Putin's Warning To The World
North Korea "On The Verge Of A Large-Scale Conflict"
By Tyler Durden
September 02, 2017
"Information
Clearing House" - As tensions between the US, its regional
allies and North Korea continue ebb and flow, depending on what and where
Kim lobs the next missile and whether Kelly can block Trump from tweeting
for the next few hours, Russian President Vladimir Putin has decided to
personally weigh in on the conflict for the first time since the UN passed
new sanctions against the North earlier this month. In an article published
on the Kremlin’s web site, the Russian president warned that the two sides
are “balancing on the verge of a large-scale conflict," adding
that any efforts to pressure the North to end its nuclear program would
prove “futile,” and that the only tenable solution to the standoff would be
a "dialogue with preconditions."
"It is essential to
resolve the region’s problems through direct dialogue involving all sides
without advancing any preconditions (for such talks)," Putin wrote.
"Provocations, pressure, and bellicose and offensive rhetoric is the
road to nowhere."
His remarks about a
diplomatic solution alluded to a “road map” to peace formulated
jointly between Russia and China.... without the U.S.
According to the joint
Russian-Chinese deescalation plan, North Korea would stop work on its
missile program in exchange for the US and South Korea halting large-scale
war games, allowing tensions to gradually subside.
"Russia believes
that the policy of putting pressure on Pyongyang to stop its nuclear
missile programme is misguided and futile," he wrote in the article
sent to media in Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa - the BRICS
member states.
"The region's
problems should only be settled through a direct dialogue of all the
parties concerned without any preconditions. Provocations, pressure and
militarist and insulting rhetoric are a dead-end road."
As recently as last
week, tensions between the two sides appeared to be easing, with US
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson praising the country’s restraint after the
North went nearly a month without a new missile test, despite restrictive
new UN sanctions that took effect on Aug. 5. That quickly changed with the
beginning of the US and South Korea’s annual 11-day joint military
exercises, which appeared to provoke an especially vitriolic response from
the North this year, prompting not one but two rocket launches over the
next few days.
Two days ago, Russian
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov reportedly warned Tillerson that it would be
“dangerous” to push for more sanctions against North Korea.
“Russian Foreign
Minister Sergey Lavrov told Tillerson that the U.S. should avoid taking
military actions against Kim Jong Un’s regime and that the Russian
government believes additional sanctions could prove “counterproductive and
dangerous.”
Tillerson’s response to
Lavrov is unclear, but the pair did condemn the North’s most recent test on
Monday, when a missile sailed over U.S. ally Japan.”
Of course, the North’s
missile launch earlier this week which flew over Japan airspace appeared to
- at least temporarily - startle investors, triggering a short-lived
selloff in global stocks. A day ago, US and South Korea insisted on a
provocation of their own, conducting a bombing drill with nuclear-capable
US bombers and the new F-35 stealth fighter.
Despite the bellicose
rhetoric from both sides, an all-out war is much less likely than the
public might believe. Echoing comments made by former White House chief
strategist Steve Bannon, a professor warned yesterday that the US is in “no
position” to start a war with the North because of the unprecedented
devastation the North’s artillery could unleash on Seoul, the densely
populated South Korean capital.
As Bannon said during an
interview with the American Prospect, the US doesn’t have a tenable
military option for toppling Kim Jong Un.
“Until somebody solves
the part of the equation that shows me that ten million people in Seoul
don’t die in the first 30 minutes from conventional weapons, I don’t know
what you’re talking about, there’s no military solution here, they got us.”
As the war of words
stretches into its eighth month, observers will surely keep this in mind.
Investors, on the other hand, are just looking for an opportunity to "buy
the fucking nuclear war dip."
In Case You Missed it
Putin's Warning: Full
Speech 2016
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