U.S. Special Operations Forces Set to Strike North Korean WMD Sites


Army General Raymond A. Thomas sat in testimony yesterday with the House subcommittee and expressed his confidence in a successful campaign against terror and nuclear intimidation on the part of North Korea.

Special forces commandos would be utilized in an offensive and defensive vice grip around the Korean peninsula in order to safeguard America and its allies.

Among some of the more fantastic examples of cloak-and-dagger military special operations:

  1. Locating & destroying North Korean nuclear weapons and delivery systems, such as mobile missiles.
  2. Prevent the movement of the weapons out of the country during a conflict.
  3. Direct Action Assaults on facilities to sabotage the weapons, or to prevent weapons from being stolen, or set off at the sites by the North Koreans.
  4. Killing North Korean leaders, such as supreme leader Kim Jong-un and other senior regime figures.

The commandos were said to have been training for covert operations against several types of nuclear facilities, including reactors and research centers.  They have been utilizing scale models of some North Korean weapons facilities in the U.S. for practice.

Additionally, General Thomas noted that Strategic Command would be laser-focused on “stopping the spread of weapons of mass destruction and dealing with the aftermath of such weapons’ use.”

North Korea is believed to have 20 nuclear devices while it is developing smaller warheads in order to tip its long-range missiles.  It also has stockpiles of chemical weapons and biological warfare agents.  Many of these are believed to be located in many fortified locations underground.

In testimony, General Thomas identified North Korea, Russia, Iran, China, and terrorism as “current and enduring” threats to our military as outlined in the new doctrine.

Asked about the new strategy, a Joint Chiefs of Staff spokesman said the latest national military strategy is secret. “A classified [National Military Strategy] will make it more difficult for adversaries to develop counter-strategies and also enables the chairman to give the best military advice to the president and secretary of defense,” Navy Capt. Greg Hicks said.

The command “has recently focused more intently on the emerging threat that is of growing concern to us as well as most of our DoD teammates—the nuclear threat of an increasingly rogue North Korea,” Thomas said.

“Although previously viewed as a regional threat, North Korea’s relentless pursuit of nuclear weapons and intercontinental ballistic missiles, facilitated by a trans-regional network of commercial, military, and political connections, make it a threat with global implications,” the four-star general added.

It appears that our military is in very capable hands, even when they are underfunded.  Once they receive the much-needed funding, the sky is truly the limit in our capability to protect ourselves.

Source:  Free Beacon

 

 

 



Share

13 Comments

Leave a Reply

Pin It on Pinterest