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Governor Kasich Ponders Taking Out North Korean Leadership

Kasich

Republican Governor of Ohio John Kasich says that drastic measures need to be taken to deal with the North Korean problem, without shedding too much blood.

The former 2016 presidential candidate somehow believes that by eliminating the DPRK leadership, the need for bombing and setting off a nuclear war will be diminished.

Kasich reckons that if it is done “very quickly” millions will be saved from death and there will be no need for military action!

He was speaking at a breakfast meeting sponsored by the Christian Science Monitor.

Sputnik reports:

Doing away with the leadership of North Korea may be preferred to solving the crisis in the region by employing a military solution, Kasich stated on Friday.

“The problem with bombing, you’re going to lose a million people in that,” Kasich said during a Christian Science Monitor breakfast on Friday. “Now, how do you deal with this? Well, I think there might be a way and that has to do with taking out the North Korean leadership. I’ll just leave it there.”

Kasich did not directly call for assassination of North Korean leaders, but suggested that targeted action against the leadership in Pyongyang is going to be more efficient than bombing the country to deter it from launching nuclear missiles.

“The North Korean top leadership has to go and there are ways in which that can be achieved,” Kasich said. “Now you have to have very good intelligence. You have to do things very quickly, and I think that is not beyond our capability to achieve that.”

Tensions surrounding North Korea’s military activities have escalated in recent months after Pyongyang conducted a number of nuclear tests and ballistic missile launches in violation of UN Security Council resolutions.

The most recent missile launch by North Korea reportedly took place early on April 16 but failed, according to South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff.

The UN Security Council is presently holding a ministerial briefing on North Korea’s nuclear program and ballistic missile launches.

The meeting comes at the request of the US mission to the United Nations and is attended by ministers and officials from nine other nations: Russia, China, Japan, Senegal, Ethiopia, Kazakhstan, Sweden, Italy and the United Kingdom.

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