STATE
DEPARTMENT LEAK. Foreign Ministries Told by U.S. to get citizens &
Diplomats out of North Korea by June 23
2
May, 2017
According
to sources with access to international diplomatic communications,
the US State Department has quietly told foreign ministries around
the world to have citizens and Diplomats OUT OF NORTH KOREA by June
23.
The
informal "advice" is seen as a dangerous confirmation of US
intent to strike North Korea.
It
is interesting to note that June 23 is the date of the "New
Moon" when night is darkest around the world.
The
United States does NOT have Diplomatic Relations with North Korea and
as such, there is no US Embassy or Consulate in that country. Other
nations, however, do have such facilities.
The
State Department Public Information Section did not return calls from
SuperStation95 seeking comment about this leaked information
I
do not believe that whatever the DPRK says it will commit suicide.
NORTH
Korea has said it will launch an attack on multiple countries in a
chilling confirmation World War 3 is coming.
The
rogue state accused the United States of pushing the Korean peninsula
to the brink of nuclear war after US bombers took part in drills with
the South Korean and Japanese air forces.
North
Korea’s state-controlled media has announced the country is now
simply “waiting for the moment it will reduce the whole of the US
mainland to ruins.”
It
warned "America’s
vast territory is exposed to our preemptive nuclear strike" and
that its army is "waiting
for the moment it will reduce the whole of the U.S. mainland to ruins
with its absolute weaponry of justice."
It
added: "If the US shows any slight sign of provocation, just the
inter-continental ballistic rockets displayed in the April military
parade will fly into the US.
“The
reckless nuclear war provocation by the Trump administration will
bring it nothing but the fall of the American empire."
North
Korea also promised to strike US allies, including South Korea and
Japan, saying they will be “submerged into a sea of fire” and
“reduced to ashes”.
But
the risk of Kim Jong-un successfully launching a nuclear strike on
the US seems unlikely.
Its
last two ballistic missile
tests have apparently ended in failure –
including one heading towards Russia.
It
comes as President Donald
Trump said a meeting between him and Kim could happen “under
the right circumstances”.
The
70-year-old business tycoon had previously shocked the world by
describing Kim as a “smart cookie” and praised the 33-year-old
for keeping control of the isolated state at such a young age.
Should
ramped-up tensions between the U.S. and North Korea devolve into
outright nuclear war, Pyongyang is claiming such a conflict would
result in the demise of the US superpower.
The
North Korean newspaper Rodong
Sinmun—which
is controlled by the state—ran
an opinion piece Tuesday titled "Nuclear
War Will Bring Nothing but Doom to U.S."
"The
reckless military provocation is pushing the situation on the Korean
Peninsula closer to the brink of nuclear war," the North's
official KCNA news agency said Tuesday.
It cited an apparent bomb-dropping drill in South Korea as the
latest provocation from the U.S.
President
Donald Trump has also threatened North Korea. "There is a chance
that we could end up having a major, major conflict with North Korea.
Absolutely," Trump
told Reuters last
week. "We'd love to solve things diplomatically but it's
very difficult."
The
president did change his tune a bit this week, suggesting he could
meet with North Korea's dictatorial leader to work things out.
"If
it would be appropriate for me to meet with him, I would absolutely,
I would be honored to do it," Trump told
Bloomberg News Monday.
"If it's under the, again, under the right circumstances. But I
would do that."
The
U.S., meanwhile, reportedly
has an operational THAAD—Terminal
High Altitude Area Defense system—set up in South Korea, a move
that angered China, North Korea's main ally in the region.
The
North, which carried out two nuclear tests last year, has said it
would ramp up the program in the wake of the tensions with the U.S.
The
country's "measures for bolstering the nuclear force to the
maximum will be taken in a consecutive and successive way at any
moment and any place decided by its supreme leadership," a
spokesman for
North Korea's foreign ministry said to state media, according to
Reuters.
When Will The U.S. Act?
By
now, the world is familiar with the intensely publicized arrival of
the US aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson and its strike group of
Destroyers, guided Missile Cruisers and at least one Missile
Submarine.
What
no one has been paying any attention to is the USS Theodore Roosevelt
and its strike group.
The
Theodore Roosevelt is part of the Pacific Fleet and sources in the
Pentagon confirm to SuperStation95 that it "is less than one
day's travel time from striking distance of North Korea."
Moreover,
the USS Nimitz and its strike group cleared their "Blue Water
Certification" off the coast of San Diego in late April and
returned to its home port of Bremerton, Washington for final
re-supply before deploying.
If
the Nimitz was ordered to North Korea, travel time would be
about eight
days.
Lastly,
the USS Ronald Reagan and its strike group are presently in home port
of Yokosuka, Japan. The Reagan entered a four month period of
"Selective Restricted Availability" and will complete its
re-fitting, maintenance and re-supply by early June.
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