Trump Issued HUGE Warning To China And North Korea And Now He’s About To Make Good On It

Trump Issued HUGE Warning To China And North Korea And Now He’s About To Make Good On It

The world has suffered two world wars so far, and thankfully the tyrannical dictators that started the messes both times were put down by those (including the United States) who stood on the side of justice. The second time around there were some serious advancements in wartime technologies and weapons, and the United States caused some serious devastation go one Asian city in retaliation for their attack.

The reasons for war are usually simple; a credible threat to the lives of those who inhabit a particular country. It’s time to bring out the guns when all diplomatic options have been exhausted. Sometimes it’s hard to tell when the diplomatic options have been exhausted because your enemy might be sneaky, or duplicitous in some way, and a country has to try and sort out fact from fiction. And sometimes they come right out in the open and announce their intentions, as North Korea has. It doesn’t get much more plain than “American bastards would be not very happy with this gift sent on the July 4 anniversary.”

America absolutely must stand up and protect itself, or generations to come will be reading their history books in another language, wondering why we kept quiet so long. President Trump has decided that he’s going to start his offensive by pressuring the United States’ trade partners into cutting off their dealings with the tiny dictatorship, in hopes that will further sway their actions.
Just because you saw it on social media doesn’t mean it’s not serious stuff. The President has to resort to means other than the traditional media because of their terrible bias, but rest assured, the man means business.

Via The Guardian:
“The US has ramped up pressure on North Korea after Tuesday’s successful intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) test, making a show of force off the Korean peninsula and calling for a broad international effort to hamper the secretive nation’s nuclear weapons programme.

The US president’s attacks on North Korea’s most important ally are likely to add to tensions at a UN security council meeting on the incident, due to be held at 3pm New York time (1900 GMT), which was called by Washington, Tokyo and Seoul.

China has already called for restraint from all sides, after joining diplomatic forces with Russia to suggest that North Korea suspend its missile programme in return for a moratorium on large-scale US and South Korean military exercises.

The US secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, earlier said any country that supported Pyongyang, hosted workers sending hard currency remittances or failed to implement United Nations sanctions was ‘aiding and abetting a dangerous regime’.

‘Testing an ICBM represents a new escalation of the threat to the United States, our allies and partners, the region, and the world. All nations should publicly demonstrate to North Korea that there are consequences to their pursuit of nuclear weapons,’ he said in a statement.

Kim delivered his own message on Wednesday, with the state Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) quoting him as saying: ‘American bastards would be not very happy with this gift sent on the July 4 anniversary.’

The news agency claimed the North Korean missile was capable of carrying a “large, heavy nuclear warhead” that could survive re-entry into the Earth’s atmosphere.

Kim was quoted as saying the North’s long confrontation with Washington had entered the ‘final stage’ and that Pyongyang would not put its nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles up for negotiation ‘unless the US hostile policy and nuclear threats come to an end completely’.

A report in its state media said Kim urged his scientists to ‘frequently send big and small ‘gift packages’ to the Yankees’.
Analysis by Japan and South Korea has supported the account given by North Korea’s Academy of Defence Science, which said the missile reached an altitude of 1,741 miles (2,802km) and flew 580 miles. The US initially described it as an intermediate-range missile but now concedes it was an ICBM.

North Koreans have celebrated the ICBM launch in the capital, Pyongyang. A 38-year-old Pyongyang resident named Ri Song-gil said his country ‘can attack anywhere in the world’. He added: ‘Now, the time when the US could threaten the world with nuclear weapons has passed away.’