Published on Jan 9, 2018
North Korea accepted South Korea's offer and will send athletes to the 2018 Winter Olympics next month, the two sides announced, as they held talks for the first time in two years.
Really want everyone to make peace with NK, but that feels far away...
Really curious who messed up like this...people got scared obviously.
I'm watching the governor of Hawaii and the head of emergency center on Fox News explaining what happened. It was caused by two mouse clicks. The person supposedly pushed the wrong option. What seems strange is the fact they didn't know why the sirens went off.
One of the main limitations facing warfighters and emergency responders in subterranean environments is a lack of situational awareness; we often don't know what lies beneath us. The DARPA Subterranean Challenge aims to provide previously unimaginable situational awareness capabilities for operations underground.
Pyongyang Metro is among the deepest metros in the world, with the track at over 110 metres (360 ft) deep underground; the metro does not have any above-ground track segments or stations. Due to the depth of the metro and the lack of outside segments, its stations can double as bomb shelters, with blast doors in place at hallways.
Well now they know what it feels like to be under a Nuke attack. Trouble is though they may tend to disregard a real one after this.
A Civil Defense employee is set to be retrained after a shocking blunder on Saturday morning, when a mistaken alert warning of an inbound ballistic missile sent thousands fleeing for shelter.
The false alarm was caused by a Hawaii Emergency Management Agency employee who 'pushed the wrong buttons' during an internal drill timed to coincide with a shift handover at 8.07am. The all-clear phone alert was not sent until 38 minutes later.
Incredibly, officials said the employee who made the mistake wasn't aware of it until mobile phones in the command center began displaying the alert.
'This guy feels bad, right. He's not doing this on purpose - it was a mistake on his part and he feels terrible about it,' said EMA Administrator Vern Miyagi in a press conference Saturday afternoon.
Miyagi, a retired Army major general, said the employee had been with the agency for 'a while' and that he would be 'counseled and drilled so this never happens again' - but stopped short of saying whether there would be disciplinary measures.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5266357/Hawaii-receives-ballistic-missile-threat-warning.html#ixz4BLpxn5a
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Employee who caused the false alarm will be retrained.
Hawaii sends out 'false alarm' missile threat | Daily Mail Online