Donate!
Welcome, Guest. Please Login or Register :: View Members
Pages: 1
Send Topic Print
25 yrs ago (Read 36 times)
WebsterMark
Serious Thumper
*****
Offline

SuzukiSavage.com
Rocks!

Posts: 14448

Gender: male
25 yrs ago
06/12/18 at 17:43:11
 

Tradition holds that such agreements are met with at least respectful coverage in the American media. For example, early in President Bill Clinton’s term the U.S. reached a similar agreement with North Korea’s communist dictatorship.
Twenty-five years ago today, the New York Times published an editorial called, “To Assure a Nuclear-Free Korea.” Given that Mr. Trump was in Singapore this week trying to persuade North Korea to dismantle its nuclear weapons program, it’s fair to say that the hopes invested by Times folk in the Clinton deal were not exactly realized. But back in 1993, the newspaper’s editorial board expressed admiration for officials in both the American and North Korean governments :
Deft diplomacy by the Clinton Administration has coaxed North Korea back from the brink. The North had threatened to bolt from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and build nuclear arms. It will now allow routine international inspections of its nuclear sites.
Gaining access to its nuclear waste sites will require further negotiation; that could provide more evidence of how much plutonium North Korea might already have produced. But the resumption of routine inspections is a critical first step toward assuring that the Korean Peninsula is truly nuclear-free.
The agreement is a tribute to sensible officials in Pyongyang who chose the path to prosperity over the road to ruin. It’s also a tribute to cool heads in Washington who refused to overreact to North Korea’s bizarre bargaining behavior.
Along with the tip of the cap to the “sensible officials in Pyongyang,” the Times went on to describe U.S. military exercises with our friends in democratic South Korea as “needlessly provocative.” Of course time would reveal that Washington’s cool heads had wildly underreacted.
Back to top
 
 
  IP Logged
MnSpring
Serious Thumper
*****
Offline

Younger than most
people my age.

Posts: 10590
Minn
Gender: male
Re: 25 yrs ago
Reply #1 - 06/15/18 at 15:06:46
 
Another ‘blast from the past’.

"Franklin D. Roosevelt, who I don’t think anyone would classify as a conservative, turned away a ship carrying German Jewish people fleeing extermination. Why? Because a German spy – a single German spy – was caught masquerading as a refugee.”
http://mynorthwest.com/1020679/fact-check-statue-of-liberty/


Back to top
 
 

Ben Franklin once said: "If you give up a freedom, for the sake of security, you will have neither".
Which is More TRUE, today, than yesterday.('06, S-40, Stock) well, mostly .
  IP Logged
LostArtist
Ex Member




Re: 25 yrs ago
Reply #2 - 06/15/18 at 18:06:57
 
WebsterMark wrote on 06/12/18 at 17:43:11:
Tradition holds that such agreements are met with at least respectful coverage in the American media. For example, early in President Bill Clinton’s term the U.S. reached a similar agreement with North Korea’s communist dictatorship.
Twenty-five years ago today, the New York Times published an editorial called, “To Assure a Nuclear-Free Korea.” Given that Mr. Trump was in Singapore this week trying to persuade North Korea to dismantle its nuclear weapons program, it’s fair to say that the hopes invested by Times folk in the Clinton deal were not exactly realized. But back in 1993, the newspaper’s editorial board expressed admiration for officials in both the American and North Korean governments :
Deft diplomacy by the Clinton Administration has coaxed North Korea back from the brink. The North had threatened to bolt from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and build nuclear arms. It will now allow routine international inspections of its nuclear sites.
Gaining access to its nuclear waste sites will require further negotiation; that could provide more evidence of how much plutonium North Korea might already have produced. But the resumption of routine inspections is a critical first step toward assuring that the Korean Peninsula is truly nuclear-free.
The agreement is a tribute to sensible officials in Pyongyang who chose the path to prosperity over the road to ruin. It’s also a tribute to cool heads in Washington who refused to overreact to North Korea’s bizarre bargaining behavior.
Along with the tip of the cap to the “sensible officials in Pyongyang,” the Times went on to describe U.S. military exercises with our friends in democratic South Korea as “needlessly provocative.” Of course time would reveal that Washington’s cool heads had wildly underreacted.


that agreement was 4 pages long, they thought it was sufficiently detailed to achieve it's stated goals.

The Trump deal, so far, is 500 words, with no enforcement or even clearly defined goals or deadlines.....

I do hope the Trump deal pans out, cause right now, NK is ahead, they've gotten a lot for nothing
Back to top
 
 
  IP Logged
LostArtist
Ex Member




Re: 25 yrs ago
Reply #3 - 06/15/18 at 18:08:30
 
MnSpring wrote on 06/15/18 at 15:06:46:
Another ‘blast from the past’.

"Franklin D. Roosevelt, who I don’t think anyone would classify as a conservative, turned away a ship carrying German Jewish people fleeing extermination. Why? Because a German spy – a single German spy – was caught masquerading as a refugee.”
http://mynorthwest.com/1020679/fact-check-statue-of-liberty/




so, this has almost nothing to do with the OP, but you have a knack for that ....

but this reminds me of the Syrian refugee issue.. except no terrorist has actually been found among the refugees....
Back to top
 
 
  IP Logged
MnSpring
Serious Thumper
*****
Offline

Younger than most
people my age.

Posts: 10590
Minn
Gender: male
Re: 25 yrs ago
Reply #4 - 06/16/18 at 09:30:58
 
LostArtist wrote on 06/15/18 at 18:08:30:
so, this has almost nothing to do with the OP, ..."

sommun mist the forrest, cause was a lookken at a tree

Trump does something, HATE TRUMP.
Clinton did less, Love Clinton.

Trump does something, HATE TRUMP.
FDR did something, (100 times worse), Love FDR.
Back to top
 
 

Ben Franklin once said: "If you give up a freedom, for the sake of security, you will have neither".
Which is More TRUE, today, than yesterday.('06, S-40, Stock) well, mostly .
  IP Logged
Pages: 1
Send Topic Print


« Home

 
« Home
SuzukiSavage.com
12/24/25 at 00:19:24



General CategoryPolitics, Religion (Tall Table) › 25 yrs ago


SuzukiSavage.com » Powered by YaBB 2.2!
YaBB © 2000-2007. All Rights Reserved.