Korea

    Lee Jae-Won / Reuters

    Amphibious assault vehicles of the South Korean Marine Corps launch smoke bombs as they move to shore during a U.S.-South Korea joint landing operation drill in Pohang, about 230 miles southeast of Seoul, on April 26, 2013. The drill is part of the two countries' annual military training called Foal Eagle, which began on March 1 and runs until April 30.

    Tension has been fueled by North Korean anger over the imposition of U.N. sanctions after its last nuclear arms test in February. The two Koreas have been technically in a state of war since a truce that ended their conflict, which lasted from 1950 to 1953. 

    3 comments

    ROK Marines....Semper Fi.

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  • Updated
    16
    Apr
    2013
    8:01am, EDT

    Helicopter 'hard landing' near North Korea border injures 21 US military personnel

    A helicopter carrying Marines made a hard landing near Seoul while participating in joint military exercises with South Korea. All 21 Marines on board survived, though six of them remain hospitalized in stable condition.

    By Jason Cumming, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A U.S. Marine helicopter's "hard landing" near the North Korean border left 21 service members injured early Tuesday, officials said.

    The CH-53E Super Stallion chopper was "conducting routine flight operations" during an exercise near South Korea's Jipo-ri Range at the time of the incident, according to a military statement.

    All 21 personnel aboard were hospitalized but 15 were treated and released. Six remained in stable condition.

    Its crew was from the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit and is stationed in Okinawa, Japan.

    South Korea's Yonhap News Agency reported that the aircraft caught fire following the incident, which it said occurred about 55 miles north of Seoul. NBC News could not immediately independently verify those details.

    The military statement added: "Safety is a priority for all aircraft operations. The CH-53E has an excellent operational safety record. A comprehensive investigation will take place to determine the facts and circumstances surrounding this incident."

    Neighboring North Korea has threatened nuclear attacks on the United States, South Korea and Japan after new U.N. sanctions were imposed in response to its latest nuclear arms test in February.

    The North has also been angry about annual military exercises between U.S. and South Korean forces, describing them as a "hostile" act. The United States dispatched stealth bombers from their bases to take part. 

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related: 

    Kerry: China must do more to resolve N. Korean missile crisis

    Missile launch is N. Korea's exit strategy, analysts say

    Full North Korea coverage from NBC News

    This story was originally published on Tue Apr 16, 2013 4:02 AM EDT

    90 comments

    I hope everyone has a rapid recovery.

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  • 13
    Apr
    2013
    6:07am, EDT

    In Okinawa, the war isn't over: Protests aimed at US base expansion

    Kazuhiro Nogi / AFP - Getty Images, file

    Protesters demonstrate against the deployment of Osprey aircraft at Marine Corps Air Station Futenma in Okinawa during a Tokyo rally in November. More protests are planned over the large U.S. military presence on the island prefecture.

    By Arata Yamamoto and John Newland, NBC News

    TOKYO -- As Japan prepares to celebrate the 61st anniversary of the nation's return to sovereignty and the end of U.S. occupation after World War II, some members of one community are getting ready to protest.

    The Pentagon hopes to expand a facility in the seaside village of Henoko, Okinawa, as part of a plan to replace an existing base, and many residents aren't happy about it.

    "We would like the United States to take back with them as many of these bases as they can," said Ikuo Nishikawa, an activist and native of Henoko who owns a hardware store.

    Kyodo via Reuters, file

    A Marine Corps Osprey aircraft flies to land at Futenma air base in crowded Ginowan, Okinawa. Some city residents are bothered by the base, but some residents of the town of Henoko, where an expansion is planned to replace it, are angry as well.

    The Pentagon says 38,000 U.S. forces live in Japan, most of them in Okinawa, making up the largest American presence in the increasingly tense Pacific Rim. In addition to the 38,000 on shore, there are 11,000 service members based on ships, 5,000 civilian Defense Department workers and 43,000 family members.

    Although Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel earlier this month announced a plan to eventually return more than 2,500 acres of land to Okinawans, the last thing some islanders want to see is a larger base -- even though it would replace an existing one that is near the heart of a bigger city and thus considered by many to be a hazard.

    Nishikawa, 69, said he was initially open to the idea of a new base in the village. It might have brought him more business.

    But now he is worried, particularly since he started hearing people complain about noise from jets, crimes committed by servicemen and neighborhoods declining as more and more bars opened.

    "I thought of it as other people's business," Nishikawa said. "It didn't occur to me how a base could destroy your living environment, how much pain it could cause.

    "If you come here, this very area where we swim and catch our fish and shellfish, where we take our children to play, will be transformed into a military base. Even today, the two sides of our community are bases -- on the northern side and on the mountainside. And then with this new base, even our ocean will be occupied by a military base."

    Despite the objections, Nishikawa concedes that many people in Okinawa rely on U.S. personnel and their families for their livelihoods and wouldn't think of protesting expansion of a base.

    On a larger scale, the United States and Japan see a major presence in the country as critical to the security of both, and they work closely together to maintain it. The April 5 announcement included a promise from Hagel that "the United States will consolidate our forces over time and reduce our impact on the most populated parts of Okinawa."

    Nonetheless, the fact that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is in favor of the Henoko expansion makes him and his government the target for much of the anger vented by Okinawans, some of whom say Abe is simply ignoring them. 

    "As someone born and raised here, it's hard to accept," Nishikawa said. "The fact that the Japanese government has pushed through this proposal, it's a mockery against the people of Okinawa."

    Okinawa's governor, Hirokazu Nakaima, has no qualms about stating his opinion on the matter. "The people of Okinawa prefecture are greatly dissatisfied," he said during an October panel discussion in Washington. "People have been requesting to relocate the bases for 15 or 16 years … but it's not happening."

    Jiji Press / AFP - Getty Images, file

    Okinawa Gov. Hirokazu Nakaima, shown speaking to reporters in October, has been vocal in his opposition of U.S. and Japanese government plans to expand a base in the seaside village of Henoko.

    However, barring a sudden change of heart by the U.S., Okinawa's leaders or the central government, a fight for the future of Henoko seems certain to rage on, and U.S. forces will continue to be stationed on the island in large numbers in case real battles replace political ones.

    There's not much the armed forces can do about the sensitive issue except try to foster good will on Okinawa, said Capt. Richard Ulsh, a Marine Corps spokesman at the Pentagon.

    "We do our best to reach out to the people of Okinawa and try to help them understand, one, how important that island itself is to the Asia-Pacific region and, two, how important their support is to us ... [and] the major partner that Japan really is," he said.

    All the outreach in the world may not be enough to appease islanders who are angry about bases and angry at their own government.

    "As someone from Okinawa, I want to remind [Tokyo] about the last big war," said Nishikawa, the hardware store owner. "In the name of national interest, in order to prevent a battle on the mainland, 200,000 Okinawans were sacrificed.

    "With that in mind, why is the government continuing to hurt us still?"

    Related:

    2 US sailors sentenced to prison for rape of woman in Okinawa

    Japan's new PM vows tighter ties with the US

    Full Japan coverage from NBC News

    240 comments

    Well, when North Korea starts spurting missiles their way, who is the first country they will cry too...

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  • 9
    Apr
    2013
    10:15am, EDT

    2 US service members killed in Afghanistan helicopter crash

    Rahmat Gul/AP

    U.S. Black Hawk helicopters arrive to the scene after a NATO helicopter crashed in a field killing two American service members, near Gerakhel, eastern Afghanistan, on April 9.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Two American service members were killed in a helicopter crash Tuesday in eastern Afghanistan, the military said.

    A spokesman for the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force said Tuesday that there was no enemy activity in the area when the crash occurred and that the cause was under investigation.

    The helicopter went down in the Pachir Agam district of Nangarhar province, Reuters quoted Ahmad Zia Abdulzai, a spokesman for the governor's office, as saying.

     

     

    52 comments

    RIP and Thank You for your service. Standing for those who stood for us....

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  • 8
    Apr
    2013
    11:27am, EDT

    Airmen plucked from sea after Navy jet crashes near carrier

    Lt. Cmdr. Josh Hammond / U.S. Navy via Reuters

    Two F/A-18 Super Hornets, like the one that crashed Monday, are shown flying above the aircraft carrier USS Enterprise in October 2012.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A U.S. Navy fighter jet crashed into the northern Arabian Sea on Monday when an engine failed, but both crew members safely ejected, the military said.

    The F-18 Super Hornet was flying near the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower aircraft carrier when it lost power, the Navy said. 

    The unnamed airmen, members of Strike Fighter Squadron 103, based in Virginia Beach, Va., bailed out in time to come down safely in the water.

    Helicopter based search-and-rescue swimmers were able to pull the airmen from the water and bring them safely back aboard the ship, the Navy said.

    An investigation into the engine failure and crash is under way, officials said.

    The Eisenhower, part of the 5th Fleet and based in Norfolk Va., is on duty to provide maritime security in the Middle East, the Navy said.

    The air unit, whose planes carry a skull and crossbones logo on their tails, is better known by some as the Jolly Rogers.

    NBC News' Jim Miklaszewski and Courtney Kube contributed to this report.

    Related:

    US pilot killed in F-16 crash in Afghanistan

    US surveillance drone approached by Iranian fighter jet

    11 comments

    As a former carrier sailor myself (WestPac 1965-1969) I'm happy the crew managed to bail out in time and the helo was able to pick them up. It saddens me however, that these fine young sailors and Marines will never experience the joys of liberty in Olongapo...

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  • 4
    Apr
    2013
    11:31am, EDT

    US pilot killed in F-16 fighter jet crash in Afghanistan

    By Courtney Kube, Jim Miklaszewski and Jamieson Lesko, NBC News

    A U.S. military pilot was killed when his F-16 fighter jet crashed while on a night flight over mountainous terrain in Afghanistan, officials said Thursday.

    There was no indication of enemy fire in the area at the time of the Wednesday’s crash, in the east of the country.

    “While the cause of the crash is under investigation, initial reporting indicates there was no insurgent activity in the area at the time of the crash,” an official with the U.S.-led international coalition, ISAF, said in a statement.

    While there have been F-16 accidents and even one deadly crash recently - one crashed into the Adriatic earlier this year- such an incident is very rare in Afghanistan, where helicopters are more at risk.

    Meanwhile, officials in the country’s Ghazni province said 6 people were killed, including four local police force members, by a NATO airstrike on Wednesday evening.

    The Afghan Local Police (ALP) were attacked while patrolling in the village of Sulaimanzai, in the district of Deh Yak.

     

    37 comments

    One more too many. RIP.

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  • 4
    Apr
    2013
    4:09am, EDT

    What happens if North Korea gets out of hand? Here are some scenarios

    In response to North Korea's announcement that they will be deploying "small, light" nuclear strikes, the Pentagon has announced it is sending an anti-ballistic missile system to Guam. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    By M. Alex Johnson, staff writer, NBC News

    While political and military analysts sound pretty confident that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's threats are just bluster, you can't get around the fact that the region encompassing the Korean peninsula is one of the most heavily militarized places on Earth, home to three of the world's six-largest militaries.

    If the unthinkable were to happen, how would it play out?

    Leon Panetta, who stepped down as President Barack Obama's defense secretary in February, warned this week in an interview with CNBC that "we don't have as much insight as we should with regards to the inner workings of what happens in North Korea."

    But based on declassified U.S. and U.N. assessments and independent analyses by military scholars, we can make some educated guesses:


    How would North Korea attack?
    Probably with a massive ground assault backed by artillery fire. That's because North Korea's standing military, according to the best U.S. and U.N. intelligence assessments, is the fourth largest in the world, at 1.1 million members. South Korea's, by contrast, is about 690,000 strong.

    Library of Congress Federal Research Division

    That ratio — a manpower superiority of roughly 3-to-2 for the North — is remarkably consistent across calculations of the countries' weaponry, too. By about the same proportion, the North has more tanks, more artillery, more planes, more ships, more missiles. 

    In a 2008 report commissioned by the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Federal Research Division of the Library of Congress depicted North Korea as, in essence, one giant military installation (see map at right).

    How would South Korea respond?
    By being smarter and nimbler.

    Much of the North's equipment is seriously outdated, going back to its alliance with the former Soviet Union during the Cold War. 

    The South's weaponry is less extensive but far more advanced, thanks to modern equipment provided by the U.S. 

    "Overall, South Korea's armed forces have become one of the world's more capable militaries and present a formidable forward defense against any possible attack by North Korea," the British-based International Institute for Strategic Studies concluded in 2011.

    All of that presumes that North Korean troops could make it into the South in the first place. To get there, they would have to go through about 28,000 U.S. troops stationed along the Demilitarized Zone separating the two countries, supported by about 40,000 more just a short hop away in Japan and on a large military base in Guam.

    Doesn't Kim have China to back him up?
    In theory, yes, and that's no small matter. 

    China's 2.3-million-strong miitary is the world's biggest, outpacing the U.S.'s by almost 40 percent. In its annual report to Congress last year, the U.S. Defense Department didn't estimate how many Chinese forces might be based in North Korea, but it did outline the massive array of forces China is believed to have inside its own borders facing the Korean peninsula:

    The map at left depicts China's naval buildup around the Korean peninsula. The map at right details army deployments. Click each map for its full-size version.

    But it's not clear that China has the stomach for a fight. Beijing has signaled its displeasure with the North's recent provocations — just last month, it voted for a U.N. resolution to impose sanctions in response to North Korea's announcement of a nuclear test on Feb. 12.

    P.J. Crowley, an assistant secretary of state during Obama's first term, told NBC News that Kim's erratic behavior has created major "frustration" in Beijing, which he said "does not want to see an implosion of North Korea."

    The U.S., on the other hand, has made it clear that it will defend South Korea. To drive home the point, it sent F-22 stealth fighter jets to South Korea as part of military exercises in a show of force Sunday. And it has sent two warships to the western Pacific to watch for missiles and will soon send an advanced anti-ballistic missile system to its base on Guam, defense officials said.

    Military and political analysts say China doesn't want a showdown over the Koreas because then the superpowers' nuclear arsenals become a factor. The U.S. said in an unclassified 2010 report (.pdf) that its stockpile was about 5,100 warheads — more than 20 times that of China, which the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists estimated in 2011 at 240.

    How long could South Korea hold out?
    Much longer than the North.

    If North Korea were to employ nuclear weapons, it would impact U.S. troops and pressure Japan and South Korea to also consider obtaining nuclear weapons – something that could lead to an all-out arms race.  NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    To put it bluntly — as the CIA did in an economic assessment last month — North Korea is a mess internally. Industrial and power output have receded to pre-1990 levels, while frequent crop failures since a devastating famine in 1995 have compounded food shortages that have fueled chronic malnutrition. All that's keeping its people afloat are international food aid deliveries, mainly from China, which would almost certainly be disrupted or cut off in a war.

    South Korea, in sharp contrast, boasts a high-tech industrialized economy — one of the 20 biggest in the world, the CIA reported. It has numerous trading partners worldwide to keep it fed and supplied. And because its communications and transportation systems are among the best in the world, it would be much better placed to coordinate civil defense and to move people and material out of harm's way.

    So if a traditional assault is unwinnable, what are Kim's options?
    Very scary ones.

    The Center for International Studies and Research, a nonpartisan French research agency, calculated in October (.pdf) that the North can deploy "a full array of what are typically described as weapons of mass destruction" — one of the biggest chemical and biological stockpiles in the world at 2,500 to 5,000 metric tons, mostly tabun (a nerve agent) and mustard gas.

    In a technically secret process, South Korea is believed to have told the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons that it had destroyed its chemical weapons in 2008.

    And then there are North Korea's own nuclear weapons — the real wild card in the deck.

    U.S. officials and other researchers say North Korea may already have a few dozen warheads that could be fitted atop its vast fleet of ballistic missiles. They're fully capable of hitting targets in Japan, South Korea or elsewhere in the northern Pacific, the officials said.

    Kim may be bluffing, as his father and grandfather did before him. But those weapons mean he must always be taken seriously.

    Mission No. 1, Crowley said, is "figure out a way to denuclearize North Korea."

    Related:

    How do you solve a problem like North Korea? Three viewpoints

    US sends anti-missile system to Guam as N. Korea says 'moment of explosion' looms

    Full North Korea coverage from NBCNews.com

    405 comments

    Why doesn't Obama send in the drones? Oh I forgot, he's saving the drones for US citizens.

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  • Updated
    2
    Apr
    2013
    1:38am, EDT

    North Korea to restart Yongbyon nuclear reactor

    Reuters file

    A DigitalGlobe Satellite image shows construction at the North Korea's Yongbyon Nuclear complex on Nov. 2010.

    By Ju-min Park, Jack Kim and David Chance, Reuters

    SEOUL - North Korea will restart all nuclear facilities including its shuttered Yongbyon nuclear reactor, its official KCNA news service said on Tuesday.

    It will rebuild and restart nuclear facilities including its mothballed uranium enrichment facility and the 5 MW Yongbyon reactor which it closed in 2007, KCNA quoted a spokesman at North Korea's atomic energy agency as saying.

    It said the nuclear facilities would be used for both electricity and military uses.


    Earlier, North Korea's leader appeared to tamp down hostile rhetoric that had threatened impending war with the United States and South Korea in a key speech published Tuesday that implied the isolated country was shifting its focus to development.

    Pyongyang has launched relentless verbal attacks and threats against the United States and South Korea since new U.N. sanctions punishing it for its February nuclear test were adopted and during military drills by the South and U.S. forces.

    But the speech delivered on Sunday by Kim Jong-Un focused on how nuclear capability supported economic development although it accused the United States of seeking to drag North Korea into an arms race in a bid to hinder its economic improvement.

    "It is on the basis of a strong nuclear strength that peace and prosperity can exist and so can the happiness of people's lives," Kim said in the speech delivered to the central committee meeting of the ruling Workers Party of Korea and published in full on Tuesday.

    Threats from North Korea have prompted the United States to beef up its forces on the peninsula and station a warship off the Korean peninsula overnight.

    US Navy shifts destroyer in wake of North Korea missile threats

    North Korea had cut off hotlines between it, the United States, South Korea and the United Nations and threatened to close a joint economic zone it runs with the South. It put its missile forces on full alert and threatened U.S. bases in the Pacific and on the mainland.

    Most people in Seoul, South Korea think North Korean leader Kim Jong-un is bluffing, but the question is "why?" Experts say Jong-un is in the process of consolidating power and planning to eliminate his rivals. NBC's Richard Engel reports from Seoul, South Korea.

    The North has promised its citizens that it would become a strong and prosperous nation and is moving towards celebrations of the April 15 birthday of its founder Kim Il-sung, the grandfather of the current leader.

    "The fact that this was made at the Party central committee meeting, which is the highest policy setting organ, indicates an attempt to highlight economic problems and shift the focus from security to the economy," said Yang Moo-jin of University of North Korean Studies in Seoul.

    The fortress island fixed in North Korea's sights

    The 30-year old Kim, who took office in December 2011, said that no nuclear state had been invaded in modern history and that "the greater the nuclear attack capability, the greater the strength of the deterrent against an invasion."

    "Our nuclear strength is a reliable war deterrent and a guarantee to protect our sovereignty," he said. 

    This story was originally published on Tue Apr 2, 2013 1:38 AM EDT

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    102 comments

    That nuclear genie we let out of the bottle will continue to keep popping up until one day it will scare the crap out of humanity...in a really bad sort of way...only then will we ever have a chance of taming it... because we all know it will never be put back in.

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  • Updated
    3
    Apr
    2013
    5:26am, EDT

    US Navy shifts destroyer in wake of North Korea missile threats

    Most people in Seoul, South Korea think North Korean leader Kim Jong-un is bluffing, but the question is "why?" Experts say Jong-un is in the process of consolidating power and planning to eliminate his rivals. NBC's Richard Engel reports from Seoul, South Korea.

    By Jim Miklaszewski and Courtney Kube, NBC News

    The U.S. Navy is shifting a guided-missile destroyer in the Pacific to waters off the Korean peninsula in the wake of ongoing rhetoric from North Korea, U.S. defense officials said.

    The USS McCain is capable of intercepting and destroying a missile, should North Korea decide to fire one off, the officials said.

    Still, U.S. defense officials insist that there is nothing to indicate that North Korea is on the verge of another launch. 

    The White House on Monday said the United States hasn’t seen large-scale movements from North Korean military forces in the aftermath of harsh rhetoric from the reclusive government.

    As North Korean state TV shows constant images of the army bombarding South Korea, North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un is saying his missiles are at the ready and has cut off emergency communications. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    "I would note that despite the harsh rhetoric we are hearing from Pyongyang, we are not seeing changes to the North Korean military posture, such as large-scale mobilizations and positioning of forces," Carney said

    The McCain in December 2012 was moved to be in position to defend against a impending North Korean rocket launch.

    On Sunday, The United States sent F-22 stealth fighter jets to South Korea as part of military exercises in a move aimed at further deterring threats from North Korea against its neighbor.

    It was unclear if the McCain was also part of the ongoing military drills.

    It was earlier reported that the USS Fitzgerald, another guided missile destroyer, would be moved to the area, though it was only among the ships under consideration for the deployment.

    Also Monday, South Korean President Park Geun-hye appeared to give her country's military permission to strike back at any attack from the North without further word from Seoul, saying she took the North's escalating threats "very seriously," South Korean news agency Yonhap reported.

    "As commander-in-chief of the armed forces, I will trust the military's judgment on abrupt and surprise provocations by North Korea," she said, according to Yonhap.

    Master Sgt. Kevin J. Gruenwald / U.S. Air Force via Reuters, file

    Two U.S. Air Force F-22 Raptor stealth jet fighters fly near Andersen Air Force Base in Guam in this handout photo dated August 4, 2010.

    The deployments and Park's remarks came as tensions approached an all-time high between Pyongyang and Washington.  

    Kim Jong Un has ratcheted up the rhetoric against both South Korea and the United States in recent months, and in February violated U.N. sanctions by ordering a nuclear weapons test. 

    On Saturday, North Korea said it had entered a "state of war" against South Korea, according to a statement reported by the North's official news agency, KCNA. 

    In an interview on CNBC Monday, former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said the United States needs to be "very concerned" by North Korea’s recent weapons test and "level of bellicosity" and do everything necessary to defend U.S. allies and interests.

    Panetta said while Kim Jung Un’s actions appear aimed at his internal situation the U.S. should “take nothing for granted” and be prepared.  The greatest danger right now, he said, appears to be the possibility of a miscalculation.

    "The reality is we don’t have as much insight as we should," Panetta said of Kim's motives.

    The stealth aircraft – two F-22 Raptors -- were deployed from Japan to the Osan Air Base in South Korea from Japan where they will remain on “static display” as part of the military drills, Pentagon spokesman George Little said. The F-22s are not expected to actively participate in any exercises, however.

    This is the fifth time F-22s have deployed to South Korea. Exercise Foal Eagle began on March 1 and will continue until the end of April.

    Kim has also recently threatened to "settle accounts" with the U.S. and posed near a chart that appeared to detail bombings of American cities.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The F-22 jets' arrival follows other recent displays of air power by the U.S. in South Korea. Last week B-52 bombers and B-2 stealth bombers were sent to the country for the annual exercise. 

    In North Korea, meanwhile, KCNA reported on an Easter service at which it said "the participants renewed the firm resolution to put the warmongers [the US and South Korea] into the red hot iron-pot of hell as early as possible."

    North Korea's stance, however, can be notoriously difficult to interpret.

    In a later release Monday on KCNA, Pyongyang announced the adoption of a law "consolidating" its position as a nuclear power that would use its weapons only “to repel invasion or attack from a hostile nuclear weapons state and make retaliatory strikes.”

    Among the law's pledges were that North Korea would store its weapons responsibly, that it would not use them against non-nuclear nations, and that it would participate in nonproliferation talks -- though the last clause came with the condition that there was “improvement of relations with hostile nuclear weapons states.”

    NBC News’ Andrew Rafferty, John Newland and Jeff Black contributed to this report.

    NBC's Jim Maceda reports on U.S. Navy movements of destroyers into the Pacific amid threats from North Korea.

    Related:

    North Korea: Nukes are our country's 'life'

    US official warns North Korea is no 'paper tiger'

    Analyst: Threats are predictable, Kim Jong Un is not

    This story was originally published on Sun Mar 31, 2013 10:45 PM EDT

    1623 comments

    And the pissing contest continues...

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  • 26
    Mar
    2013
    2:50pm, EDT

    Arab nations set to declare the right to arm Syrian rebels

    Ahmed Jadallah / Reuters

    Heads of Arab states line up for a photo at the opening of the Arab League summit in Doha on Tuesday.

    By Reuters

    DOHA — An Arab summit agreed on Tuesday that Arab League member states had the right to provide military support to Syrians fighting President Bashar al-Assad, according to a draft declaration obtained by Reuters.

    The summit, meeting in the Gulf state of Qatar, urged regional and international organizations to recognize the opposition National Coalition for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces as the sole legitimate representative of the Syrian people, the draft said.


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    While it has diplomatic significance, the summit's draft language on arming the rebels may not have immediate practical implications for Arab policymakers: Arab states are not subject to the European Union and U.S. arms embargoes on Syria, and many therefore consider themselves at liberty to supply the rebels with weapons.

    While noting that reaching a political solution was a priority in ending the Syrian crisis, the summit "affirms every state's right, according to its desire, to present all kinds of measures for self-defence, including military ones, to support the steadfastness of the Syrian people and the Free Army," the draft document said.

    The summit has been dominated by the two-year-old war in Syria, which has cost an estimated 70,000 lives.

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    4 comments

    About time the Arabs start taking responsibility for regional security.

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    Explore related topics: military, syria, arab-league, damascus
  • Updated
    29
    Mar
    2013
    2:23am, EDT

    North Korea puts rocket units on 'highest alert,' issues new threats against US

    It was announced that North Korea has now ordered rockets and long-range artillery units to be targeted towards U.S. military bases on Guam, Hawaii and the mainland. Analysts believe the threats are only to bolster the appearance of power for new leader Kim Jong Un.

    By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

    North Korea stepped up its aggressive rhetoric on Tuesday, ordering its rocket and long-range artillery units to be combat ready and on the "highest alert" and issuing new threats against U.S. bases on Hawaii, Guam and mainland America.

    Pyongyang warned that U.S. facilities would be "reduced to ashes and flames the moment the first attack is unleashed," according to a military order issued by the pariah state’s military "supreme command."


    The U.S. and South Korea have signed a military agreement to combine forces in the event of an attack from North Korea.  NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    It comes in response to joint military drills by U.S. and South Korean forces which began in the area early this month and which have seen U.S. bombers flying sorties threatening the North.

    South Korea's defense ministry said it saw no sign of imminent military action by North Korea Tuesday, according to Reuters.

    "They need to stop threatening peace on the peninsula," Pentagon spokesman George Little told reporters on Tuesday of North Korea's latest threat. "That doesn't help anyone ... and we stand ready to respond to any contingency,''

    He said Pyongyang's statements were designed to "raise tensions and intimidate others."

    Rodong Sinmun via EPA

    North Korean leader Kim Jong Un inspects an army landing exercise on Monday.

    North Korea's neighbor and long-time communist ally again called on all parties to show restraint.

    "At present, the situation on the Korean peninsula remains complex and sensitive,'' said China's Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei.

    The announcement marked a further increase in military rhetoric from Pyongyang, and followed a threat last week that it would attack U.S. bases in the Pacific if its "enemies … make even the slightest movement."

    It came as South Korea marked the third anniversary of the sinking of one its navy vessels, blamed on North Korea, which left 46 sailors dead.

    Pyongyang previously threatened nuclear attack on the United States and South Korea, although it is not believed to have the capability to hit the continental United States with an atomic weapon. However, Reuters reported that U.S. military bases in the Pacific area are in range of its medium-range missiles.

    The isolated nation has threatened to attack American military bases in Japan and Guam in retaliation for the U.S. conducting military exercises with South Korea. On Wednesday, major South Korean banks and media companies were hacked.

    The military statement, also posted on the KCNA website, said: "From this moment the… supreme command will put on the highest alert all the field artillery units including strategic rocket units and long-range artillery units which are assigned to strike bases of the U.S. imperialist aggressor troops in the U.S. mainland and on Hawaii and Guam and other operational zone in the Pacific as well as all the enemy targets in south Korea and its vicinity."

    Voice of America’s Northeast Asia bureau chief, Steve Herman, quoted South Korea's defense ministry saying Tuesday’s announcement is the first time North Korea has referred to "Il-ho" — its highest level combat readiness posture.

    #ROK MND tells VOA this is 1st time for #DPRK military to refer to "Il-ho" (1st or highest level) combat readiness posture. #Korea

    — Steve Herman (@W7VOA) March 26, 2013

    North Korea has said it has abrogated an armistice that ended the 1950-53 Korean War and threatened a nuclear attack on the United States. 

    Slideshow: North Korea's young leader, Kim Jong Un

    The youngest son of Kim Jong Il succeeded his late father in 2011, becoming the third member of his family to rule the unpredictable and reclusive communist state.

    Launch slideshow

     

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related:

    PhotoBlog: Combat ready? Kim Jong Un inspects troops as N. Korea issues new threats

    South Korea on alert after hackers strike banks, broadcasters

    US Capitol in flames? North Korea dreams of nuclear strike

    UN passes sanctions despite North Korea threat of 'pre-emptive nuclear attack'

     

    This story was originally published on Tue Mar 26, 2013 6:22 AM EDT

    1418 comments

    This is really like watching an episode of The Simpsons with Bart as the NK leader. What a maroon.

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    Explore related topics: asia-pacific, us, security, featured, military, nuclear, north-korea, hawaii, updated, kim-jong-il, guam
  • 25
    Mar
    2013
    11:39am, EDT

    Bar Refaeli roils: Is supermodel a super Israeli or simply a shirker?

    Vincent Kessler / Reuters, file

    Model Bar Refaeli arrives at the screening of the film "The Beaver" at the 64th Cannes Film Festival in May, 2011.

    By Martin Fletcher, Correspondent, NBC News

    TEL AVIV, Israel -- As the beautiful face of a nation, supermodel Bar Refaeli has few rivals. So Israel’s foreign ministry thought it was on to a winner this month when it picked the blond, blue-green-eyed, willowy, tall and curvy Refaeli to lead a public relations campaign highlighting Israel’s world-beating technologies.

    Instead, it sparked a bitter controversy about just who is a 'real' Israeli. The Israeli army attacked the proposal, saying that the 27-year-old Sports Illustrated cover girl was a draft dodger and a bad example to Israel’s youth.

    "I wish to turn your attention to the negative message that could be delivered to Israeli society," an army spokesman wrote to the foreign ministry.

    The foreign ministry’s private response to the military was to mind its own business. As diplomats, though, their public reaction was phrased more carefully: "Bar Refaeli ... is considered one of the most beautiful women in the world and she is widely recognized as Israeli. There is no reason to dredge up the past when we are dealing with a public diplomacy campaign of this kind."

    The dispute hit a nerve.

    With compulsory conscription of three years for men and two years for women, army service is traditionally seen as a social equalizer and the glue that holds the society together. But today, about half of Israeli women don’t serve and about a third of men don’t. In both cases, these numbers are made up of Arabs and ultra-Orthodox Jews who are excused, as well as those who are exempt for a variety of medical and other reasons.

    Yehuda Raizner / AFP - Getty Images, file

    An ultra-Orthodox Jewish man waits to cross the street opposite a billboard featuring Israeli supermodel Bar Refaeli advertising lingerie in Tel Aviv in Nov., 2009.

    Refaeli’s case, however, was particularly provocative.

    She stated that she did not want to serve because it would obstruct her career. Then, when obliged by the system, she reportedly evaded service by marrying a family friend and getting an exemption as a married woman. It was widely reported in Israel that she got a divorce as soon as her exemption was accepted.

    That didn’t win her many friends. But her beauty did, as did her liaison with one of the world's most eligible bachelors, film star Leonardo DiCaprio.

    Refaeli is very popular. So much so that sometimes it seems like everyone in tiny Israel has claimed acquaintance with her or her family. She also routinely espouses Israeli causes like calling for the release of Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard, who has languished in American jails for 28 years. She never fails to support Israel in any forum and when at home she hangs out on the beach like anyone else.

    But according to the army, the fact that she didn't serve in the army disqualifies her from representing her country. For them, she is not a true Israeli.

    And that is exactly the message the foreign ministry is trying to do away with. The diplomats want to dispel the notion that Israel is merely a military success story. They want to highlight Israel’s many other achievements in the field of technology, where Israel shines, to show the world that it is more than just a country in conflict.

    So who is the 'perfect' Israeli? Refaeli in a bikini or Refaeli in battle fatigues?

    It is a metaphor for a country seeking peace yet is mired in conflict -- a nation in transition and struggling to define itself.  

    Martin Fletcher is the author of "The List,""Breaking News" and "Walking Israel."

    Related:

    Refaeli: Nerdy GoDaddy Super Bowl ad co-star 'a very good kisser'

    377 comments

    Yawn. Yawn again.

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    Explore related topics: featured, israel, military, model, bar-refaeli
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