John Schilling opined
Chad Irby writes:
In article mail-0E43D5.00500922122003@localhost,
Michael Ash wrote:
North Korea, on the other hand, has enough artillery on the border to
completely level Seoul within a few hours, from what I understand. That
alone is enough to stop any plans for an invasion. In a way, it's even
worse than the nuclear problem. Unlike a nuke and its delivery system,
there's no possible way to take out mumble-thousand pieces of artillery
before the deed has been done.
Kinda makes you wonder how well they can coordinate those artillery
pieces... they can't even feed their troops.
Out of the tens of thousands of cannons sitting on the north side of the
border, anyone want to bet that no more than a couple of hundred
actually get to fire? Especially with a few dozen MLRS launchers and a
couple of hundred attack aircraft cranking out a few million
submunitions across their firing positions... while reducing their
command centers to smoking holes in the ground and jamming
communications.
How do you jam a homing pigeon?
Big magnet.
-ash
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