vendic wrote:Now K.K is threatening a US aircraft carrier: http://www.cnn.com/2017/04/23/politics/ ... us-drills/
When you're strong, act weak. When you're weak, act strong...
vendic wrote:If they really want to get a nuke into a country, there is really no way to stop them.
I just think it would be suicide on NK's part to pull that stunt.
If the US did a pre-emptive strike, I have no clue if the Government of Australia would support them or not. Historically speaking, probably.
Tarragon wrote:How evil do you think the DPRK is? I hear USA politicians using equivalent rhetoric against them and other countries. If the US were to use a nuke against DPRK first, which almost happened in the Korean War, would the world really blame DPRK for using one in response?
Tarragon wrote:How evil do you think the DPRK is? I hear USA politicians using equivalent rhetoric against them and other countries. If the US were to use a nuke against DPRK first, which almost happened in the Korean War, would the world really blame DPRK for using one in response?
Rommie wrote:Yeah, my understanding of the situation (which included a really informative chat with the Pentagon-working BiL) is what people really spend time worrying about is the insane amount of artillery North Korea has, which no one's quite certain of in number but can certainly destroy a large chunk of South Korea, and now has some number of nuclear weapons. If you don't believe that NK would use all of it at once (and why would they) the trillion question then is how they deploy it, and do they ever get desperate enough to use the nuclear stuff.
Frankly the US has enough conventional weapons of their own that I find it unlikely that we would use nuclear weapons first when you've got stuff like the MOAB used a few weeks ago in Afghanistan- the potential effects of fallout in South Korea alone are not something I imagine anyone wants, but then, it's not the most rational and competent current administration.
If the North Korean Peoples Army (KPA) were to start a doctrinal, conventional artillery barrage focused on South Korean forces, we could expect to see around three thousand casualties in the first few minutes, but the casualty rate would quickly drop as the surprise wears off and counter-battery fires slow down the North Korean rates of fire. If the KPA were to engage Seoul in a primarily counter-value fashion by firing into Seoul instead of primarily aiming at military targets, there would likely be around thirty-thousand casualties in a short amount of time. Statistically speaking, almost eight-hundred of those casualties would be foreigners given Seoul’s international demographic. Chinese make up almost seventy percent of foreigners in Seoul and its northern environs which means KPA might also kill six-hundred Chinese diplomats, multi-national corporation leaders, and ranking cadre children who are students in Seoul. Horrible, but nothing approaching “millions”. Three primary factors and three secondary factors account for the huge discrepancy between rhetoric and reality:
SciFiFisher wrote:Tarragon wrote:How evil do you think the DPRK is? I hear USA politicians using equivalent rhetoric against them and other countries. If the US were to use a nuke against DPRK first, which almost happened in the Korean War, would the world really blame DPRK for using one in response?
Well, they are not adverse to starving millions of their own people and working them to death. We have some fairly good documentation of NK torturing people down through the years. And the current leader fires people by executing them with Anti-Aircraft guns. So, I am willing to say that on a scale of 1 to 10. With 10 being the most evil. The current regime in NK is probably about a 9 out of 10. It's hard to hit 10. Not everyone can be a Stalin.
As for the U.S. nuking them and them nuking us in response. I think the majority of the pro-democracy and some of the not so democratic countries would say NK did not have a right to retaliate. I base that on NK's track record with the rest of the world. They really don't have any friends currently. China, Iran, and maybe a couple of other countries willing to provide tacit support. Mostly on the basis of "We dictators must stick together". China primarily uses them as a buffer. The Korean war started primarily because China didn't like the U.S. or it's proxies being so close to their border. And because Russia really thought the U.S. wouldn't fight that hard to stop the annexation of South Korea.
geonuc wrote:Tarragon wrote:How evil do you think the DPRK is? I hear USA politicians using equivalent rhetoric against them and other countries. If the US were to use a nuke against DPRK first, which almost happened in the Korean War, would the world really blame DPRK for using one in response?
Very evil. On a scale of 0 -10, 9.5 evil. As Fisher says, the North Korean population has suffered and died in great numbers under the Kim dynasty. Sometimes I think the US and its allies have a moral obligation to invade the country and throw those bastards up against the wall. Then I remember that such endeavors rarely work out well.
As for first use of nuclear weapons, it depends on the scenario. If, for example, North Korea started an artillery barrage against Seoul, or started sinking South Korean or US or Japanese ships, or invaded South Korea, then yes, we'd be perfectly justified in using nuclear weapons against them. Not that we'd have to. I think the US still has an ample supply of Tomahawks (despite wasting 59 on Syria) and other distance ordnance to take on the North Korean military. Their navy would be toast.
Also, with respect to the vulnerability of the USS Carl Vinson to stealthy attacks by submarine or mine, it isn't that easy to sink a carrier. One or two torpedoes or mines won't do the job. North Korea might be able to disable it, but they'd have to be really fortunate to sink that ship. First, they'd have to find it. It's a big ocean and the carrier doesn't need to approach NK territorial waters to deploy its weaponry.
North Korea worries me. As mentioned, they don't even have to develop a reliable ballistic missile to deliver a warhead. Driving a suicide vessel into a port would do the job.
Tarragon wrote:How exactly do you justify a nuclear attack in response for a conventional attack?
I'd be curious to see how Tomahawks fare against their air defenses.
I know they have a brown-water navy, but I don't know how far out their newer littoral subs or ye olde Romeos can range (doctrinally, speaking). I was referring to a nuclear torpedo of some sort, probably a special towed version since I wonder if they'd trust their technical ability enough to fit it into a self-propelled torpedo. Then, they'd only have to get within a half mile or so, depending on yield. But I'm not sure how much data from Operation Crossroads can be applied due to newer ship design.
A port nuke would be the worst kind of dirty bomb, as you probably know, but others might not. Not only would you get damaged port infrastructure and damaged ships, but It would paint everything within several miles radius with an invisible, sticky cloud of death. The sodium in the seawater would be transmuted into radioactive sodium-24 with a 15-hour halflife (not to mention other reaction products and toxic, unreacted plutonium). Well, I suppose there are worse types of dirty bombs, like the salted variety, but this might be easier to claim as incidental instead of intentional, for what it's worth on the international stage (probably not much).
geonuc wrote:How do you justify a nuclear strike? Necessity. If North Korea is causing grave damage or is in position to overrun South Korea, you use what weaponry you must. Of course, there are political as well as strategic military considerations to using nuclear weapons instead of conventional. Mind you, I don't advocate using nuclear weapons. I'm just saying it could be justified under certain circumstances.
I don't think North Korea has any air defenses that could shoot down a significant number of Tomahawks, if any. Even Russia would have a hard time with Tomahawks. They are low-flying and have very small radar cross-secions. The US has other varieties of cruise missile, as well.
I don't think North Korea has a nuclear torpedo or is remotely close to having one. Not sure how they would tow a nuclear weapon close to a carrier, much less set it off.
geonuc wrote:I have no good answer to clarify the term 'justify' except that I mean all of that.
Any time we use cruise missiles against a country whose weaponry is supplied by Russia, we are essentially testing Russian weapons to some degree depending on modernity. Syria uses Russian air defense systems, for example.
Carrier task forces use a variety of anti-submarine measures, including active sonar. The destroyers and frigates don't worry so much about stealth. The nuclear attack submarines operating with the group will rely almost exclusively on passive sonar.
Tarragon wrote:geonuc wrote:I have no good answer to clarify the term 'justify' except that I mean all of that.
Any time we use cruise missiles against a country whose weaponry is supplied by Russia, we are essentially testing Russian weapons to some degree depending on modernity. Syria uses Russian air defense systems, for example.
Carrier task forces use a variety of anti-submarine measures, including active sonar. The destroyers and frigates don't worry so much about stealth. The nuclear attack submarines operating with the group will rely almost exclusively on passive sonar.
I saw some headlines from less-than-reputable sites claiming a large percentage of the Tomahawks were shot down by Syria and/or Russia. Have you heard anything like that?
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