Casual Discussion Kim Says North Korea ‘Fully Prepared’ for Fight With US

xizhimen

Experienced member
Messages
7,391
Reactions
384
Nation of residence
China
Nation of origin
China

Kim Says North Korea ‘Fully Prepared’ for Fight With US​

July 28, 2022 0:39 AM

SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA —
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un warned late Wednesday that his country is “fully prepared” for any military conflict with the United States, state media said Thursday.

The warning is Pyongyang’s latest threat amid speculation it will soon conduct its seventh nuclear test.

Kim, in a speech marking the anniversary of the end of the Korean War, also warned that South Korea’s government would be annihilated if it made any “dangerous attempt,” according to the state-run Korean Central News Agency.

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, a conservative who took office in May, has repeatedly spoken of the possibility of preemptive strikes, including strikes against senior North Korean leadership, if South Korea detects signs of an imminent attack.

Such action would be “immediately punished with strong force,” Kim said, adding “the Yoon Suk Yeol regime and his military will be annihilated."

"If the South Korean regime and its military gangsters are thinking of taking us on militarily and think they can neutralize or destroy part of our military power preemptively based on particular military means or methods, they are mistaken," Kim said.

In his speech, Kim repeatedly boasted of his country’s nuclear weapons and indicated he was prepared to use them if necessary. North Korea, he said, was “fully prepared” for any military confrontation with the United States.

North Korea has tested an unprecedented number of missiles this year. Pyongyang has also apparently finished preparations for another nuclear test, according to U.S. and South Korean officials.

In response, South Korea has expanded its country’s decades-old military alliance with the United States. The two countries have also embraced more explicit demonstrations of military power in an attempt to deter the nuclear-armed North.

Next month the United States and South Korea will resume large-scale field military exercises that had been suspended for years, as the two countries pursued negotiations with North Korea.

Although the two allies say the exercises are defensive in nature, North Korea sees the drills as preparations to invade and often uses them as occasions to issue threats or conduct other provocations.

In his address Wednesday, Kim blasted the “double standard” and “thuggish behavior” of the United States. While he described North Korea’s military moves as routine, he said the U.S.-South Korea drills “seriously threaten our national security.”

At a press conference Wednesday in Seoul, South Korean Foreign Affairs Minister Park Jin called North Korea’s nuclear and missile development the main causes of tension on the Korean Peninsula.

Park also warned North Korea against conducting another nuclear test, saying such a move would likely lead to more international sanctions against the North.

“North Korea is in a situation where it needs to think carefully,” he said.

On Tuesday, U.S. State Department spokesperson Ned Price said a North Korean nuclear test “would carry tremendous costs,” without specifying what those costs would be.

It will likely be much tougher for the United Nations Security Council to respond with additional sanctions against North Korea. Russia and China, both veto-wielding members of the Security Council, have in recent months called for North Korea sanctions to be relaxed, not expanded.

 

xizhimen

Experienced member
Messages
7,391
Reactions
384
Nation of residence
China
Nation of origin
China

North Korea ready to use nukes against the United States: Kim Jong Un​

Pyongyang, North Korea Updated: Jul 28, 2022, 10:09 AM

In the wake of indications North Korea may perform its first nuclear test since 2017, the nation's state media on Thursday reported that the leader Kim Jong Un has declared that his nation is prepared to mobilise its nuclear war deterrent and for any military conflict with the United States. According to the official KCNA news agency, Kim made the comments during a speech at a celebration to commemorate the 69th anniversary of the Korean War armistice on July 27. As per a Reuters report, Kim said, the confrontation with the US presented a nuclear danger because it forced the North to complete an "urgent historical task" of bolstering its self-defence.

"Our armed forces are thoroughly prepared to respond to any crisis, and our nation's nuclear war deterrence is also fully ready to mobilise its absolute strength faithfully, accurately and promptly to its mission," he said.

 

xizhimen

Experienced member
Messages
7,391
Reactions
384
Nation of residence
China
Nation of origin
China
He's a source of nice entertainment 🤣
When Iraq, Libya, Afghanistan said that they didn't have WMD, US still went after them and claimed they did. When North Korea said they did have WMD and dared US, US keeps their mouth shut and some think it's entertaining.
 

Gary

Experienced member
Messages
7,723
Reactions
21 12,311
Nation of residence
Indonesia
Nation of origin
Indonesia
If you think Russia's abysmal performance in Ukraine is bad enough, wait until you saw North Korea's.

Putin enters Ukraine confident that his military hardware will perform as advertised and his soldier is as super as Shoigu wanted him to believe.

Now think that kind of situation in North Korea where nobody will tell Kim that his troops is starving and his trucks and vehicles ran on coal.

Yeah absolutely ready lol🤣
 

xizhimen

Experienced member
Messages
7,391
Reactions
384
Nation of residence
China
Nation of origin
China
Technically North Korea+China are still at war with US

N. Korea marks armistice anniversary​

General 09:16 July 28, 2022
PYH2022072802400031500_P4.jpg


N. Korea marks armistice anniversary
North Korean military officials place flowers to pay tribute to the North's soldiers killed in the 1950-53 Korean War and buried at the Fatherland Liberation War Martyrs Cemetery in Pyongyang on July 27, 2022, to mark the 69th anniversary of the Korean War armistice that fell on the same day, in this photo released by the North's Korean Central News Agency. North Korea refers to the three-year conflict as the great Fatherland Liberation War. (For Use Only in the Republic of Korea. No Redistribution) (Yonhap)

 

xizhimen

Experienced member
Messages
7,391
Reactions
384
Nation of residence
China
Nation of origin
China
If you think Russia's abysmal performance in Ukraine is bad enough, wait until you saw North Korea's.

Putin enters Ukraine confident that his military hardware will perform as advertised and his soldier is as super as Shoigu wanted him to believe.
Now think that kind of situation in North Korea where nobody will tell Kim that his troops is starving and his trucks and vehicles ran on coal.

Yeah absolutely ready lol🤣
They did 70 years ago when US GDP accouted for 52% of the world total.
And if US can't prevail 70 years ago and again in Vietnam and Afghanistan , what makes you believe they can prevail today?
 

xizhimen

Experienced member
Messages
7,391
Reactions
384
Nation of residence
China
Nation of origin
China

North Korea is ready for a Military Confrontation with the United States​

World | July 28, 2022, Thursday // 08:30| views

photo_big_216086.jpg

@WSLS 10

North Korea is "fully prepared for any military confrontation with the US." This was stated by the country's leader, Kim Jong-un, quoted by Yonhap news agency.

He delivered a speech on the anniversary of the end of the Korean War (1950-1953). Kim Jong-un also said that South Korea's military "will be destroyed" if an attack on the DPRK is attempted.
The anniversary of the end of the Korean War is an official holiday of the DPRK. The fighting on the Korean Peninsula began on June 25, 1950, and ended on July 27, 1953. A coalition of 17 countries, led by the United States, fought on the side of South Korea against the DPRK, which was supported by China and the Soviet Union.

The hostilities end with the signing of an armistice agreement at the Panmunjom border crossing in the demilitarized zone between North and South Korea. However, the war has not officially ended to this day, as a full-fledged peace treaty has not yet been signed.

 

Blackbeardsgoldfish

Committed member
Moderator
Germany Moderator
Messages
282
Reactions
1 458
Nation of residence
Austria
Nation of origin
Austria
This is just the usual saber rattling done by Kim to distract from the domestic problems. North Korea's economy is in the gutter and hasn't rebounded, the Covid outbreak is stretching their health system to the breaking point, there's likely a famine going on - better get the people riled up against the traditional enemies otherwise they just might revolt.

Same thing China did with India in 2020, Galwan clashes and the other skirmishes happened to distract from the economic contractions and lockdown measures.
 

xizhimen

Experienced member
Messages
7,391
Reactions
384
Nation of residence
China
Nation of origin
China
Same thing China did with India in 2020, Galwan clashes and the other skirmishes happened to distract from the economic contractions and lockdown measures.
But in 2020, China was the only country whose economy increased among the major economies in the world, China experienced economic and trade expasion in 2020, not contraction, it was a good year for China. you must have confused Chian with India or US.

GDP growth rate in 2020

China : +2.3%
India: -8.0%
US: -3.5%
Japan: -4.8%
Germany: -4.9%
UK: -9.8%
 
Last edited:

xizhimen

Experienced member
Messages
7,391
Reactions
384
Nation of residence
China
Nation of origin
China

North Korea mocks DC memorial’s new Wall of Remembrance as ‘ceremony play’​

By DAVID CHOI AND YOO KYONG CHANG
STARS AND STRIPES • August 8, 2022

090822NK-WALLphoto01.jpg

A soldier with the 3rd U.S. Infantry Regiment, also know as The Old Guard, helps dedicate the Wall of Remembrance at the Korean War Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., July 27, 2022. (Josue Patricio/U.S. Army)

— South Korea’s veterans affairs chief denounced North Korea’s mockery of a new Korean War memorial in Washington, D.C., and said honoring those who died for their country is a “courtesy and duty as a human being, regardless of political ideology.”

The North Korean state-run news outlet Uriminzokkiri, or With Our People, on Saturday described events in Washington as “ceremony play.”

“The Wall of Remembrance and the unveiling ceremony play may comfort and commemorate someone; however, it would never lessen the nightmare of the lost war and cure the shame of the disastrous defeat,” said the column. The wall instead should stand as a testament to North Korea, “our great republic, which has embraced a great victory.”


The Korean War Veterans Memorial was rededicated in a ceremony on July 27 to include a new Wall of Remembrance that contains the names of over 36,000 American and 7,100 South Korean augmented troops who were killed during the 1950-53 war.

On Sunday, Minister of Patriots and Veterans Affairs Park Minshik described North Korea’s remarks as “irrational” and that it was “time that North Korea’s propaganda outlets should level up.”

Those who died in war ought to be remembered for their service, Park said in a statement posted on his Facebook account.

“The U.S. sent the largest number of young persons to the war and some of them never returned to their loving families,” Park said. “Commemorating the sacrifice and commitment is a courtesy and a duty as a human being, regardless of political ideology.”

North Korea’s state-run news outlets frequently criticize the U.S.-South Korea alliance and mock war casualties from the two countries.

The communist regime characterizes its Korean War campaign as a successful deterrent against imperialist forces. North Korea also holds tributes to the war dead and observes a national holiday to commemorate the signing of the Korean War Armistice Agreement.

Congress approved building the memorial wall in 2016 and construction workers broke ground in 2021. The renovations cost $22 million and were funded by donations from South Korean companies, religious groups and veterans’ organizations, according to the Korean War Veterans Memorial Foundation. Upgrades to the existing memorial included installation of rail lighting, planting of junipers and statue restorations.

"This wall reminds us of the depths of their sacrifice and instills in us a call of duty to carry on their fight," South Korean Ambassador to the U.S. Cho Tae-yong said at the rededication ceremony, according to a Defense Department news release. “The service members we are here today to honor stood their ground in battlefields so that future generations could live in a vibrant democracy — indeed, [South Korea] is a vibrant democracy today.”

 

Follow us on social media

Top Bottom