Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Article #7


Article #7
Rajan Clark
April 25, 2018
On-line News
Trump and Korea Nuclear negotiation
          April 25, 2018 Trump was announced having a sit down negotiation with North Korea’s dictator Kim Jung Un. No matter how the conversation goes, dictator Kim says there is a low chance of him giving his nuclear weapon to trump. Lately the power around the world has been going out. Some parts of the U.S have been going hours and days without power in their house. This Nuclear explosion is made for three stages of shock. Each shock is a shut down every solar power made on the Universe.

The first shock could start by producing a so-called E1 shock, which is a brief pulse that is particularly devastating to what are known as supervisory control and data acquisition systems.  Immediately after the E1 would follow an E2 burst, which is a lesser magnitude and may last as little as a microsecond. Finally, a longer E3 pulse could last several minutes and attack long-line systems such as the electric power grid by destroying substations across the nation. E1 and E3 are the effects of greatest concern because we are the least hardened against them.  Therefor is would be important to have lighters and candles around the house in case of danger. This negotiation should be trumps smartest move in his president years. The fact that he is in the position to ask him for negotiation over the Nuclear weapon is risky. Everyone knows how Trump behavior is over social media and I doubt they would want a person as such character to negotiation their life. Ten times out of ten, he may start WW3. Now that the news about the negotiation table is out, the military is trying to work on a safety package.
The military has been notified that the shocks are made of EMP. The military needs to increase its ballistic missile defenses against the “single shot” attack that would use EMP. U.S. President Donald Trump has threatened to deal with Kim's regime “very strongly,” saying all options including military ones  are on the table. Kim has executed senior advisers including his uncle and one-time guardian, raising concerns about his temperament and the absence of considered counsel. His half-brother was murdered in Malaysia in February 2017. Some analysts warn that a collapsing North Korea with nuclear weapons would be more dangerous than a stable North Korea with nuclear arms.

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