Padmapani Devi's Blog
Namaste'and welcome beloveds ...
05 July 2006

I am sorry to be going on and on about this.  But honestly can't they see the bigger picture. ALL of this is complete and utter idiocy.  It is unfathomable to a rational mind.

Two good movies they should all watch 'The Day After' and 'On the Beach' with Armand Asante, Bryan Brown and Rachel Ward.  Maybe watching those movies would 'awaken' these fools.  I'm sorry but no one anywhere should have nukes.  The guy who invented them should've destroyed all his work when he realised what he created..

We all know better after Hiroshima so why is this %^$&ing crap still happening?

Again my apologies but I think it's just one old hippy having a whinge.

But on the upside don't let this affect your day, have a better than normal day to show them and the world WE ARE DETERMINED TO BE HAPPY NO MATTER WHAT!!

Love and Light

Padmapani Devi

U.S. official: North Korea tests long-range missile

From Elise Labott and Justine Redman
CNN

Tuesday, July 4, 2006; Posted: 4:51 p.m. EDT

SPECIAL REPORT

 

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- North Korea launched a long-range Taepodong-2 missile early Wednesday in an apparently unsuccessful test that failed in flight, a senior State Department official said.

North Korea also tested at least two smaller missiles, U.S. sources told CNN.

Both missiles were launched from a site other than the one intelligence officials have watched for weeks ahead of the long-range missile test, a senior State Department official said.

The United States, Japan and other countries have warned North Korea against a long-range missile test, saying such a move would be considered a provocation.

Washington and North Korea's Asian neighbors -- South Korea, China, Russia and Japan -- have been trying to persuade North Korea to dismantle its nuclear weapons program since 2002, but those talks have stalled in recent months.

President Bush warned last week that the isolated Stalinist state would face even further isolation if it launched the Taepodong-2, which U.S. analysts fear is capable of reaching the western United States.

"The North Koreans have made agreements with us in the past, and we expect them to keep their agreements," Bush said last month at the end of a European Union summit.

"It should make people nervous when nontransparent regimes, that have announced that they've got nuclear warheads, fire missiles," Bush said. "This is not the way you conduct business in the world. This is not the way that peaceful nations conduct their affairs."

The senior State Department official said the launches were timed to coincide with the launch of the space shuttle Discovery from Florida, calling it "a provocative act designed to get attention."

The North Koreans fired a Taepodong-1 missile over Japan in 1998, but declared a moratorium on future tests in 1999.

Two senior State Department officials said Tuesday that fuel trucks had departed the site where the Taepodong-2 sat on a launch paid, indicating that a test may have been near.

On Monday, Pyongyang's state-run media carried a report accusing the United States of harassing North Korea and vowing to respond to any pre-emptive attack "with a relentless annihilating strike and a nuclear war with a mighty nuclear deterrent."

The White House has dismissed that threat as "hypothetical."

Meanwhile, the Pentagon took steps to be ready for a possible military response to a North Korean missile launch.

The U.S. Northern Command recently increased security measures at its Cheyenne Mountain Air Force Station in Colorado Springs, Colorado, a military official confirmed.

In other planning measures instituted in the past several days, Northern Command, along with the Federal Aviation Administration, has put standby commercial flight restrictions into place over Vandenberg Air Force Base in California and Fort Greely, Alaska, where the U.S. interceptor missiles are based.

 

2006-07-04 21:38:09 GMT
Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1