Nuclear proliferation just seems to the latest stage in the technological race.
The next step will be preliminary defenses capable of intercepting missiles in flight — already being fine-tuned with the Israeli Arrow and American Patriot systems, along with work beginning on an anti-missile defense system in Alaska — and the step after that will be fully functional and mostly reliable systems. After that, I don't know.
It appears there is no stopping proliferation, nor shall there be any real attempt to prevent nations from erecting anti-missile defense systems in response to the proliferation.
Returning to the Korean Peninsula briefly, I think America should insist that South Korea and North Korea begin real peace talks, so that we can, in time, remove the 37,000 troops we have there. My understanding is that our troops are there only because there never has been a formal peace treaty and, thus, the DMZ is merely a buffer between two powerful armies that, technically, are still at war.
This peace treaty would have to be between SK and NK, *not* NK and America. After all, if our SK allies are officially at peace with NK, we could remove our troops ... that way, we'd not have to sign some silly non-aggression pact with a despotic regime (NK in this case), and said despotic regime wouldn't have to worry about 37,000 U.S. troops backing up the million or so troops SK has (they'd also have a peace treaty ... so no surprise attacks by either side, I'd imagine).
Gatekeeper
The next step will be preliminary defenses capable of intercepting missiles in flight — already being fine-tuned with the Israeli Arrow and American Patriot systems, along with work beginning on an anti-missile defense system in Alaska — and the step after that will be fully functional and mostly reliable systems. After that, I don't know.
It appears there is no stopping proliferation, nor shall there be any real attempt to prevent nations from erecting anti-missile defense systems in response to the proliferation.
Returning to the Korean Peninsula briefly, I think America should insist that South Korea and North Korea begin real peace talks, so that we can, in time, remove the 37,000 troops we have there. My understanding is that our troops are there only because there never has been a formal peace treaty and, thus, the DMZ is merely a buffer between two powerful armies that, technically, are still at war.
This peace treaty would have to be between SK and NK, *not* NK and America. After all, if our SK allies are officially at peace with NK, we could remove our troops ... that way, we'd not have to sign some silly non-aggression pact with a despotic regime (NK in this case), and said despotic regime wouldn't have to worry about 37,000 U.S. troops backing up the million or so troops SK has (they'd also have a peace treaty ... so no surprise attacks by either side, I'd imagine).
Gatekeeper


How many refugees went north when those millions starved?
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