Before reading the article below quickly peep this story about Israeli concerns about NK shipping WMD`s to Syria from May 2010, (bearing in mind the USS liberty incident)
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From the democratic underground Who am I to question the "experts", but here goes, in no particular order of importance, but just notes I make while reading:
1. Why is a new commission being convened? The United Nations Command said Friday that it will convene a special committee to review the investigation that concluded North Korea had torpedoed a South Korean patrol ship. http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=...
In an unusually swift response, the North said Thursday the report was based on "sheer fabrication" and threatened "all-out war" in response to any attempt to punish it.
On Friday the communist state's official Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea reiterated claims the South had fabricated the evidence.
"It just produced fragments and pieces of aluminium whose origin remains unknown as 'evidence', becoming the target of derision," a committee spokesman said in a statement on official media.
North Korea yesterday said the conclusion by a multinational investigation team that a North Korean torpedo attacked the warship Cheonan had been “fabricated” and said it would send its own inspectors to get a firsthand look at the evidence in South Korea.
.....The commission’s statement, delivered through the state media, said the investigation was “a sheer fabrication orchestrated by the group of traitors in a deliberate and brigandish manner to achieve certain political and military aims.”
.....“The world will clearly see what a dear price the group of traitors will have to pay for the clumsy ‘conspiratorial farce’ and ‘charade’ concocted to stifle compatriots,” the statement said. http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=292...
3. N Korea has demanded that its inspectors be allowed to examine the evidence. North Korea also demanded that its inspectors be allowed to visit South Korea over the weekend to conduct their own probe.
4. South Korea has rejected NK's demand to send a team
S. Korea Says North Korea’s Probe Demand Is ’Outrageous’ May 21 (Bloomberg) -- South Korea rejected a request from North Korea to send a team to investigate accusations that the communist nation sank a warship, South Korean Defense Minister Kim Tae Young said.
“It’s like a robber or a killer wanting to investigate himself once the trust was revealed,” Kim told reporters in Seoul today. “We will send our position to the North in this afternoon.” http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-05-21/s-korea-say...
It seems like a good chance to embarrass the N Koreans by confronting them with iron-clad evidence. Why would the South refuse?
5. The experts do not appear to have hard proof that a NKJ submarine fired the missile. They just say it must have. All they seem to know for sure is this: Investigators say a North Korean midget submarine and a support vessel left a naval base on the west coast two to three days before the attack on the South Korean corvette Cheonan on March 26 and returned to port two or three days later.
Mumbai suspect is US double agent, India claims An American man charged with plotting the attacks on Mumbai was a double agent for both the United States and al-Qaeda terror group Lashkar e Taiba, Indian officials have claimed. By Dean Nelson in New Delhi Published: 6:22PM GMT 16 Dec 2009
David Headley, a Pakistan-born American national arrested in Chicago in October, is alleged to have carried out reconnaissance missions in the run-up to the Mumbai attacks, in which 166 people were killed.
He is also believed to have been present in the terrorists' "control room" in Pakistan where their handlers directed the killing spree over an open telephone line.
According to Indian officials, Headley travelled to India again in March this year, with the knowledge of American agencies who did not inform their Indian counterparts. During the trip, Headley is alleged to have collected intelligence for future terrorist attacks on civilian and military targets, including India's National Defence College.