Originally posted by FUNKED1
Thrawn, I can see how the UN should treat them equally.
From a US point of view, our Constitution charges the government with ensuring American security, not the collective security of the membership of the UN. And obviously Iranian nuclear weapons would represent a much greater threat to the safety and security of the US than RoK nukes, and therefore the US government should deal with the Iranian problem much more firmly than the (yet to be confirmed) RoK nuclear issue.
Sure, but the only thing that will make the US safer in this respect is the non-proliferation of WMD. Heck Iraq has certainly shown that your friend can be come your enemy in a decade.
Take Pakistan, all we need is for some Islamic fundies to take control of that country, and bam, suddenly your ally is a nuclear armed enemy.
Gunslinger,
PS: That's a good story who wrote it?"
It was a bleeding-heart liberal anti-war song.

It was realsed 1971, along with the film “One Tin Soldier (The Legend of Billy Jack).
the only problem with that is this little issue of sovereignty. IMHO when a country does what you mention they no longer members of the UN but subjects to it.
They would be subject to treaty that they
voluntarily (hence the exercise of sovereighty) agree to, just like the UN charter.
And remember sovereignty only extends to ones borders. Outside one is subject to the various systems of treaties they have agreed to.