NK - just doesn't make any sense at all. Aside from us sanctioning them for human rights things, why are they so mad? Why do we think they are so scary, when we do have the capability to deter any attack they might mount?
It's all just idiotic. Playing a game of chicken or something even more stupid like "giving them a bloody nose" just makes no sense at all.
Ahahahahaha.
We staged a war in their country that resulted in the death of 1 in 5 people within living memory and forcibly split their country in two. Again, 3 million dead, 1.5 million of those civilians. But the US would surely never do anything to North Korea again, right? Just like it would only ever invade Iraq once, and how it would definitely respect the sovereignty of small foreign nations, right? Take a good long look at US actions worldwide and tell me with a straight face that we would not invade and topple the North Korean regime if not for the artillery pointed at an ally and potential nuclear deterrence. Everything they are doing is perfectly rational and is frankly the only way for their government to protect itself against US aggression.
The country was split before the Korean War, and saying it was "staged" by the US is an... interesting interpretation of history.
Aye. How dare the US refuse to sell heavy armaments to South Korea before the war? I mean, if Truman had simply given in to a knee-jerk anti-Communist sentiment and
given sold Rhee all the guns he wanted as well as not pulling back all troops except a couple hundred advisors, North Korea would never have sensed weakness and invaded. It's all because the US didn't want a war that a war happened.
To be fair, though, it *is* a decent portrayal of how the North Koreans likely see the war, which is how it would affect their approach to a second such conflict. To argue in North Korea that it was a war of aggression by North Korea, and worse, that it was a failed war of aggression? That seems like it would be counterproductive. The official line, as far as I know, is that it was a defensive action triggered by South Korean aggression aimed at deposing the Syngman Rhee government, at which point the South Korean population would welcome North Korean leadership with open arms, but American intervention and Rhee's own brutality prevented that. To be fair again, in 1950s, most of those elements weren't too far off from the truth, either. Rhee did want a war, which is why Truman didn't trust him, Rhee was actively purging South Korea of Communist guerilla activity (notably in the Jeju massacres that wiped out as much as 10% of the island population), and both sides were staging provocations in the DMZ. It's just the whole that adds up to something that smells a bit funny because the Kim government was no better and was actively preparing the war for the last five years, down to even wiring Moscow for an official imprimatur.
EDIT: Added some further thoughts on the matter.