Madness here is mate on another forum speaking about it 2weeks ago
"Of course NK should disarm... only a fool would say otherwise. I mean look how well it turned out for Libya and Gaddafi and Iraq and Saddam and Syria and Assad...
The world will be a safer place if NK dont have nuclear weapons. Riiiiight. Not for NK it won't."
Folk forget what happened to North Korea in living memory as well, it was bombed into tiny pieces, every city destroyed. Till there were no viable targets left.
Bombing of North Korea
The first major U.S. strategic bombing campaign against North Korea, begun in late July 1950, was conceived as similar to the major offensives of World War II.[305] On 12 August 1950, the U.S. Air Force dropped 625 tons of bombs on North Korea; two weeks later, the daily tonnage increased to some 800 tons.[306] Following the intervention of the Chinese in November, General MacArthur ordered increased bombing campaign on North Korea which included incendiary attacks against their arsenals and communications centers and especially against the "Korean end" of all the bridges across the Yalu River.[307] As with the aerial bombing campaigns over Germany and Japan in World War II, the nominal objective of the U.S. Air Force was to destroy North Korea's war infrastructure and shatter their morale. After MacArthur was removed as Supreme Commander in Korea in April 1951, his successors continued this policy and ultimately extended it to all of North Korea.[308] The U.S. dropped a total of 635,000 tons of bombs, including 32,557 tons of napalm, on Korea, more than during the whole Pacific campaign of World War II.[309][310]
Almost every substantial building in North Korea was destroyed as a result.[311][312] The war's highest-ranking U.S. POW, U.S. Major General William F. Dean,[313] reported that the majority of North Korean cities and villages he saw were either rubble or snow-covered wasteland.[314][315] North Korean factories, schools, hospitals, and government offices were forced to move underground, and air defenses were "non-existent."[310] In November 1950, the North Korean leadership instructed their population to build dugouts and mud huts and to dig underground tunnels, in order to solve the acute housing problem.[316] U.S. Air Force General Curtis LeMay commented, "we went over there and fought the war and eventually burned down every town in North Korea anyway, some way or another, and some in South Korea, too."[317] Pyongyang, which saw 75 percent of its area destroyed, was so devastated that bombing was halted as there were no longer any worthy targets.[318][319] On 28 November, Bomber Command reported on the campaign's progress: 95 percent of Manpojin was destroyed, along with 90 percent of Hoeryong, Namsi and Koindong, 85 percent of Chosan, 75 percent of both Sakchu and Huichon, and 20 percent of Uiju. According to USAF damage assessments, "eighteen of twenty-two major cities in North Korea had been at least half obliterated."[320] By the end of the campaign, US bombers had difficulty in finding targets and were reduced to bombing footbridges or jettisoning their bombs into the sea.[321]
As well as conventional bombing, the Communist side claimed that the U.S. used biological weapons.[322] These claims have been disputed; Conrad Crane asserts that while the U.S. worked towards developing chemical and biological weapons, the U.S. military "possessed neither the ability, nor the will", to use them in combat.[323] {/b]