
Why Recessions Forge Great CEOs Who Think Beyond Cost-Cutting
But the CEOs who make history in downturns aren’t the ones with the deepest cuts
April 20, 2022: According to a professor at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies, North Korea is willing to have nuclear weapons against the U.S. troops in South Korea and Japan in an invasion.
North Korea can use a small number of nuclear weapons against the U.S, said Jeffrey Lewis, a professor on arms control.
“They have some deterrence, but I think the North Koreans fundamentally want the ability to use a much significant number of nuclear weapons against U.S. forces in South Korea and Japan if they tan invasion was underway,” he told CNBC on Monday.
“This is part of an alarming change in the way they approach nuclear weapons, and that change is really to give themselves the ability to use nuclear weapons first if they think they are about to be invaded,” he said.
State news agency KCNA reports that Kim “gave important instructions on the building up the country’s defense capabilities and nuclear combat forces.”
“North Koreans are committed to shifting their nuclear policy,” said Lewis.
He said the missile looked such as “yet another variant” of a short-range one and that it’s “more of the same” from North Korea, but it’s “still quite unwelcome.”
According to Lewis, North Korea is now working toward a nuclear weapons test over four years since its last one in 2017.
“In a sense, the gloves are off,” he said. “They don’tn feel bound by any of the commitments they made in 2018 when the diplomacy period started, and we’re seeing a lot of activity at the nuclear test site.”
I his presidency, U.S. President Donald Trump held two summits with Kim to discuss the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula. The second one, in Hanoi, finished when the two sides were unable to agree on the removal of sanctions.
North Korea is closing the entrances to its nuclear test tunnels in 2018, but they have likely already reopened them, Lewis said.
In March, Satellite images taken showed construction at the site where Korea has conducted all its previous nuclear tests, Reuters reported.
But the CEOs who make history in downturns aren’t the ones with the deepest cuts
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But the CEOs who make history in downturns aren’t the ones with the deepest cuts
April 15, 2025: Multiple wildfires burning across northern and central Alberta have triggered large-scale evacuations.
April 10, 2025: The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party has recorded significant gains in regional elections, triggering a wave of political instability across the country
April 08, 2025: France and Germany are delaying progress on the European Union’s proposed digital identity wallet, citing unresolved concerns over data sovereignty,
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