Posted on 05/25/2004 7:29:57 AM PDT by TigerLikesRooster
So they banned cell phones, to keep information from going out? I wonder if the US got a call about what was in the warehouse before it could be shipped.
N. Koreans believe that cell phone(s) is(are) used to trigger the explosion.
Is the cell phone story coming up on your computer?
--Boot Hill
Try the link in #118. That link leads to the right story.
LOL, yes the story does come up, but it is in Kanji with no option link for English!
--Boot Hill
I understand, but would they ban cellphones because of that?When they use the word trigger could something have gotten lost in translation? I guesss what I am saying is with an explosion of this magnitude how would they determine a cell phone was the trigger mechanism?
No English version at this time, it appears.:)
I do not know how they came up with that conclusion. Some news accounts did say that there were two explosions, one preceding the other by a short time. It may be that the first one created fire which spread out and triggered the second catastrophic explosion by engulfing the secret military cargo escorted by Syrians. If the first one occurred some distance away from the second one, it may be possible that some potential evidences for the first explosion managed to survive.
Of course, I am assuming that cell phone story is not just a cover story.
eastforker: "I understand, but would they ban cellphones because of that?"
Because they don't want cell phones to be used anymore to trigger explosions. (I must not understand your question.)
--Boot Hill
Just about anything electronic can be used to trigger an explosion, hell a kitchen timer would do that. Banning cell phones would never stop remote detonations but cell phones would be much harder to tap, especialy cell phones with the transponder in china. Cell phones today with camera capabilities is a spies dream come true, no more micro-film to be smuggled accross international lines and all that cloak and dagger stuff. See now where I am coming from?
Posted by Rockpile to per loin
On News/Activism 05/16/2004 12:42:04 PM PDT #39 of 58
I wonder if North Korea is making their own rocket fuel or if they import----like maybe from China in railroad tankcars?
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I still wonder where NK gets their rocket fuel from. If they have to import from China and if that is what was involved in this explosion I would think that an outside player could be involved such as the US, South Korea, heck maybe even the Japanese.
Given the North's penchant for foreign murders in the past it kinda makes you feel warm and fuzzy to think the little toad may be sweating life on the receiving end.
Still, could be a coup attempt though. I hope he hears the Boogeyman in the dark :]
It is more likely that explosive materials were from N. Korea and that the saboteurs could also be Chinese or someone connected to Chinese.
It dawned on me that Kim Jong-nam, Kim Jong-il's eldest son, could be behind Kim Jong-il's assassination attempt. Jong-nam is being pushed aside and steps are taken by N. Korean regime to install his younger brother, Jong-chol, as the successor to Kim Jong-il. With the help of Chinese and Americans, Jong-nam might have used China as his base to launch this operation.
Jong-nam has enough connections inside N. Korean regime to pull something like this. Some reports even claim that the death of party secretary Kim Yong-soon and the hospitalization of Ko Yong-hee were also the work of pro-Kim Jong-nam faction.
Yes, I caught all of that from Japanese sources, too.
Freepmail sent to you.
A son killing a father? Impossible, why that would violate the Biblical injunction to "honor thy father and mother"! J
(If I were Kim Jong-nam, I'd make darn sure not to miss Fathers Day this year!)
--Boot Hill
thanks.
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