Regime Change

Oh, man, just shut up, your digging yourself an even bigger hole. You posted "drop a couple nukes". It's an immoral and disgusting idea. Are you really this stupid that you don't understand why ?
With Canada housing nitwits like yourself I could support a limited strike against your town.
 
It might also have something to do with the survival of the "petro-dollar".

The petro-dollar is an agreement to buy oil from Saudi Arabia (or their oil alliance) with U.S. Federal Reserve notes, which is also considered the world reserve currency. It's an attempt to monopolize the purchase of oil from sources that will only take one kind of currency over another, and to protect that monopoly with force. It's a way to literally prop up the forced currency, which may well lose it's value if it wasn't needed to buy the damned oil from the monopoly.

That's what has started wars, and what might start this one.

Meanwhile, Iran will take other currency for it's oil, and Syria has said it can run a pipeline to the world through it's borders, and Russia supports this.

There is indeed a rival alliance, a monopoly, that want's to run through Syria to reach Europe.

imo, your recent theory has been quite interesting. However I think the whole play has been designed for NKorea to watch and think!

LOL


https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...up-north-korea-peninsula-syria-missile-strike

10 April 2017

Tillerson: China agrees on 'action' on North Korea as navy strike group sails

* Secretary of state: ‘President Xi understands the situation has intensified’
* Syria missile strike described by North as ‘intolerable act of aggression’
 
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RAPID ESCALATION
Nasty, brutish, and short—what the next Korean War will look like

April 10, 2017

https://qz.com/950488/nasty-brutish-and-short-what-the-next-korean-war-will-look-like/

How long it might last

As long as China didn’t get involved to help the North, says Robert E. Kelly, a professor at Pusan National University in South Korea, the Kim-controlled Korean People’s Army (KPA) would lose in a conventional ground war to the US and its allies within “six weeks, a month, two months max.”

Of course a two-way nuclear exchange would play out differently, but the US and its allies would be hesitant to use that option. “If we’re exchanging nukes across the peninsula then things have deteriorated to the point when all other options have been exhausted, and we’re in a very different world. But it’s not a path that I think they would use,” says Graham.
 
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