Time: Fri Sep 26 06:37:40 1997
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Date: Fri, 26 Sep 1997 06:27:22 -0700
To: RodColumn@aol.com
From: Paul Andrew Mitchell [address in tool bar]
Subject: SLS: A Sea of Flames (fwd)
Hello Rod,
We recommend "Common Law Copyright",
because it is perpetual. Statutory
copyrights only last 7 years.
Confer at "Common-law copyright" [sic]
in Black's Law Dictionary, 6th Edition.
Best regards,
/s/ Paul Mitchell
http://supremelaw.com
copy: Supreme Law School
At 03:28 AM 9/26/97 -0400, you wrote:
>
>
> A SEA OF FLAMES
> 26 September 1997
>
> Copyright 1997, Rod D. Martin
>
> "Vanguard of the Revolution"
>
> http://members.aol.com/RodDMartin/vanguard.htm
>
>
>
>On Tuesday, the enigmatic Kim Jong Il, "Dear Leader" and son of the
>three-years dead Stalinist dictator Kim Il Sung, was finally nominated to
>the post of General Secretary of the Workers' Party, the North Korean
>Communists. This potentially answered the question of who exactly runs
>North Korea; it did not give anyone comfort.
>
>Kim Il Jong has never met a Westerner. He has never been outside North
>Korea. He has lived all his life in the personality cult of his father,
>the first and to this day only dictator and the man who launched the
>Korean War. Western ears have heard him speak precisely one sentence.
>
>It is fitting, if disconcerting, that he lead North Korea.
>
>North Korea stands on alert, ready to invade and destroy the South. This
>much we know. Among multiple defectors in the past year, two come from
>the country's highest ranks: former politburo member Hwang Jang-yop, the
>architect of North Korea's autarky and the highest ranking defector ever;
>and Chang Sung-gil, North Korea's ambassador to Egypt and the man who ran
>his country's highly profitable Middle East arms trade. Both confirm:
>the invasion is only a matter of time, possibly as early as this fall.
>
>North Korea openly threatens to turn Seoul, the capital of its southern
>neighbor and our close ally, "into a sea of flame." According to U.S.
>intelligence sources and the two defectors, North Korea has stockpiled at
>least three nuclear weapons, as well as innumerable chemical and
>biological ones, for the campaign to "liberate" the South. The North
>trumpets its plan to "annihilate" the 37,000 U.S. troops stationed in
>South Korea, as well as attack Japan, Okinawa, Guam, and even the United
>States.
>
>Why Korea, and why now? In short, North Korea is not only bankrupt, but
>starving as well. It's famine becomes more acute by the day; and like
>all famines in Communist countries before it, it touches the well-fed and
>supplied North Korean armed forces not at all. North Korea is
>increasingly an army in search of a nation, and the nation is has is
>dying. The Party faces a simple choice: collapse into chaos, or reach
>out and grasp the dangling, sumptuous fruit just across the DMZ.
>
>But is that fruit within its reach? Yes. Today, what is certainly the
>world's most dangerous nation faces 700,000 South Korean and 37,000 U.S.
>soldiers with an army of 1.1 million, confined in a truly tiny space. Of
>these, no less than 100,000 are commandos, the largest Special Forces in
>the world. North Korea's generals believe they can use this force to
>conquer the South in a high-intensity 7-20 day campaign, completing the
>job before heavy U.S. reinforcements can arrive.
>
>Two hundred Scud-B and Frog missiles would blanket the ten U.S. and South
>Korean airfields with chemical weapons, while the large but antiquated
>North Korean air force would throw itself at the same targets in a
>suicide run. The 100,000 commandos would strike these airfields and
>various other command centers by sea as well as by air from a fleet of
>300 AN-2 transports, utterly invisible to radar due to their fabric skin.
> Seoul's millions would be forced to flee their city ablaze on the very
>first day, and the world's number three military would race down the
>peninsula even as it neutralized bases in Japan and Okinawa, either by
>intimidation or direct attack.
>
>The U.S. Army took nearly six months to deploy for Desert Storm. Today
>it has radically less to fight with, further away from the scene.
>
>What is Bill Clinton's response to this potential nuclear war?
>Appeasement on a scale not seen since Munich. After pressing South Korea
>and Japan into four-power talks that serve only to dignify the brutal
>Pyongyang regime, Clinton is actually giving the North two American
>nuclear reactors, as well as vast quantities of food and fuel oil. Note
>that none of this supply effort has gone to aid the population; it has
>stocked the military we face. The price of this outlandish aid? Vague
>promises from North Korea's shadowy leadership that they will halt
>further nuclear weapons production. Needless to say, the North Korean
>reactors continue to run.
>
>When contrasted with America's crushing embargo of Iraq, this approach is
>simply astounding; yet as in Haiti, Bill Clinton likes being tough with
>enemies who can't fight back. North Korea, a dire and imminent threat,
>is treated in a manner that would make Chamberlain blush, showing the
>world precisely what this administration is made of.
>
>If war is to be averted, Pyongyang must be shown that war will not pay.
>Aid must be cut off at once: North Korea must be forced to spend down
>its six-month war reserve of food, oil and spare parts. Armor and other
>heavy weapons must be prepositioned close enough to the Korean peninsula
>to drastically cut the time needed to deploy a full scale army. Above
>all, North Korea must be told in no uncertain terms that on day-one of
>any conflict, it will face the maximum force available to the United
>States in defense of South Korea. Let them determine for themselves just
>what that might be.
>
>Appeasement has never worked. Isolated, starving countries with big
>armies have never failed to exploit weakness. And Bill Clinton has never
>shown courage. May God help us all.
>
>Copyright: Rod D. Martin, 26 September 1997
>
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========================================================================
Paul Andrew Mitchell : Counselor at Law, federal witness
B.A., Political Science, UCLA; M.S., Public Administration, U.C. Irvine
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