It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
SOUTHFIELD, Mich. - Republican Sen. John McCain (news, bio, voting record) on Tuesday accused former President Clinton, the husband of his potential 2008 White House rival, of failing to act in the 1990s to stop North Korea from developing nuclear weapons
"I would remind Senator (Hillary) Clinton and other Democrats critical of the Bush administration's policies that the framework agreement her husband's administration negotiated was a failure," McCain said at a news conference after a campaign appearance for Republican Senate candidate Mike Bouchard. The Koreans received millions and millions in energy assistance. They've diverted millions of dollars of food assistance to their military," he said
Originally posted by LDragonFire
Hmmm North Korea had 0 nukes during the Clinton years. Now North Korea has 10 to 11 nukes. So whos presidental policy is a failure??
year 2000 N. Korea = zero nukes
year 2006 N. Korea = 10 to 11 nukes
Clinton was not president during this time...duh
In U.S.-North Korea relations, the initial breakthrough occurred in October 1994 when U.S. negotiators persuaded North Korea to freeze its nuclear program, with onsite monitoring by U.N. inspectors. In exchange, the United States, with input from South Korea and Japan, promised major steps to ease North Korea's acute energy shortage.
The Koreans received millions and millions in energy assistance. They've diverted millions of dollars of food assistance to their military," he said.
Originally posted by Shar
Yes North Korea was messing with nuclear weapons during the Clinton adminstration. He even had funds for him millions of dollers for food but instead he used in for the military.
The Koreans received millions and millions in energy assistance. They've diverted millions of dollars of food assistance to their military," he said.
Originally posted by HowlrunnerIV
I would point out that it not your news agency that says Kim Jong Il diverted food aid money to the military.
The Koreans received millions and millions in energy assistance. They've diverted millions of dollars of food assistance to their military," he said.
I would also point out that the WFP traditionally ships whole food, usually in the form of grain or rice, to its recipients, not funds to purchase the food with.
Therefore, to divert funds you actually have to divert the food and sell it on the local market to make money. The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (that's not a joke) has no market on which to sell it, they would have to re-export the lot.
Clinton started out, as mentioned before, trying to altogether ignore some eminent problems brewing in North Korea. In his Essay "Clinton's Foreign Policy in Somalia, Bosnia, Haiti, and North Korea", Thomas H. Henriksen gives a detailed account of the events that shaped Clinton's early policy towards North Korea. He mentions that Clinton never made any talk about North Korea during his first presidential campaign in 1992. However, Clinton very quickly figured out he would have to deal with North Korea when fears starting to arise that they were generating materials for nuclear weapons with their small nuclear reactor in Yongbyon. Clinton, in response to these fears, decided to start military training exercises, known as Team Spirit, in South Korea. This flexing of military muscle prompted North Korea to threaten to pull out of the Non Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
The events that transpired between the United States and the DPRK early in Clinton's administration are rich in Foreign Policy decision making. One can pick out many examples of ideas such as bilateral diplomacy. In his book, American Foreign Policy: Past, Present, and Future, Glenn P. Hastedt mentions that bilateral diplomacy is, "[a] form of diplomacy in which two states interact directly with one another" (291). From this definition it is apparent that in fact much of the dealings with North Korea during the Clinton years were of a bilateral-diplomatic form. Additionally, a form of military coercion is also apparent, although the effectiveness can be debated. This apparent coercion came in the form of Clinton's resumption of the Team Spirit training exercises.
As a result of the failure of a coercive approach, the United States had to turn to different approaches. Namely, the United States would have to move away from military unilateralism and more towards economic multilateralism. The United States did just that. As Henriksen reports, the United States along with Japan and South Korea persuaded the DPRK to not consider dropping the NPT. The United States then rewarded North Korea for this decision by not imposing any trade sanctions (31).
Just as Clinton began his presidency, George W. Bush also started out with a policy of indifference towards North Korea. When the 2000 elections rolled around in November North Korea was not an issue at all. It was not a thought in anyone's mind, and the first 9 months of Bush's administration seemed to be no different from his campaign as far North Korea is concerned. That all changed on September 11, 2001 when terrorists crashed large jets into the both towers of the World Trade Center and also into the pentagon.
Originally posted by Shar
Originally posted by HowlrunnerIV
Originally posted by Shar
Yes North Korea was messing with nuclear weapons during the Clinton adminstration. He even had funds for him millions of dollers for food but instead he used in for the military.
I would point out that it's not your news agency that says Kim Jong Il diverted food aid money to the military.
The Koreans received millions and millions in energy assistance. They've diverted millions of dollars of food assistance to their military," he said.
I would also point out that the WFP traditionally ships whole food, usually in the form of grain or rice, to its recipients, not funds to purchase the food with.
Therefore, to divert funds you actually have to divert the food and sell it on the local market to make money. The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (that's not a joke) has no market on which to sell it, they would have to re-export the lot.
And what McCain appears to be saying is that the food was given to the military, not the civilians it was intended for.
So, perhaps you should do a little further analysis before you begin ranting.
I think you need to read what DontThreadonme posted. That will tell you alot.
So I think you should do a little further analysis before you begin your ranting.
My ranting was that we the people need to stand up for what we believe in. Not just go and vote one way or another.
Its time to leave the R and D out of the names of those we vote for and find out what they stand for.
Originally posted by Shar
I have no idea what your talking about.
I did not misunderstand anything.
But what are you arguing about. Yes he toke the money and put it to the military it tells you that black and white.
Why do you keep saying he didn't?
External Source
"They've diverted millions of dollars of food assistance to their military," he said.
Where in my first post did I say anything about corruption in North Korea.
He even had funds for him millions of dollers for food but instead he used in for the military.
I'm talking about Presidents here in our country in the US and how people should not vote just because its their party but vote because of what that person stands for. What that person can do for our country. You missed everything I said.
Originally posted by HowlrunnerIV
Originally posted by Shar
I'm talking about Presidents here in our country in the US and how people should not vote just because its their party but vote because of what that person stands for. What that person can do for our country. You missed everything I said.
I understand your argument: That each president is equally culpable for the foreign policy failures regarding NK and that now a Republican is using a false example to get cheap points by bashing his Democrat opponents.
McCain's version of history goes beyond "revisionism" to outright falsification. It is the exact opposite of what really happened.
And while we're on the subject of Bushes doing nothing, George H.W. Bush, the president's father, had just moved into the White House in 1989 when the CIA discovered that the North Koreans were building a reprocessing facility near their nuclear reactor at Yongbyon—the facility that could manufacture plutonium from the fuel rods. Five years later, Bill Clinton stopped them from moving the rods into this facility. Eight years after that, George W. Bush let them go ahead.
The rest is history. John McCain would do well to read up on it sometime.