• @pingveno
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    -1611 months ago

    On the upside, better than South Korea building their own, assuming this is a geopolitical move to assure South Korea of the US’s commitment. But outside of that, it seems weird. The US could flatten North Korea like a bug using purely conventional means. Why get the complexity of nuclear weapons in the mix?

    • @Aria@lemmygrad.ml
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      1311 months ago

      The DPRK has nukes. Why would they suffer an invasion or bombardment? There’s no war against Korea that isn’t nuclear.

      • @pingveno
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        -511 months ago

        North Korea has relied on dug in artillery pointed at Seoul to act as a deterrent since the end of active hostilities in the Korean War. The US would instantly see everything via satellite and both retaliate and eliminate the artillery. It would be too late for the 26 million residents of Seoul.

        Nukes are more about threatening targets outside artillery range like Japan and US territories.

      • @pingveno
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        -911 months ago

        Your comment lacks substance. Try harder please.

    • @redtea@lemmygrad.ml
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      811 months ago

      The geopolitical manoeuvring is against China.

      If this is really to protect against the DPRK, the fact that the US thought it necessary to move nukes to SK would surely indicate that the US military is not confident that it could win such a conventional war.

    • @PolandIsAStateOfMind
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      11 months ago

      Why get the complexity of nuclear weapons in the mix?

      Because those are not really aimed at DPRK (letting aside that funny part about DPRK being “flatten like a bug”) but at China.

      For reminder: this came quite soon after China announcing they successfully tested anti ICBM missile interception system.

    • Soviet Snake
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      511 months ago

      North Korea would fuck the US in a conventional war no questions answered.

      • @pingveno
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        -811 months ago

        I… what? What are you basing that on? North Korea’s decrepit old air force? Its submarines that are of greater danger to their own crew? The US’s air force, which if broken out into separate branches would have 4 of the top 10 branches worldwide? And don’t think China’s going to swoop in and help if North Korea picks a fight with the US. It’s going to be pure situation containment mode from Beijing.

        • Soviet Snake
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          811 months ago

          For starters, the size of the military, Korea has a total of 7,769,000 personnel in the army, while the US has 2,072,950. US naval force is not that relevant here since the most vulnerable attack for that would be in the South, which is where it’s most connected to the sea, and the air force has been proven to not be that effective against guerrilla warfare, you need to use an insane amount of ammunition like they did in Laos.

          China will probably not participate, but it won’t allow US navy ships next to its shores, and if you think Russia, Iran, Syria and some other countries will not help NK you are delirious. Simply by the number of soldiers NK can win a war of attrition.

          • @pingveno
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            -311 months ago

            For starters, how useful is that army? The US has a smaller force, but far better equipment. North Korea’s equipment is decades out of date. The army also takes time to call up. Ultimately, it would be a slaughter.

            I don’t think Russia, Iran, and Syria would be in any position to help. I think the fighting would be over fast. Remember the initial invasion in the 2003 Iraq War? It was over in three days; the following civil war and occupation was what lasted so long. That’s what wars look like when the US is off its leash, especially when it’s been training for this scenario for decades. Meanwhile, Iran and Syria are thousands of miles away and while Russia technically shares a border, that far from Russia’s economic and military centers. None of them would be well placed.

            • @redtea@lemmygrad.ml
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              811 months ago

              You might be forgetting three things.

              First, Russia is already in a proxy war with the US and winning. The type and location of the DPRK border certainly poses problems. You’re not wrong there. But Russia is unlikely to sit back and watch the US encroach it’s borders in the east (while there’s a chance to prevent it).

              The US might have been training for it but not in the way that you imply. The DPRK is simply not an existential threat to the US (unless the US provokes a war), and while I don’t give much credit to the US military, it’s high command knows that the DPRK will be difficult to provoke. Just look how patient it has been with part of the peninsula being occupied. It’s not like the Soviets preparing for a fight for survival against the Nazis – it’s almost the exact opposite, in fact, which is another reason why the DPRK will be prepared while the US won’t.

              If anything, though, the immediate threat to the US is in South Korea. That’s the part where the US is at risk of being kicked out. If that happens, US power in SEA is over within two decades later. The US already had to intervene once in SK, following the growth of a highly successful protectionist economy, to retain control. It’s been going pretty shit for South Koreans ever since, and some of them seem to be getting restless.

              All the US has to do to avoid being embarrassed is not to step on any more DPRK soil or provoke another proxy war. The US military is somewhat masochistic, though, so it probably will ignore such sage advice.

              Considering it’s track history for starting and losing direct and proxy wars, there’s no chance that Russia, China, DPRK, Syria, and Iran haven’t also been training for years for when the US makes the error of fighting with a state that has the capacity to fight back, with different contingencies depending on who gets hit first. Additionally, the US likes to pretend that it’s some kind of moral world police, so it’s unlikely to be launching any surprise attacks, giving it’s adversaries time up prepare.

              Second, the US is a parasite state that is heavily reliant on imports. It has repeatedly started wars to secure access to foreign oil. All the countries the US has oppressed for decades are (i) waiting for an opportunity to breakaway, and (ii) already starting to breakaway as the US loses its dollar hegemony due to the first point, above. Russia, Syria, and Iran are just the at the top of the list to help the DPRK.

              They can do so by disrupting US oil thefts from the Middle East. Once this happens and Saudi Arabia sees which way the wind is blowing not only is the US fucked (it’s production cycles are unsustainable without constant imports), the US’s allies are also fucked because they’ll lose access to the same resources.

              This will see the rest of the Anglo-European empire making new alliances and taking the chance to form a new bloc with the US as the lesser party. Similar to the split in the Roman empire. And that’ll be the end of imperialism because the rest of the world won’t be sat still waiting for the new oppressors to turn up.

              Third, the US tried this once and lost. This time the DPRK and it’s allies are much more resilient and they now have nukes that can reach the US. The idea that the DPRK doesn’t have a strong, prepared military seems wildly off the mark.

              More likely would be the US prodding SK to attack the North but the most realistic outcome there is a unified Korea, with the US being kicked out. But any war in Korea risks this outcome. The US knows this and knows that it has to balance whether it wants a land base so close to China (by far the bigger threat) or whether it wants to be the reason why a peaceful state that up to now has been content to be left alone, becomes aggressive.

              It wouldn’t be the first time the US opted for the latter, I know. And the suggestion of putting nukes in SK seems to be evidence that the US continues to be ruled by war mongers.

              The constant grandstanding against the DPRK is just entertainment for USians. Nukes in SK is not mainly for the DPRK, but preparation for escalation with or to further threaten China. Xi knows it. But Biden can hardly shout this in public.

              • @pingveno
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                -311 months ago

                First, Russia is already in a proxy war with the US and winning.

                Russia is engaging with its own troops. NATO is only working on supplies and support. Given that Russia has already had its newest tanks defeated and is relying on museum pieces, I wouldn’t exactly call it a great success.

                high command knows that the DPRK will be difficult to provoke

                There is no scenario where the US pursues a fight with North Korea. The US gets nothing out of it and it stirs a pot that could get really nasty. For that matter, the US doesn’t particularly want Kim Jung-un dead because of the power struggle that would cause. Given the already fragile state of North Korea, that would lead to a massive refugee crisis.

                The most likely scenario is instead that a series of small escalations lead to all-out war.

                • @redtea@lemmygrad.ml
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                  311 months ago

                  Have you not seen the reports of all the foreign (NATO) soldiers fighting in and for Ukraine? Nor those about NATO being unable to send enough ammunition?

                  There is no scenario where the US pursues a fight with North Korea.

                  It was you who hypothesised that the US could beat the DPRK in a conventional war. You then had several replies explaining why that was unlikely. It’s a little disingenuous to now suggest that it was you, all along, who thinks the US would not want a war with the DPRK.

                  It also ignores the fact that the DPRK is already in a conflict with the US. The US started a war decades ago, lost, and never left the peninsula.

        • @redtea@lemmygrad.ml
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          711 months ago

          … if North Korea picks a fight with the US.

          This seems a bit unlikely and seems to be framed in the wrong way. The DPRK isn’t occupying any part of the US, while the US is currently occupying the Korean peninsula and now threatening to put it’s nukes there! When this is the starting point, it’s a bit strange to suggest that the DPRK could pick a fight when it’s already in a fight with the other party and it was that other party who picked the fight in the first place and keeps on trying to escalate. Not to mention that of the two countries concerned, one has started at least one fight in almost every year of it’s 200-year history and the other one is the peaceful DPRK.

          • @pingveno
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            -611 months ago

            The US is there by invitation of an allied government. North Korea can have the official position that the whole peninsula belongs to it, but that isn’t worth the paper it’s written on in the same way that Taiwan’s claim of all of China has no practical worth.

            • @redtea@lemmygrad.ml
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              811 months ago

              This is rather semantic. I’m not making an argument about which state or which territorial claims are legitimate. And that legitimacy doesn’t change the fact that the US has a presence in Korea – the whole peninsula is Korean, yes? regardless of which state has a claim to which part – whereas the DPRK has no presence anywhere that could be called US territory. The point is that the US is the aggressor and the DPRK is peaceful.

              • @pingveno
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                -811 months ago

                While the peninsula as a whole is Korean, sure. Doesn’t mean the North Korean government has any legitimate jurisdiction over South Korea or grounds to complain if South Korea invites US troops to be stationed in South Korea. And if North Korea wanted to claim that it was peaceful, maybe it wouldn’t have artillery trained on the world’s 4th largest metropolis, no?

                • @CountryBreakfast@lemmygrad.ml
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                  11 months ago

                  The South Korean state is run by US generals. RoK is as legitimate as the genocidal maniacs that facilitated it’s creation and development throughout the on going conflict. Pearl clutching about peace during a multidecade conflict that is part of an even longer decolonial struggle is like concern trolling about world peace during slave revolts in the colonies.

                  • @pingveno
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                    -511 months ago

                    Huh, the South Koreans don’t seem to have much noticed how evil their American occupiers are. 84% approval rating of the US from one typical poll I found.