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Politics : American Presidential Politics and foreign affairs -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: RMF who wrote (35174)4/27/2009 10:51:24 PM
From: TimF  Respond to of 71588
 
but it would seem they have the power to destroy Japan and S. Korea, along with at least 50K of our troops.

Not really. But they do have the power to largely destroy Seoul.

You seem to think that N. Korea is somehow LESS a threat after 8 years of Bush than it was before he came into office.

As long as the program continues N Korea becomes more of a threat over time. If the Bush and Clinton swapped times in office than it would have been more of a threat after eight years of Clinton that it was before he came in to office.



To: RMF who wrote (35174)4/28/2009 11:22:11 PM
From: Peter Dierks  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71588
 
FLASHBACK: Albright: North Korea 'Cheated' on Clinton Nuke Agreement
NewsMax.com | Sunday, Sept. 12, 2004 10:13 p.m. EDT | NewsMax.com Staff

Posted on Tuesday, October 10, 2006 12:15:28 PM by excludethis

Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright admitted for the first time on Sunday that under the Clinton administration's Agreed Framework arms control treaty with Kim Jong-il, North Korea "cheated."

Asked point-blank if North Korea developed nuclear weapons during the Clinton administration, Albright told NBC's "Meet the Press," "No, what they were doing, as it turns out, they were cheating."

"The worst part that has happened under the Agreed Framework," Albright said, was that "there [were] these fuel rods, and the nuclear program was frozen."

But because of North Korea's cheating, she explained, "those fuel rods have now been reprocessed, as far as we know, and North Korea has a capability, which at one time might have been two potential nuclear weapons, up to six to eight now, we're not really clear."

Albright's comments came less than 24 hours after reports surfaced that Pyongyang detonated what some said was its first above-ground nuclear test – though experts later said the mushroom-cloud explosion witnessed by tens of thousands was a non-nuclear event.

In a February 2003 interview, Albright boasted to NBC, "When we had the Agreed Framework, we did freeze those fuel rods, and had we not, in the last years, we would have somewhere, people calculate, 50 to 100 nuclear weapons."

A 1999 congressional study determined that Pyongyang was cheating on the agreement, but Albright disregarded the warning and continued to claim that the Agreed Framework was a success.

freerepublic.com

As you can see, regardless if I got the details of Clnton's contribution to North Korea's nuclear program wrong, it was advancing rapidly during the CLitnon years.