2012-06-03

US Special Ops Commander: We’ve Sent Troops Into North Korea

Vatic Note:  Here we are again.   They have done nothing to threaten America.  They have had nuke technology now for years, since Rumsfeld went into civilian life the first time and was on the board of Directors of a Swiss company or was it Sweden?  Swiss, I think.... where they sold and provided the nuke power technology to North Korea, knowing full well, its was a risk to do so.  Yet, North Korea has done nothing to harm South Korea nor the United states, so what in the hell are we doing  entering their country militarily???    So, Rumsfeld sells No Korea the technology,  and begins the process of threatening  to  bomb Iran back into the dark ages for doing energy with nukes and nothing more.  How is that suppose to be credible??  One of our most screwed up  "false flag" nuke attacks was to be blamed on No. Korea and then bam,  world war III was to start over that happening, but they screwed it up and got caught.  It was all bogus.

The intel services in Israel say that  no evidence exists that Iran has weaponized their nuke waste.   Yet, they are still threatening to bomb Iran.   Well, I think they should bomb the bank of  london and get rid of those who are doing all this.  Let them  personally report into Satan on their progress, top side.  Amazing gall.  No wonder we are seen as the new nazi's, when in fact, its the same old nazi's we brought over here that are running the show with their old partners, the khazar bankers.

US Special Ops Commander: We’ve Sent Troops Into North Korea
http://members.beforeitsnews.com/story/2191/291/US_Special_Ops_Commander:_We_ve_Sent_Troops_Into_North_Korea.html
by Mort Amsel,   Before Its News



U.S. Special Forces have been parachuting into North Korea to spy on Pyongyang’s extensive network of underground military facilities. That surprising disclosure, by a top U.S. commando officer, is a reminder of America’s continuing involvement in the “cold war” on the Korean peninsula – and of North Korea’s extensive preparations for the conflict turning hot.

In the decades since the end of the Korean War,  Pyongyang has constructed thousands of tunnels, Army Brig. Gen. Neil Tolley, commander of U.S. Special Operations Forces in South Korea, said at a conference in Florida last week. Tolley said the tunnels include 20 partially subterranean airfields, thousands of underground artillery positions and at least four tunnels underneath the Demilitarized Zone separating the two Koreas. “We don’t know how many we don’t know about,” Tolley said.
“The entire tunnel infrastructure is hidden from our satellites,” Tolley added. “So we send [Republic of Korea] soldiers and U.S. soldiers to the North to do special reconnaissance.” Tolley said the commandos parachute in with minimal supplies in order to watch the tunnels without being detected themselves.
Tolley outlined new equipment he said would boost the spies’ capabilities without giving them away to North Korean troops. For starters, he said his men could use a lightweight sensor able to “characterize what’s in a facility from standoff distance.” In addition, the commandos would benefit from a high frequency radio whose signal can’t be tracked back to its origin. Finally – and most dramatically – Tolley said a wireless power transmission system would allow his troops to jump into North Korea without heavy loads of batteries for their radios and other gear.
Source:  Diplomat

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