Originally posted by GePap
NO. We could , but we don;t have the right.
NO. We could , but we don;t have the right.
Right now the opposition of NKors neighbors to a US preemptive attack on NKor has less to do with their concern for the fine points of international law, and more to do with their concern for the aftermath of the collapse of North Korea, which they seem to think (perhaps correctly) would make Iraq look like a cakewalk.
I would say that the notion that a power cant preemptively strike when an enemy aquires nuclear weapons, given particularly that said enemy has shown evidence of not being deterrable (Nkor) or of supporting terrorists who could plant an untraceable nuke (Iran) is "law" in the same sense that its illegal to smoke pot in the privacy of your home in the US - its a law that cant very well be changed on paper, for many reasons, but its a law everyone understands to be foolish, and that no one is inclined to enforce. Whether its truely a "law" in that case, I leave to legal philosophers.
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