Kremlin Worried About North Korea

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
March 6, 2017

I generally shut off as soon as I see something about that “North Korean threat.”

The media has been talking about this for decades, ever since the end of the cold war, and yet nothing ever happens and it generally looks as though North Korea are not the big baddies the Jewish media claims.

There is no way to have any idea what is happening in North Korea, because the only information coming out is from “defectors” who have a reason to lie.

All of the pictures we see from the country, everyone is smiling, happy and healthy-looking.

However, the Russians have just came out and said they’re concerned about NK, which should give us pause.

Reuters:

Moscow is seriously worried about North Korea’s latest missile drills, which saw Pyongyang fire four ballistic missiles into the sea off Japan’s northwest, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Monday.

“Definitely, we are seriously worried – these are the sort of actions that lead to a rise in tension in the region and of course in this situation, traditionally, Moscow calls for restraint from all sides,” Peskov told a conference call with reporters.

As a rule, Russia does not engage in hyped-up nonsense.

The Japs are less reliably rational in this matter, as it relates to China, but they don’t tend to be especially irate either.

Bloomberg:

Japan moved to the highest possible alert level after North Korea fired four ballistic missiles simultaneously into nearby waters, the latest provocation from Kim Jong Un’s regime.

Three of the missiles fell into Japan’s exclusive economic zone, with one dropping about 350 kilometers west of the nation’s northern Akita prefecture, government spokesman Yoshihide Suga told reporters after a meeting of Japan’s National Security Council. Authorities were still analyzing the type of missile launched, he said.

The launches “clearly show that this is a new level of threat” from North Korea, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told lawmakers in Tokyo. American officials held phone calls afterward with counterparts in Japan and South Korea, which rely on the U.S. for security.

“North Korea’s nuclear and missile capabilities have really improved, and they are becoming more difficult to predict,” Abe said. The missiles “are getting closer to Japan’s waters and territory.”

Most likely, Jong-Un is unnerved after having been framed in the murder of his brother – which definitely appears to be a total frame-up – and thus may be acting irrationally.

Whatever the case, the solution is to open a channel of communication with Pyongyang, instead of just wondering what the hell is going on.