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Are you scared of North Korea?

| Tuesday, 11 Nov. 2010 | 18:06 - 19:00 GMT

South Korea says North Korea has launched an artillery attack on one of its border islands, reportedly killing two South Korean soldiers. South Korea has now returned fire as it slips into its highest non wartime alert.
It's a "reckless provocation" accordingly to Professor Zhu Feng from Peking University, whilst Dr. Park Young believes this is North Korea flexing its muscles.

"Although I can't be certain of the rationale behind North Korea's attacks yet, I see it as North Korea's intention to turn this region into a conflict zone so that it can bring the concerned parties to the discussion table....By showing that it has nuclear capacity and by firing artillery shells today, I think it is trying to make a point that it is militarily capable and thus should not be lightly regarded. Ultimately, I think it is strategically seeking to tilt talks concerning the contested Northern Limit Line and the peace treaty toward its advantage."
Is this attention seeking behaviour that should be ignored, or are South Koreans right to be concerned?

Your comments

  1. Comment sent via YOURSAY

    Bill emailed - South Korea, Japan, and the US should end the north korean threat by launching massive, unannounced, preemptive strikes against the north korean nuclear program, military, and government. Their repeated criminal acts and outright blackmail warrant nothing less.

  2. Comment sent via SMS

    Shammua from Barbados. Most people don’t even know the history of the Korean situation. North Korea is Branded as the bad guy through carefully organized filtered news. What is the history of this tense situation, who created this problem, was it orchestrated by outside interest?

  3. Comment sent via SMS

    Dut Gak in Rumbek Southern Sudan. North K. is a bad regime with foolish inhertanced ideas.

  4. Comment sent via BLOG

    John in Lake Oswego on the blog - When I think of North Korea the image that comes to mind is of Josef Stalin doing an impression of Rodney Dangerfield

  5. Comment sent via SMS

    The recent provocative attacked by north korea is unaceptable, and at the same time i am apealing to the south to show maturity and remain focus to peace, shame on the america, from Alussein Chelsea in kailahun, sierra leone.@

  6. Comment sent via YOURSAY

    Francis in Juba, south Sudan emails - such indiscriminate shelling is barbaric and unjustified. North Korea should be punished for trying to cause instability in the peninsula. This reminds me of what Northern Sudan was doing in South Sudan and Darfur.

  7. Comment sent via YOURSAY

    Matt in Vancouver, Canada - What if China, Russia or even South Korea opened the border with North Korea and invited, and possibly even paid, North Korean soldiers to defect? Wouldn't North Korea simply collapse and could be re-united with South Korea? Is this plausible?

  8. Comment sent via YOURSAY

    Wiamah Browne from Monrovia, Liberia emailed - North Korea has been constructing her nuclear weapons for a very long time. I think they are finding a way to unleash their weapons as a try to tell the world that they are prepare for any provocation.

  9. Comment sent via YOURSAY

    Francis from Juba, south Sudan, emailed - such indiscriminate shelling is barbaric and unjustified. North Korea should be punished for trying to cause instability in the peninsula. This reminds me of what Northern Sudan was doing in South Sudan and Darfur.

  10. Comment sent via Facebook

    Pukar - Stop showing North Korea as a demon. Why is the whole world blaming North Korea only? Every action has equal and opposite reaction. So why is media not focusing on the role of South Korea in this conflict?

  11. Comment sent via BLOG

    Elias on the blog - Continued appeasement only brings more confrontaton from the North. They should be told very clearly it is not acceptable and to appologise and pay restituion for their recent attack

  12. Comment sent via Facebook

    Kate in Zambia - I'm a bit scared, sure. I believe the north koreans behave this way cos the rulers know they can get away with it. There's nothing anyone can do cos china will stand by them.

  13. Comment sent via Facebook

    Chidozie in Nigeria - Of course, I am scared of North Korea as long as they enjoy the support of Mighty China. The US should take a backseat and let China take the lead in resolving the Korean crisis

  14. Comment sent via Facebook

    Mark - Yes, I'm scared... nukes are involved, and it seems nothing can restrain their aggression.

  15. Comment sent via Facebook

    Sanousi Sesay in Kenema, Sierra Leone - The world has to be careful in responding to the north/South Korea crisis. Flexing muscles and plying tough will only worsen the crisis in the region.