muy_thaiguy wrote:Jenos Ridan wrote:muy_thaiguy wrote:d.gishman wrote:bellaraphon wrote:a few people have mentioned "Japan." to all of you ignorant people japan isn't allowed to go to war and their military production is limited under "article 9 of the japanese constitution." they never have been after WWII.
yes, but the constitution can be revised.
besides, japan loosely translates the "no military force" part by keeping a "police force" anyways
Which constitutes of soldiers, jet fighters, tanks, etc.
Japan will become involved because North Korea has nuclear capability and is right... Next...DOOR!!!
If WWIII breaks out, expect fighting in the Sea of Japan and the Korean Pennesula in addition to the Middle East and the Balkans. There may even be fighting in Indonesia and South East Asia due to the current internal struggles in those nations. Look to any country with internal trouble and within about two decades on average, history shows us they'll externalize by declaring war on a neighbor, typically one they don't like much.
How long before China finally snaps? Wouldn't be the first time, same with Russia. Pakistan and a few (used lightly) of it's neighbors are already bubbling.
Look at history: it took about twenty years from the signing of the Treaty of Versailles to the official declaration of war by France and Great Britian against Germany. As soon as the internal trouble beings, a dictator will rise to the occation, solve some of the problem but not all and because of that he/she will invent an excuse. Hand-over-fist it has always been war with a neighbor, especially when there is bad blood between them (Eg. Germany and France; the bad blood goes back to at least the Napoleonic Era).
Currently, Putin is working on establishing himself as the new soviet premier (via a possible bid for the office of prime minister and a puppet president and a rubber-stamp parliament). North Korea has always had trouble and now they have leverage, in the form of nuclear weapons, over South Korea and Japan. China will be dragged into it simply because they are in the region and would stand to gain by being on the side of North Korea. The Middle East, having always been in a near-constant state of war (at the very least, tribal feuding), will erupt the moment either Iran or Pakistan makes an large aggressive move of any sort (like seizing Iraq as soon as those pesky Americans and their paltry coalition leave). In the case of Pakistan, India and Afghanistan are probably the likily targets.
In short, it could happen within five to twenty years and hopefully not any time sooner but I can't say it wouldn't be possible.