04-24-2013, 04:47 PM
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#4
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Living Legend
Join Date: Aug 2008
Age: 58
Posts: 21,744
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Re: North Korea: Threat or Blackmailer?
Just so you know why SK will lose :cheeky-sm
Quote:
Army Devoid of Right of Operational Command (1)
Operational command is essential to an army. The right is as good as its life and soul.
But, the south Korean puppet army was deprived of the right of operational command by its foreign master and serves as cannon fodder and bullet-shield for it.
Right of Operational Command Lost to U.S.
On June 25, 1950 the U.S. and the Syngman Rhee puppet clique of south Korea launched an all-out surprise armed attack on the DPRK.
The invaders were so foolish as to brag that they would take breakfast in Haeju, lunch in Pyongyang and supper in Sinuiju. But, the result turned out contrary.
The Korean People's Army immediately went over to counterattack, liberating Seoul in three days and advancing on southward.
Much upset, on July 7th, 1950 the U.S. prodded the UNSC to pass a resolution on dispatching armed forces of UN member states to the Korean war and attaching them to the U.S.-led combined command.
According to the resolution, the U.S. hurried to conclude an agreement on putting the right of operational command of the south Korean puppet army under its control.
On July 14th, 1950 MacArthur, the then commander of the U.S. Far East Command, had talks with traitor Syngman Rhee in Taejon.
At the talks, traitor Rhee signed an agreement to hand the right of operational command of the south Korean puppet army over to the U.S.-led combined command.
The conclusion of the "Taejon Agreement" enabled the U.S. to use the south Korean puppet army as its war servant at will.
As a result, the south Korean puppet army was reduced to a jackstraw army that cannot use even a single shell without the U.S. approval and a bullet-shield army that must go into the jaws of death if the U.S. army orders.
Of course, even when the south Korean puppet army had the right of operational command, its position had been little different.
U.S. military advisers attached to corps, divisions and regiments of the puppet army controlled the puppet army with absolute authority.
The conclusion of the "Taejon Agreement" transferred the seeming right of operational command of the puppet army openly to the hands of the U.S.
So Nam Il
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