Fox News is reporting that china just put 150,000 troops on NK's border

China tolerates NK more than anything (feeling is probably mutual). What the Chinese definitely don't want is the U.S. on their doorstep, and that's what they'd get if NK violates the cease-fire and the war gets hot again.
 
we would seal the south china sea, the Malacca straights, china would be in big time starvation trouble mode in a matter of 2 months. WE need to arm Japan and S Korea with Pershings 2 missiles with nuke payload that would really focus China on the problem.
 
150000 mother fuckers have to be somewhere, may as well be as close to us as possible when the shooting starts, hate to go looking for them...
maybe they could bunch them up, crowd them together, maybe even put them all in a spot where we could cut off their food to watch the skinny mothers eat each other...
 
My guess, is china does not want N/K's flooding across their borders like last time. They know the US will take him out, Plus they refused to unload N/K s coal ships in the last 24 hrs sending them home full. China cut a deal with Trump in Fl for coal. The troops are a signal to disgruntled N/K's that it's time fat boy goes, either you people do it yourself or the US will. If the US has to do it that's on you, best vote with your balls now.
 
I say we drop about 3 billion porn mags and blow up dolls into North Korea and wait about a month . Then all we'll have to do is go in and mop up . BA dump bump .
 
My guess, is china does not want N/K's flooding across their borders like last time. They know the US will take him out, Plus they refused to unload N/K s coal ships in the last 24 hrs sending them home full. China cut a deal with Trump in Fl for coal. The troops are a signal to disgruntled N/K's that it's time fat boy goes, either you people do it yourself or the US will. If the US has to do it that's on you, best vote with your balls now.
[h=1]China Tells North Korean Coal Ships To Go Home[/h] [h=2]The move may be a sign Beijing is fed up with its nuclear neighbor.[/h]
By Nick Visser
58ec8362150000200034ad6c.jpeg

JACKY CHEN / REUTERS Chinese customs officials have told coal ships to return to North Korea, according to reports.


China ordered ships laden with North Korean coal, the isolated nation’s most important export, to return home full this month after promising in February to suspend imports of the fuel for the rest of the year.

On Monday evening, Reuters reported a fleet of cargo ships from the country was returned to the North Korean city of Nampo after Chinese customs officials told trading companies to send coal shipments back. A map that the agency published shows nearly a dozen vessels leaving China in the direction of the port.

China suspended all imports of coal from North Korea on Feb. 26 to abide with a United Nations Security Council resolution meant to punish the country and its authoritarian leader, Kim Jong Un, for testing nuclear weapons and launching ballistic missiles. The resolution, passed in December, prohibits member states from importing more than $400 million of North Korean coal in 2017, an amount set so as to not have “adverse humanitarian consequences for the country’s civilian population.”

Coal is North Korea’s biggest export and China is, by far, the product’s biggest buyer. The fossil fuel accounts for 34-40 percent of the country’s exports and remains a financial lifeline for the isolated dictatorship, The New York Times reports. Shortly after the suspension was announced, Pyongyang fired back at its most powerful ally.

“This country, styling itself a big power, is dancing to the tune of the US while defending its mean behavior,” the North’s state-run news agency said.

Chinese officials rejected that notion, saying the country was ending imports because it had nearly reached the level set by UN restrictions.

“According to our statistics, China has already approached the upper limits of coal imports from North Korea,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said during a news briefing in February. “So because of this, we have stopped imports of coal from North Korea with a responsible attitude.”

However, analysts have cast doubt on that sentiment, saying it’s unlikely China was able to import enough coal by the end of February to reach the $400 million threshold.

“Unless China has other sources of coal imports from North Korea that were not accounted for in the customs data, China unilaterally adopted punitive measures on North Korea that were not required by the UN Security Council Resolution,” wrote Yun Sun, a fellow at the think tank The Stimson Center, on 38 North.

The move may signal China’s annoyance with the North’s continued weapons development, and rifts have grown in recent months between the two countries, particularly over the assassination of Kim Jong Un’s half brother in Malaysia this year.

While China’s action was met with ire from the North, the country has flouted its own promises before. In 2016, the Chinese government said it would abide by UN sanctions made that March, only to import record amounts of coal from the country the following August, citing “people’s well-being.”

The country has been unwilling to destabilize its neighbor, which China borders to the north. North Korea provides a vital buffer zone between China and South Korea, a long-time U.S. ally and host to American military bases.

But the North has continued to draw international condemnation over an ongoing string of missile launches. Earlier this month, the country launched a ballistic missile days before President Donald Trump was set to meet China’s Xi Jinping. The move sparked a terse rebuke from the U.S.

“The United States has spoken enough about North Korea,” Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said. “We have no further comment.”

China, still hungry for coal, has rapidly increased imports from the United States after several years of inactivity, Reuters reports.

CLARIFICATION: Language has been amended to better reflect China’s geographical relationship to North Korea.
 
I believe it is a shield. When you look back at the famines in NK, they had people streaming across the border. I read in excess of 300,000 people.

Different circumstances but the NK people aren't stupid. If we start showering the country with tomahawks, they know where to head for safety.

The Chinese want no more of that.
 
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The denial of NK coal sounds like some Trump diplomacy to me. God I hope I'm right and we finally have a leader who can make meaningful deals around the world that protect us and ours.
 
You do realize that 150,000 is .00011% of their population. Meaning it would take 15 million of them to be worth a penny.

actually based on my calculations it is 0.00010815173% but i guess that went over your head as well. it was just a joke. I also thought of using other ones but i guess i am not that funny to you. carry on.
 
I read the transrated version of a communist party article that was pulled down about 4 hours after it went live. The article basically said that the PRC would not tolerate the NK's doing nuclear testing anywhere close enough to the PRC for the fallout to drift across their border, the article went on to say that the PRC also would not tolerate a hostile force anywhere near their border. The PRC basically told the NK's AND the US to calm the hell down or they would get involved.
 
I think that read was to tell the NK self thinkers time to off fat boy, as you will not like/survive whats coming. Plus if you don't, we won't/can't stop it. They wrote off NK on their main source of state income coal. That is telling. Cards are being played an others are still trying to cut their self's in, though.
 
Bottom line is that little shit threatened us with Nukes, that is reason enough for Trump to open up a nuke whopping in Pyongyang and he would be justified.

I read the transrated version of a communist party article that was pulled down about 4 hours after it went live. The article basically said that the PRC would not tolerate the NK's doing nuclear testing anywhere close enough to the PRC for the fallout to drift across their border, the article went on to say that the PRC also would not tolerate a hostile force anywhere near their border. The PRC basically told the NK's AND the US to calm the hell down or they would get involved.