-Caveat Lector-

Goodie , let's add North Korea to the list of nuclear capable countries that
hate us .... Anyone out there getting worried yet ?? I know for one I will
indeed be doing some soul searching .


Divine ~

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Remember...not ALL people are your enemies...just the stupid ones

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--- Kris Millegan  wrote:
>
>

> ATTACHMENT part 2 message/rfc822
> Reply-To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Alamaine Ratliff)
> To: "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Cc: "#Eu4Ea" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: New Target/Searching Seoul
> Date: Fri, 26 Mar 1999 16:52:16 -0600
>
> From Sydney (Australia) Morning Herald
>
> Saturday, March 27, 1999
>
> New target: Milosevic
>
> <Picture>Villagers from Lacevci near Kralevo look at missile damage. Image
> taken from Serbian television; (Below) USAF Force technician, Sgt Robert
> Roemer, checks a missile at an F-16 Falcon fighter hangar at Aviano's NATO
> air base in Northern Italy. (Bottom) A RAF Harrier fighter is prepared for
> take-off from Gioia Del Colle air base in Southern Italy. Photos by AFP
>
> By GEOFF KITNEY, Herald Correspondent in Berlin
>
> NATO has threatened to target President Slobodan Milosevic and his military
> commanders after the Yugoslav leader defiantly ordered his forces in Kosovo
> to continue their brutal campaign against ethnic Albanian separatists.
>
> A second and bigger wave of missile and bomb attacks on Serb targets was
> accompanied by escalating threats from both sides, with NATO indicating
> that it was prepared to fight until Milosevic's military structures were
> destroyed.
>
> NATO's supreme commander, General Wesley Clark, said there would be "no
> sanctuary" for Milosevic or his military leaders and that NATO was ready to
> destroy the Yugoslav Army.
>
> The United States Vice-President, Mr Al Gore, also raised the political
> stakes, saying Milosevic had "blood dripping from his hands" from
> "murdering his own people".
>
> This heightened political rhetoric suggests that the US goal now is to
> force Milosevic from power and bring him to account for years of military
> atrocities.
>
> As the threats intensified, B-52 bombers were preparing to take off from
> their base at Fairford in England to spearhead a third wave of bombing, a
> US Air Force spokesman said.
>
> <Picture>But the prospect of a longer, more intense conflict is testing
> NATO unity and putting increasing domestic political pressure on alliance
> governments.
>
> Italy, which is critical to the operation because most aircraft involved
> are flying from its bases, indicated at a meeting of European leaders in
> Berlin that it wanted a quick end to the operation.
>
> British newspapers have reported that both Italy and Greece have cast doubt
> on continuing the bombing campaign.
>
> As well, Russia is a fierce critic of the air strikes, and the official
> China Daily newspaper has called the campaign "blatant aggression" and a
> barbarity.
>
> Hopes that Milosevic would back down and agree to a Kosovo peace plan
> receded further when Yugoslavia announced that it was severing diplomatic
> relations with the US, Britain, France and Germany.
>
> This came as protesters attacked Western embassies and representative
> offices in neighbouring Macedonia and Bosnia, and in Moscow and Canada.
>
> NATO's initial military objective had been to limit Milosevic's capacity to
> continue his Kosovo security operations.
>
> <Picture>But it has hardened its position amid reports of renewed fighting
> in Kosovo and declarations by Serb leaders that they would continue to try
> to destroy the ethnic Albanian separatist movement and would never
> surrender to NATO military force.
>
> The Serbs claimed that the rebel Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) had used the
> cover of the NATO air strikes to step up attacks on government forces.
>
> But a spokesman for the KLA in London, Pleurat Sejeu, told the BBC that
> Yugoslav MiGjets were being used against ethnic Albanians.
>
> He said Serb forces had rounded up thousands of displaced ethnic Albanian
> civilians in the central Drenica region and were marching them towards
> Pristina.
>
> NATO's second wave of attacks - cruise missiles fired from warships and
> laser-guided bombs from nearly 70 aircraft - appeared to be directed more
> at targets in Kosovo, although targets throughout Yugoslavia were also hit.
>
> Western officials dismissed comments from Yugoslavia's Deputy Prime
> Minister, Mr Vuk Draskovic, suggesting that military operations in Kosovo
> could be stopped if the NATO bombing ended.
>
> One NATO diplomat said: "We have seen absolutely nothing from Milosevic to
> encourage us to believe that he is ready to back down. On the contrary, he
> is marshalling his forces for a long fight."
>
> There was also concern that the conflict was feeding tensions in
> neighbouring countries, increasing the risk of it spreading beyond Yugoslav
> borders.
>
> The Macedonia Government in particular indicated that it was worried
> following the violent protests outside a number of Western embassies by
> angry Serbs.
>
> But the alliance leadership strongly reaffirmed its determination to
> continue the military operation until it had achieved its objectives.
>
> Both political leaders and NATO military commanders said the air campaign
> would continue until President Milosevic agreed to political autonomy for
> Kosovo, policed by an international military force.
>
>
>
> Saturday, March 27, 1999
>
> NUCLEAR THREAT
>
> Seoul pinpoints 14 missile sites in North
>
> North Korea has at least 10 missile launch bases and four factories
> producing missiles, according to the latest assessment by South Korea of
> its rival's ballistic strike-power. The disclosure comes as South Korean
> and United States officials issue new warnings about the North Korean
> military threat, which they say is still potent despite cutbacks to its
> conventional weapons arsenal.
>
> It also comes two days before crucial talks in Pyongyang between North
> Korean and US officials on efforts to dismantle the communist country's
> missile program. News reports in Seoul quoted a government official giving
> the precise locations of missile factories in North Korea, even specifying
> the type of missile components made in some plants. "There are even reports
> that there are eight factories and over 12 bases," the official said,
> adding that the Stalinist state was building more missile bases.
>
> The official said North Korea began developing missiles as far back as
> 1965, when a national science university was established in honour of the
> North's founding father, Kim Il-sung.
>
> North Korea can produce up to 100 short-range Scud missiles a year as part
> of a missile export program that earns much of the country's export
> earnings. But its suspected development of long-range intercontinental
> ballistic missiles is of more concern, particularly since its test firing
> of a medium-range Taepo-Dong missile over Japan last August. That launch
> sparked panic in Tokyo and set off alarm bells in Washington, as Pyongyang
> is already suspected of possessing plutonium for use in nuclear devices
> which, if mounted on long-range missiles, could reach the US east coast.
>
> Washington wants North Korea to stop all development, testing and export of
> missile technology. Mr Stephen Bosworth, the US Ambassador to South Korea,
> declared this week that the North was more dangerous than ever given the
> new threat of its weapons of mass destruction.
>
> "We see an active missile-development program and activities that could be
> related to the production of nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass
> destruction," he said. "Combine this military potential with a failed
> economy and the North's self-imposed isolation, and we clearly have a more
> complex situation and potentially more dangerous situation than in the
> past."
>
> South Korea's Defence Ministry told President Kim Dae-jung earlier this
> week that the North's land and sea forces were weaker due to the crumbling
> economy. But it warned that the North compensated for its inability to wage
> full-scale conventional war by developing long-range missiles, chemical
> weapons, and possibly nuclear warheads.
>
> "The North has a terrible ability to launch destruction against South
> Korea, but no staying power beyond that," said Dr Kenneth Quinones, a
> former North Korea desk officer at the US State Department, now based in
> Seoul. "The army could come south quickly, but a frontal assault would
> expose it to devastation."
>
>
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~
> A<>E<>R
>
> The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking
> new landscapes but in having new eyes. -Marcel Proust
> + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
> Every great advance in natural knowledge has involved
> the absolute rejection of authority. -Thomas Huxley
> + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
> Forwarded as information only; no endorsement to be presumed
> + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
> In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material
> is distributed without charge or profit to those who have
> expressed a prior interest in receiving this type of information
> for non-profit research and educational purposes only.
>
>

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