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North Korea Attacks South Korea - Latest Update

No questions was just sharing my observation.

@ topic.
North Korean excuse is that South Koreans initiated it first.And that South Korean army was holding a training exercise which triggered that.
In response what they did :killed two marines and innocent people and some panic across Korean peninsula.Totally childish approach.Just seeking excuses for aggression.:tdown:

Yes..:agree:
NK 's response to army exercise was too little to call aggression..fired 200-250 artillery shells. destroyed ~100 homes and killed 2 Marines. definitely not worth such coverage.
 
Its not calling his bluff. Its stopping being a coward state and standing up for country's pride.

now we are talking in terms of bravado.. if this was possible, then i don't think the world would have waited for this long inspite of his repeated provocation.
this guy wants attention. maybe this is some sort of bargaining chip.
 
now we are talking in terms of bravado.. if this was possible, then i don't think the world would have waited for this long inspite of his repeated provocation.
this guy wants attention. maybe this is some sort of bargaining chip.
This is still no way to bargain. This calls for ROK declaring war on DPRK. Let the 2 Koreas handle this and not let their big brothers come in the way.
 
now we are talking in terms of bravado.. if this was possible, then i don't think the world would have waited for this long inspite of his repeated provocation.
this guy wants attention. maybe this is some sort of bargaining chip.

Yes..May be..
Or,as some one said maybe this is a show of solidarity of army behind his retarded son who is now poised to be next dictator.

This is still no way to bargain. This calls for ROK declaring war on DPRK. Let the 2 Koreas handle this and not let their big brothers come in the way.

If this indeed escalates to war ( which i dont think will happen) then no way this will remain as korean war..NK will definitely target Japan and rest we know very well..
 
North Korea shells South in fiercest attack in decades

INCHEON, South Korea (Reuters) – North Korea fired scores of artillery shells at a South Korean island on Tuesday, killing two soldiers, in one of the heaviest attacks on its neighbor since the Korean War ended in 1953.

The barrage -- the South fired back and sent a fighter jet to the area -- was close to a disputed maritime border on the west of the divided peninsula and the scene of deadly clashes in the past. South Korea was conducting military drills in the area at the time but said it had not been firing at the North.

The attack came as the reclusive North, and its ally China, presses regional powers to return to negotiations on its nuclear weapons program and revelations at the weekend Pyongyang is fast developing another source of material to make atomic bombs.

It also follows moves by leader Kim Jong-il to make his youngest, but unproven, son his heir apparent, leading some analysts to question whether the bombardment might in part have been an attempt to burnish the ruling family's image with the military.

"Houses and mountains are on fire and people are evacuating. You can't see very well because of plumes of smoke," a witness on the island told YTN Television before the shelling, which lasted about an hour, ended.

YTN said at least 200 North Korean shells hit Yeonpyeong, which lies off the west coast of the divided peninsula near a disputed maritime border. Most landed on a military base there.

Photographs from Yeongyeong island, just 120 km (75 miles) west of Seoul, showed columns of smoke rising from buildings. Two soldiers were killed in the attack, 17 wounded. Three civilians were also hurt.

News of the attack rattled global markets, already unsettled by Ireland's debt woes and a shift to less risky assets.

Experts say North Korea's Kim has for decades played a carefully calibrated game of provocation to squeeze concessions from the international community and impress his own military. The risk is that the leadership transition has upset this balance and that events spin out of control.

South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, who has pursued a hard line with the North since taking office nearly three years ago, said a response had to be firm following the attack.

But he made no suggestion the South would retaliate further, suggesting Seoul was taking a measured response to prevent things getting out of hand.

The North has a huge array of artillery pointed at Seoul that could decimate an urban area home to around 25 million people and cause major damage to its trillion dollar economy.

The two Koreas are still technically at war -- the Korean War ended only with a truce -- and tension rose sharply early this year after Seoul accused the North of torpedoing one of its navy vessels, killing 46 sailors.

North Korea said its wealthy neighbor started the fight.

"Despite our repeated warnings, South Korea fired dozens of shells from 1 p.m. ... and we've taken strong military action immediately," its KCNA news agency said in a brief statement.

South Korea said it had been conducting military drills in the area beforehand but had fired west, not north.

The international community was quick to express alarm at the sudden rise in tension in a region that is home to three of the world's biggest economies -- China, Japan and South Korea.

A French diplomatic source said the U.N. Security Council would call an emergency meeting in a day or two over North Korea, against which it has imposed heavy economic sanctions for previous nuclear and missile tests.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov called the escalation in tensions a "colossal danger.

China was careful to avoid taking sides, calling on both Koreas to "do more to contribute to peace.

"China hopes that the relevant parties will do more to contribute to peace and stability in the region ... it is imperative now to resume the six-party talks," a spokesman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, Hong Lei, told reporters.

Those talks on North Korea's nuclear weapons program -- involving the two Koreas, China, Japan, Russia and the United States -- have long been on ice.

But the North has recently been pushing to resume the talks, which previously it has used to win massive aid in return for promises to end its weapons program.

WON TUMBLES

News of the exchange of fire sent the won tumbling in offshore markets with the 1-month won down about four percent at one stage in NDF trading. U.S. 10-year Treasury futures rose and the Japanese yen fell.

The South Korean central bank, after an emergency meeting, said it planned to cooperate with the government to take measures to stabilize markets if necessary. Many traders expect South Korea's financial markets to fall further when trading opens on Wednesday.

The attack comes just as a U.S. envoy is in Beijing on a tour of the region and is expected to ask China to use its influence over North Korea.

Washington has branded the North a danger to the region and expressed concern Pyongyang would sell nuclear weapons technology to other states. It has said it was ready to return to talks but wants to see more commitment to denuclearization by the North beforehand.

The White House condemned the attack, telling the North to halt its "belligerent action" and saying it was committed to defend the South.

It has about 28,000 troops in South Korea, their combined forces facing an estimated one million North Korean soldiers who make up one of the world's biggest standing armies.

"UNBELIEVABLE"

"It's unbelievable," said Zhu Feng, professor of international relations at Peking University. "Today's news proves that North Korea, under unprovoked conditions, shot these South Korean islands. It's reckless provocation. They want to make a big bang and force the negotiations back into their favor. It's the oldest trick."

The North depends heavily on China for economic and diplomatic support and Kim Jong-il has visited China twice this year, in part to gain backing for the anointment of his son as heir.


Those ties have become a sore point with Washington after reports that North Korea appears to have made big steps toward enriching uranium, possibly using technology that passed through or even originated in China.

China has urged returning to the nuclear disarmament negotiations but has also fended off calls from Washington and its regional allies to use its vital food and energy aid to North Korea as a lever.

North Korea shells South in fiercest attack in decades - Yahoo! News
 
I doubt it. NK isn't Iraq. These people are fanatics, their agents regularly volunteer for suicide mission and the military is just about the only thing that is well funded in that country. (the only nice luxury cars on the streets belong to the military)
Pleeeaaaase...:rolleyes:...In some ways people must feel sorry for Iraqis. Everyone said 'so-and-so is not Iraq'. Which is worse, a surrender or a complete route so bad that the military self dissolved? The French must be mighty glad that Iraq is now the focus of military historian and strategists and the target of these 'so-and-so is not Iraq'.

You speak as if every North Korean soldier is such a fanatic. Wrong. Take a close look at their soldiers in those extravagant parades. Their uniforms merely hang on their thin frames. They may not be malnourished but they certainly are underfed and underpaid conscripts. In my experience with the ROK Marines, a single ROK Marine is worth three NKRean troopers anytime and they are no less 'fanatic' in defending their half of Korea. The South Koreans certain are not Iraq. Do some research on the effects of 'carpet bombing', psychological and physical. A few days of this and there will be far more surrendered troops than dead ones. In a conventional fight, North Korea will lose and lose badly. Just like Iraq...:lol:
 
This is still no way to bargain. This calls for ROK declaring war on DPRK. Let the 2 Koreas handle this and not let their big brothers come in the way.
Absolutely...Korea will be a single country again and the capital city will be Seoul. Pyongyang will be nothing more than a museum piece among many of the utter failures of communism.
 
Absolutely...Korea will be a single country again and the capital city will be Seoul. Pyongyang will be nothing more than a museum piece among many of the utter failures of communism.

:cheers: to this.
 
Absolutely...Korea will be a single country again and the capital city will be Seoul. Pyongyang will be nothing more than a museum piece among many of the utter failures of communism.

Didn't you guys say that in 1950 too?

Well if the USA wants to get themselves stuck in another war, with their economy already doing so badly, then that's none of my business.

The only thing that worries me is the possibility of mass civilian casualties, considering how close Seoul is to the North Korean border.
 
North Korea Fires Artillery at Tense Western Border

"Hoguk" Triggers Retaliation

The attack appears to have been a response to military exercises taking place in contested waters in the Yellow Sea. South Korea has been carrying out live-fire exercises in waters off Baengnyeong and Yeonpyeong islands as part of an annual nine-day military exercise called operation "Hoguk". The drill is aimed at enhancing its defence capabilities against North Korean provocations. According to South Korean officials, the Pyongyang government sent a faxed message to the South this morning saying that it would not simply "sit back" while the drill took place.

An Ongoing Flaspoint Between the Two Koreas

The island has long been a flashpoint due to its location just a few kilometres away from the tense maritime border between the two Koreas in the Yellow Sea, known as the Northern Limit Line (NLL). The NLL was drawn up by the United Nations in 1953 at the end of the Korean War. However, North Korea has objected to the delineation since the early 1970s, complaining that it forces North Korean ships to take convoluted routes to access international sea lanes. There was a brief period of optimism in 2007 after the two Koreas struck an agreement to transform the area into a "zone of peace", but the pact was never implemented. South Korea continues to maintain a large military garrison on the island and keeps one of its latest class of "patrol killer" guided-missile ships there. The island is also equipped with 19 bomb shelters, and residents conduct monthly air raid drills. In this way, the population of Yeonpyeong Island are familiar with acts of North Korean aggression. In June, North Korea responded to joint U.S.-South Korean military drills in the Yellow Sea by firing 130 artillery shells towards the island—although only ten of these actually landed on the opposite side of the NLL. Furthermore, the first battle of Yeonpyeong in 1999 resulted in the deaths of up to 30 North Korean sailors, while the second battle in 2002 saw a North Korean patrol boat sink a Chamsuri-class (Sea Dolphin/Wildcat) fast-attack craft, killing six South Korean sailors. Amid rising tension on the Korean Peninsula last year, the Seoul government took the opportunity to demonstrate its resolve during a naval clash in the Yellow Sea in November 2009.

The latest clash constitutes North Korea's most serious assault on civilian targets since it planted a bomb on a South Korean airliner, killing 115 people in 1987. It comes after the third son of North Korea's ailing leader, Kim Jong-il, was effectively confirmed as successor-in-waiting at a Workers' Party of Korea convention in Pyongyang in September. The display of such belligerent behaviour suggests that Kim junior may be flexing his muscles as a way of shoring up capital within the North Korean political elite, and particularly the military. The attack feeds into already heightened tension between the two Koreas following the March sinking of a South Korean naval ship, the Cheonan, which led to the deaths of 46 sailors. Although the Pyongyang government has repeatedly denied any involvement in the incident, a multi-national investigation in May indicated that a North Korean torpedo had been used. For President Lee, the incident is likely to bolster his hard-line policy towards the North, providing him with further evidence to back-up his foreign policy. Here it is worth noting that Lee has shown no sign of retreating from his tough stance towards North Korea since the Cheonan incident. Internationally, the attack will further strengthen the U.S.-South Korean alliance, already in the best shape that it has been in recent years. The Cheonan sinking brought together the two allies against North Korea. South Korea's recent announcement of its sanctions on Iran reaffirmed the spirit of the relationship. Regarding six-party talks, the incident deals another blow to prospects for their resumption. Recent weeks have seen the Washington and Seoul governments thinking about how to move on from the Cheonan incident, but nuclear negotiations now look set to remain on the backburner as tension on the Korean Peninsula spikes once again.
 
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Absolutely...Korea will be a single country again and the capital city will be Seoul. Pyongyang will be nothing more than a museum piece among many of the utter failures of communism.

Only if we take the North Korean nuclear weapons/facilities out of the equation.Otherwise burnt S. & N.Korean trees and images will be the found in famous museums across the world. :oops: And something for Images that shook the world.
 
Actually North Korea dont have anything to lose but south korea does have things .
1 Economy
2 Foreign investments

I think they acted very sensibly and retaliated in a good manner.
Then North Koreans have nothing worth defending, do they?

https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/kn.html

https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ks.html

South Korea has the numerical advantage. With the country they have, including the prosperity they built over the years, the SKReans have plenty of incentives to defend with everything they are.
 
Relax. S Koreans will most probably drop some Samsung corbys all over NKoreas population.
 
Didn't you guys say that in 1950 too?
South Korea today is not the Korea of the 1950s.

Well if the USA wants to get themselves stuck in another war, with their economy already doing so badly, then that's none of my business.
Wrong...If China is soooooo convinced that the US is such the proverbial 'paper tiger', now is the best time to attack US -- in the Korean peninsula. I do encourage Beijing to begin...:D
 
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