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Old 06-13-2018   #4
no1you2me3
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Các chuyên gia nhận định giải Nobel Ḥa b́nh vẫn c̣n xa vời với Tổng thống Mỹ Donald Trump và lănh đạo Triều Tiên Kim Jong-un, sau khi Mỹ - Triều đă kư thỏa thuận chung về phi hạt nhân hóa, mà vẫn chưa có cơ hội đạt giải Nobel Ḥa b́nh.
Triều Tiên kư thỏa thuận bỏ vũ khí hạt nhân? Dể vậy sao? Ngu khờ dể tin vậy sao?

Tin này th́ chỉ có đám bợ Trump tin.

Kim sau thượng đỉnh có được cái mà Kim muốn:
+ Giăm bớt cấm vận (hay ít nhất không bị cấm vận thêm).
+ Không bị khiêu khích bởi tập trận chung của các nước với Mỹ nữa.
+ Có được sự an toàn là Mỹ sẽ không tấn công (peace of mind for Kim) bắc Triều Tiên trong lúc này.
+ Đạt được bài bản đă soạn trước của China, và Russia cho Kim.

Hăy mở to mắt lên coi bắc Triều Tiên đă bao nhiêu lần kư thỏa thuận từ bỏ vũ khí hạt nhân nhé:

Quote:
What: Treaty on the Nonproliferation of Nuclear Weapons
When: December 12, 1985
What happened? North Korea signs onto this landmark treaty—190 countries are currently members—but makes its membership contingent on the US withdrawing nuclear weapons from South Korea, which doesn’t happen for several years, buying North Korea time to build its nuclear capabilities.

What: Joint Declaration of the Denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula
When: January 20, 1992
What happened? North and South Korea sign an agreement that “the South and the North shall not test, manufacture, produce, receive, possess, store, deploy or use nuclear weapons.” In February of 1993, suspicion that North Korea is violating its commitments creates tension over inspections, leading to further delays.

What: Agreed Framework
When: October 21, 1994
What happened? North Korea promises to stop plutonium production in exchange for much-needed supplies. This mostly holds up until 2002, when the US discovers that North Korea has secretly been enriching uranium for nuclear weapons. By the end of that year, Kim Jong Il kicks out all international inspectors. On January 10, 2003, North Korea officially withdraws from the 1985 nonproliferation treaty.

What: Six-Party Talks
When: September 19, 2005
What happened? After several rounds of intense talks with South Korea, China, Japan, the US, and Russia, North Korea pledges to abandon “all nuclear weapons and existing nuclear programs.” The US and North Korea can’t agree on verification details, though, leading to increased hostilities.

What: Six-Party Talks (Again)
When: October 3, 2007
What happened? In a joint statement, North Korea agrees to declare all of its nuclear programs, shut down those affiliated with its weapons program, and not to transfer “nuclear materials, technology, or know-how.” Once again, stakeholders can’t agree on a verification process.

What: US Agreement
When: February 29, 2012
What happened? North Korea agrees to suspend nuclear tests and uranium enrichment, and said it will allow inspectors, in exchange for food aid. Two weeks later, North Korea announces plans to launch a satellite, which immediately unwinds the deal.

So yes, North Korea has gotten this far before. Trump and Kim haven’t forged any new ground. “The parallels are apparent in the similarities between this statement and many of the previous ones, such as those from the 1990s,” says Baker. “That’s very clear.”

The rest hinges on whether the two sides can iron out not just when North Korea will denuclearize, but how, and the manner in which the rest of the world can confirm it. Or maybe the more apt question is what happens when they don’t.

Last edited by no1you2me3; 06-13-2018 at 23:34.
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