Jan 2, 2018

Dry Dead Olive Leaf Blown In On Kim's Hot Air


After South Stops Fuel Ship Delivery From China


Since I was with the 1st Marine Division when we 
rescued his parents, out of North Korea, in December 
1950, I feel free to offer the reply the new South 
Korean President, Moon Jae-in, should send the dictator 
of North Korea, Kim Jong-un, who just made the same 
offer he, his dictator Pappy and dictator Grandpappy 
have made umpteen times before and then reneged on.
Our brilliant presidents have counseled previous leaders
of South Korea to suck up all those little olive branches, 
thinking they were olives, and paid for them, but got 
nothing in return but indigestion. 
Why politicians can't remember history is an incredible 
phenomenon. Hitler sent Neville Chamberlain back to
Briton with the same olive branch..." peace in our time".
Here is Kim's latest, hard to chew, "olive branch".

Headline in News:

Kim Jong Un offers olive branch to South Korea



Rayburn's suggested reply:
We have a warehouse full of your olive branches, Kim.


This time we want some olives or we may have to 


uproot the whole tree and take off some of your limbs.
_________________________________________

This from FOX News reprinted from Military.com

How US Marines saved South Korean President's
Parents in the epic battle of Chosin Reservoir

New South Korean President Moon Jae-in begins a four-day U.S. trip for difficult talks on THAAD deployment and the North Korean threat with an emotional visit Wednesday to the "Frozen Chosin" exhibit at the National Museum of the Marine Corps in Quantico, Va.
Moon shares a special relationship with the Marine Corps and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Joseph Dunford, the former Marine commandant. 
Dunford's father, then-20-year-old Joseph F. Dunford Sr., fought with the 1st Battalion, 5th Marines, in the brutal sub-zero 1950 battles against the Chinese around the Chosin Reservoir in what is now North Korea. 
Moon's parents were among about 100,000 refugees who were evacuated from the area to the south as the Marines fought their way to the sea at Hongnam in what became known as the "Christmas Cargo" campaign or the "Miracle of Christmas."



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