It is pitiful that Kim Jong-il cannot read the handwriting on the wall to understand that he can only fire just one shot, that provocative shot, and his land will be turned into a pile of dust? Icheoku says, if he is so incapacitated by reason of sickness to comprehend the faith that awaits his buffoonery, why is he still in charge of North Korea or its armed forces? Where are the men and women of North Korea or are they all cowards of the country who must tremble and cower at the sight of their ailing leader? Icheoku says, Kim Jong-il is over-playing his hands; and now, is the time for the world to be ready to forever solve his problem, the Saddam Hussein way, if need be.
In the interim, the world should simply ignore him and await, trigger-ready, for any further provocative move he might make and pray it is the firing of the first shot. Since Saddam Hussein was taken out, that part of the world known as the Middle East has rested from being on a perpetual edge; except the dust of apprehension which Iranian Ahmadinejad intermittently raises. Icheoku is not a war-monger but at the same time, we do not shy away from the good fight; and we conclude here that North Korea is steadily graduating into such a good fight which the coalition of the willing must be ready to stand up to! Enough of this jittery on North East Asia peninsula! Icheoku says, end the tension, take Kim Jong-il out!
North Korea's penchant for defying the world is known and continual: last month, in utter disregard of international calls for restraint, it launched a rocket which it says was a communications satellite; but which the world believed was part of its ballistic missile program? When the world denounced the launch, instead of apologising and/or backing off, North Korea threatened to carry out more tests and followed through with that threat. It triggered an underground nuclear test in its border with China, believed to be comparable in force to the blasts that devastated Hiroshima and Nagasaki! This was followed with the launch of three ground-to-air missiles in the area of the test, immediately soon after. They also fired additional short range missiles subsequently; and had since become recalcitrant about further six-party talks. Lastly, when its brother neighbour to the south, South Korea threatened that it will join a United States of America-led initiative aimed at intercepting NOrth Korea's shipments suspected of carrying equipment for weapons of mass destruction, North Korea warned that such move would be considered by it as an act of war! Now South Korea has technically joined with Pyongan saying it has ended the 1953 armistice between the two Koreas and hostilities shall soon begin. So what next? May be smarting to fire the first shot? Icheoku asks, when is the first salvo going to leave the guns of North Koreans with projectiles raining down on the South? Further, when shall enough be really enough of these provocations by a repressive country that once executed a factory boss, by a firing squad in front of 150,000 people, for just making an international phone calls? His offence, trying to reach the outside world? Really! Also, we ask, when he finally and foolishly fires the mother of all shots, will the world be ready and resolved to respond in kind and forcefully too, in unison?
Until then, Icheoku says, Kim Jong-il, his army and people of North Korea are not that suicidal to provoke a fire-fight with the world. It would appear that they are merely huffing and puffing, craving for attention and should just be ignored; with a watchful alert maintained in case they over-reached thenselves. In the event of their miscalculations, the world must be decisive in conclusively solving this problem, once and for all. A caveat however, provided China is in tandem with the world!
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