Oh! How trully useful to cabal, cemented in the CIA heart -minionized north korea is!(Not the real North Korea).
All this has to also happen because mischievous-mischievous big china ( not the real China) does sell oil to little-naughty-naughty north korea, despite sanctions.
But what can big-mischievous-mischievous china (not the real China) do, when pompous us (not the real US), filthy-satanic-sinister-virulent Globe's , (the Real Globe), pimpy-malicious-warmongering devastators send their sting-sting/bomby- -bomby malevolent, ugly, little warships in front of big- miscievous-mischievous china's door?! Huh!?
What a nauseating false international politics, disgusting false flag, this whole false attitude and Huge Crime against Gaia and Humanity IS!quelle Nausée! Quelle impasse!
Knots cutting time is come!
Maria L. Pelekanaki
The deployment of US-made Aegis Ashore land-based missile defense systems in Japan will affect ties between Moscow and Tokyo, the Russian Foreign Ministry warned on Thursday. Tokyo’s decision causes “deep regrets and major concerns,” TASS quoted the ministry’s spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, as saying. Such actions “will negatively influence the general atmosphere in bilateral relations, including negotiations on a peace treaty,” according to Zakharova. Japan formally decided this month it would expand its ballistic missile defense system with US-made ground-based Aegis radar stations and interceptors “in response to a growing threat from North Korean rockets,” Reuters said.
On Tuesday, the South Korean newspaper Chosun Ilbo claimed US surveillance satellites spotted Chinese vessels engaged in ship-to-ship oil transfers with North Korean ships at sea, citing government sources in Seoul. At least 30 such transfers have allegedly occurred since October.
September’s United Nations Security Council Resolution 2375 imposed an import quota of 500,000 barrels of refined petrol on North Korea, for three months starting in October, as well as restrictions on crude oil transactions. Direct ship-to-ship transfers, which make it harder to account for the oil, are also banned by the UN, which imposed Resolution 2375 in response Pyongyang’s suspected nuclear test earlier that month.
On Thursday, China insisted that it was in full compliance with the resolution, as well as the new UN Security Council resolution passed last week, which places even tighter restrictions on North Korea’s energy imports.
“The situation you have mentioned absolutely does not exist,” Chinese defense ministry spokesman Ren Guoqiang said when questioned about the media revelations.
In fact, in recent days China has publicized its decision to entirely cut off North Korea’s oil and gas exports following its series of missile and nuclear tests, on the back of its move earlier this year to suspend import of coal from the cash-starved regime, saying that the sanctions-led tightening “reflects its views.” China’s General Administration of Customs published statistics showing that no gasoline or diesel was pumped or shipped to the southern country in either October or November.
Donald Trump has designated North Korea as the prime security threat to the US since his election in 2016, and last month threatened to “utterly destroy” the Asian country in response to any potential acts of aggression.