Post Tagged with: "North Korea"

Book Review: Patriots, Traitors and Empires—The Story of Korea’s Struggle for Freedom, by Stephen Gowans

Book Review: Patriots, Traitors and Empires—The Story of Korea’s Struggle for Freedom, by Stephen Gowans

International, Nuclear Weapons, Reviews July 19, 2018 at 1:39 pm 0 comments

Reviewed by Maximilian Forte, published originally at Zero Anthropology Review of: Patriots, Traitors and Empires: The Story of Korea’s Struggle for Freedom, by Stephen Gowans. Published by Baraka Books, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. 6 x 9 inches. 280 pages. ISBN No 9781771861359. Paper, $24.95 CDN; PDF/EPUB, $19.99 CDN. “It is easyRead More

Korea Has Nuclear Plants, Unlike Other Countries That the US has Bombed: What the Generals are Not Telling You

Korea Has Nuclear Plants, Unlike Other Countries That the US has Bombed: What the Generals are Not Telling You

Featured, Nuclear Weapons February 4, 2018 at 9:56 am 0 comments

All of the recent US-coalition wars have involved countries where there were no– repeat no – large, operating nuclear power plants.  Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Yemen, Somalia, and Libya.

Trump’s contradictory policies could lead to nuclear war with North Korea: Slavoj Zizek  remembers his own military service

Trump’s contradictory policies could lead to nuclear war with North Korea: Slavoj Zizek remembers his own military service

Nuclear Disarmament December 29, 2017 at 6:37 am 0 comments

SLavoj Zizek | The US is pursuing two contradictory strategies with North Korea and it could lead to nuclear war. This is often how armies function, as I remember from my own military service.

Gensuikyo's Peace March Demanding Nuclear Abolition [File photo]

Condemning North Korean N-tests, Hiroshima’s peace activists criticise Japan for not pursuing diplomacy and global disarmament

Asia, Nuclear Disarmament, Nuclear Weapons September 4, 2017 at 3:49 pm 0 comments

Gensuikyo Statement | Japanese government’s response as a neighbor of demanding that North Korea should stop nuclear tests and missile launches is not enough. Japan must support the efforts of resolving the issue through negotiations based on the Constitution of Japan, the U.N. Charter and the resolutions of the Security Council and urge the U.S. and North Korea to hold a dialogue.