And They Wonder Why Relations Are Deteriorating

Update: Ouch. You can clearly see how this administration has moved to the left from where it began.

UniFiction Minister Lee Jong-Seok says the United States “failed the most” when North Korea launched its missile. You thought, perhaps, those whose main event exploded 45 seconds after launch? The rising superpower whose uncontrollable satellite managed to cement a U.S.-Japanese alliance? The government whose incalculably costly and increasingly unpopular appeasement policies were exposed as a worthless sham at the push of one button?

And here I was, positively salivating at the thought of the repo man coming for Kim Jong Il’s wave machine and pizza oven after the Treasury Department is through with him. Guess we all thought wrong.

2 Responses

  1. Yeah yeah yeah – blame USA. This is from ex-head of ex-KCIA and you can bet that this SOB who ought to be burned alive for treason to US and ROK for leaking classified info to his sugar daddy MURDERER…

    So hey ahole uniFICTION traitor! What about FAILURE OF SUNSHINE POLICY? Huh? What did No and DJ (other than paid for Nobel prize) gain for giving billion plus to MURDERE Kim?

    So what this ahole Lee is saying is that George W ought to knowtow and appease MURDERE Kim like NO? Fxxk off and die ahole!

    Here are excerts from similar article from Chosun:

    Minister Lambastes U.S. for ‘Failed’ N.Korea Policy

    Seoul’s top official in charge of North Korea policy on Sunday singled out the U.S. as the nation whose policy toward Pyongyang “failed the most.”

    “But if it was the U.S. the North tried to threaten the most, the logic goes that it is the U.S. that failed the most.” Lee made the remarks on an SBS TV program, hinting that an irate North Korea fired the missiles because Washington turned down its invitation to the U.S. chief nuclear negotiator Christopher Hill early last month.

    To a question whether dialogue channels between the two Koreas have weakened since the Kim Dae-jung administration initiated the “sunshine policy,” the minister said it was an “illusion” to imagine a deep clandestine understanding and mutual trust existed between Seoul and the North. “It’s not a situation where the South can persuade the North over either the missiles or the nuclear issue,” he added.

    http://english.chosun.com/w21data/html/news/200607/200607240002.html