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Robert Gates: North Korea Will Pose Direct Threat To U.S.

ANNE GEARAN   01/11/11 12:39 PM ET   AP

BEIJING — North Korea's development of nuclear weapons and long-range missiles poses a direct threat to the United States, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Tuesday, a blunt assessment of the risk posed by an erratic dictatorship that considers the U.S. its foremost enemy.

North Korea will have a limited ability to deliver a weapon to U.S. shores within five years using intercontinental ballistic missiles, Gates predicted. North Korea has threatened to test such missiles, and has already conducted underground nuclear tests that prove it has manufactured at least rudimentary nuclear weapons.

"With the North Koreans' continuing development of nuclear weapons and their development of intercontinental ballistic missiles, North Korea is becoming a direct threat to the United States, and we have to take that into account," Gates said.

The risk of war on the Korean Peninsula is also rising because South Koreans are fed up with provocation and harassment from the North, Gates said.

"We consider this a situation of real concern and we think there is some urgency to proceeding down the track of negotiations and engagement," he said.

North Korea is accused of sinking a South Korean Navy ship last spring, killing 46 sailors, and it fired artillery at a disputed island in November, killing four South Koreans.

The South's "tolerance for not responding" is nearly gone, Gates told reporters in China, which is North Korea's only ally.

"Clearly, if there is another provocation there will be pressure on the ... South Korean government to react," Gates said.

Gates said he thanked Chinese President Hu Jintao and others he saw here for reining in North Korea, and asked China to keep leaning on the fellow communist state.

Gates is in China in part to broaden military cooperation between China and the U.S. On Tuesday, the second date of Gates' visit, China conducted its first known test flight of its new stealth fighter plane. The test was apparently intended to send the message that Beijing is responding to calls from the U.S. and others to be more transparent about its defense modernization and future intentions.

North Korea depends on China for aid and protection, but China's influence over the inward-looking nation is limited. China props up the insolvent North largely out of fear that a collapsed state would unsettle the entire North Asian region.

U.S. officials have said North Korea's increasingly bellicose behavior over the past year is probably part of a plan to establish the military bona fides of leader Kim Jong Il's son as his chosen successor. North Korea regularly denounces the United States and accuses it of wanting to destroy the country, but it poses the most direct threat to its neighbor South Korea, a U.S. ally.

War on the Korean peninsula could involve the United States apart from any North Korean ability to deliver a nuclear weapon across the Pacific. The United States has 29,000 troops stationed in South Korea as a legacy of the Korean War, and is pledged to help defend Seoul.

Gates will visit Seoul on Friday for talks on the North Korean threat.

North Korea has pleaded for talks in recent days, and has proposed holding a working-level dialogue on Jan. 27 to prepare for higher-level government discussions and Red Cross talks on joint economic projects on Feb. 1.

South Korea's Unification Ministry has rejected the North's latest offer as an attempt to win economic aid.

"If the South Korean authorities sincerely want the improvement of North-South relations, they should clear away useless doubt and open the door of their minds and actively respond to our proposal for dialogue and goodwill measures," Min Kum Song, a North Korean official, told Associated Press Television News in Pyongyang on Tuesday.

Gates said he wants to see North Korea take specific steps, such as a moratorium on nuclear and missile tests, to show that it is serious about disarmament talks.

Gates said he wants to make sure North Korea is not rewarded for brinksmanship. He said the North has a pattern of bargaining by provoking a crisis, "and then everybody scrambles diplomatically to try and put Humpty Dumpty back together again. I don't want to buy the same horse twice."

___

Associated Press writer Kim Kwang-tae contributed to this report from Seoul.

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BEIJING — North Korea's development of nuclear weapons and long-range missiles poses a direct threat to the United States, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Tuesday, a blunt assessment of the ...
BEIJING — North Korea's development of nuclear weapons and long-range missiles poses a direct threat to the United States, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Tuesday, a blunt assessment of the ...
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ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
08:38 AM on 01/12/2011
C'mon Mr Gates, targetting is one thing, hitting is something else entirely.
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cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
03:32 AM on 01/12/2011
Mr. Gates, no empire, no problems.
leonel
MA, Pol.Sci.; MA, Ed.; JD. Veteran.
01:33 AM on 01/12/2011
North Korea is testing out a transition in their dictatorship. Can daddy transfer a dictatorship to his son? Can enough firepower help them out? Like some medieval lord buildining a safer castle to keep his succession going. Very tricky and a high wire act. China is not interested in any more political challenges. There is no actual military threat to the US.

But there is also no need to push things closer to the cliff. Most likely to see what happens over a few years.

Yes, it is not a crisis of days, months, but years. But the information needed is collected over daily and weekly responses. through "body language,'" through responses to what seems like bluffs and so on.
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tapeatsbill
Founder of the Ownership Project
12:37 AM on 01/12/2011
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xh_9QhRzJEs

Team America F - Yeah!
11:23 PM on 01/11/2011
Mr Gates, if I were you I would keep a sharp eye on Tasmania, they might very well be a threat to us one day.
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bccmeteorites
Don't believe everything NASA says.
06:53 AM on 01/12/2011
I'm very suspicious of Lichtenstein too. It's just too quiet to be trusted.
07:34 AM on 01/12/2011
Tasmania does not have any nuclear warheads aimed at the US.
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Edward Standley
opinionated jerk
11:37 AM on 01/12/2011
Neither does the DPRK. Their nuclear tests were less than impressive and most analysts predict it will take them years to overcome the miniaturization problems attendant to putting warheads on missiles. Does N. Korea bear watching? Of course, but they are certainly no immediate threat to us. Both North and South Korea desire a unified nation, albeit for different reasons. North Korea is a smart negotiator. The South just needs to be as smart or smarter. China has lost patience with the North and I think that will help to push negotiations in the right direction.
10:54 PM on 01/11/2011
iraq, afghanistan, pakistan, yemen, iran, north korea...sigh
10:19 PM on 01/11/2011
Quick, quick, give the Pentagon more money.
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cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
03:45 AM on 01/12/2011
fanned and faved for a week of outstanding comments. Boeing and Northrup-Grummin has some real competition now -- China. I'm sure they bought their new stealth fighter technology from Israel who, of course, got it in their usual manner by spying on us.
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Edward Standley
opinionated jerk
11:41 AM on 01/12/2011
I'm guessing that China's stealth technology is pretty archaic. I read years ago that our first stealth fighters were test flying in the late '50's and were unknown to the public until the late '70's. I don't think the Pentagon stopped R&D in the late '50's. It would be interesting to know just what experimental aircraft they're testing today.
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Rahm11219
10:18 PM on 01/11/2011
But fear not! We are bombing Afghanistan and Pakistan. It's all good.
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MikeyJaii
Socialism.
08:59 PM on 01/11/2011
North Korea poses a direct threat to U.S? Then what should we consider China then? How about Russia?
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cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
03:47 AM on 01/12/2011
Unfortunately, our own government is the most immediate threat the American people face today.
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dmherb
I don't even know how to read...so...yeah
08:01 PM on 01/11/2011
North Korea poses a direct threat, as does dependancy of fossil fuels. Priorities, priorities.
12:20 PM on 01/12/2011
smart comment. Cover most of the reasons :)
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dmherb
I don't even know how to read...so...yeah
01:47 PM on 01/12/2011
I can give you one general reason: eventually both of them will kill us if we don't do anything.
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offred
A biocitizen is 3/5 of a corporate citizen
07:56 PM on 01/11/2011
Wheeeee doggeeez, Gates is gearing up for another war. He must have gotten tired of waiting for instructions from the neocons to invade Iran.
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cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
03:38 AM on 01/12/2011
Oh nooooo. Netanyahu made another aggressive anti-Iran speech today not covered by the MSM, of course. He criticized the U.S. for thinking the current system of sanctions could prevent Iran from developing what they're not developing. Bibi N. Kafka went on to call for increased military threats. And we're all worried about domestic turrists......
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Sleepers Awake
Google this: "Fighting for peace is like" ...
07:18 PM on 01/11/2011
Gates' world view is too depressing.

Rather then citing the list of all those who pose a risk to the US, such as Gates' statement "North Korea Will Pose Direct Threat To the US," why don't we make a list of the countries that do NOT pose a direct threat to the US?

Then we could build on that, no?
07:25 PM on 01/11/2011
You realize he in charge of defense right? The countries that do not pose an offensive capability to the US will not require him to defend the US. We have intelligence agencies and the State Dept. for that type of a mission.
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Sleepers Awake
Google this: "Fighting for peace is like" ...
08:34 PM on 01/11/2011
OK, but with a guy like Gates wagging his finger at anybody and everybody, it make it kind of hard for the bridge builders, no?
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bccmeteorites
Don't believe everything NASA says.
10:47 AM on 01/12/2011
MMRDO 27 minutes ago (10:17 AM)
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Unfan
That is very classy of you to hurl insults instead of debating, I'm impressed needless to say...

So now you are no longer denying factual events as you were before?

It behooves us to complain about NK human rights abuses of their own populations when we in the U.S. are committed to untold thousands of deaths from human rights abuses in the middle east, including illegal torture, murder and mayhem.
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cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
03:40 AM on 01/12/2011
Of course the biggest threat to the U.S. is the very corporatist industry he represents -- the defense industry. I think they all now sense that they'd better squeeze the turnip before it runs completely dry.
05:21 PM on 01/11/2011
Does North Korea still power its missiles with those old souped up scud engines? Gates seems to be saying NK is developing real intercontinental engines for its missiles. A missile attack on the US is suicidal and NK knows it. North Korea wants the kind of sweet deal with washington that South Korea has - unlimited access to the US consumer market. NK labor is cheaper than Chinese labor.
If commercial interests and imperial interests coincide North Korea may very well be rewarded for its brinksmanship. It could get access to US markets directly or through South Korean Corporations. Yet another reason to oppose Obama's Korean Free Trade Agreement.
04:22 PM on 01/11/2011
What has it been? Only ten days or so since this Dr. Strangelove pledged to cut 78 billion from defense over the next five years? And now an "immediate threat to the United States" is alleged. Wow, how ***convenient***.
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ArjenBoatsma
No such thing as too much coffee.
07:48 PM on 01/11/2011
That 78 billion is going to come out of benefits for soldiers (and of course airmen, sailors and marines) and veterans. No cuts on hardware!
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Aarontastic
"Mr. Cain instead decided to try to provide her wi
04:21 PM on 01/11/2011
I don't suspect that North Korea will actually attack anyone--the US or South Korea--if they believe that it will lead to a war. Their state wouldn't survive the conflict, and they must know that. Even if they don't, Beijing certainly does and Chinese diplomacy will continue to be important in keeping things calm. The ironic thing to me is that the US might have to play a similar role with South Korea; it seems like they are just as keen on provoking the north, and as the article states, they are getting fed up with the constant appeasement of their pugnacious neighbor which yields pretty much nothing. At this point, they seem like the likeliest party to openly declare war, simply because the public will demand it if the North continues its actions. America has to have the cooler head in the situation and make sure the South restrains itself. We're kidding ourselves if we think we can get involved in another war right now.