WASHINGTON - United States military leaders love to talk about "asymmetric warfare" in which their forces wield enormous firepower against seemingly far weaker enemies skilled in hit-and-run attacks and brutal acts of terrorism.
No contest in which the United States is engaged would appear more asymmetrical than that between it and North Korea next week in which some of the world's most advanced navy vessels and fighter planes go through the motions of training for anti-submarine warfare for four days beginning on Sunday off the coast of South Korea.
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