Ibm Rational Doors 9.6

1 view
Skip to first unread message

Lane Frisch

unread,
Jul 21, 2024, 10:42:51 AM7/21/24
to lokerroli

If it is a case you just need traceability - link a requirement to a work item - all you have to do is add RTC in the OSLC Remote Services of DOORS and DOORS in the Application-Friends Outbound/Consumers Inbound of RTC. Also in RTC you need to do a project association in the RTC project. Then in DOORS under the normal Links menu you can link to RTC and vice versa in RTC. -01.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/SSYQBZ_9.6.0/com.ibm.rational.doors.integrating.doc/topics/t_configureconsumecmqmdata.html

If you purchased your windows and doors through a distributor, please report any issues directly back to the distributor as they will need to make the claim to Rationel. Your distributor will ensure you are updated during the process of the claim.

ibm rational doors 9.6


Downloadhttps://geags.com/2zwiS8



The recent tests confirm that North Korea has moved closer to developing a long-range nuclear-strike capability. Pyongyang is now re-operating its nuclear facilities to produce and enrich nuclear materials to weapons-grade, mastering warhead miniaturization essential for delivering a weapon long distances and testing mobile missiles, including transporter erector launchers (TELs) and submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs). Many assessments indicate that North Korea has already achieved a short- and medium-range mobile nuclear-strike capability. With North Korean nuclear facilities in full operation, Pyongyang will possess 20 to 120 nuclear warheads in the next five years unless it is stopped soon. In short, North Korean nuclear capability has by now become a game-changer about to cross the threshold threatening both China and the US.

A nuclear North Korea will create enormous instability in this region. In addition to the possibility of unleashing nuclear concatenations throughout South Korea and Japan, it is inviting forward deployment of US missile defense systems. China has been strongly opposed to possible deployment of the US Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system in South Korea, which could provide surveillance of Northeast China. Beijing has repeatedly warned against deployment of THAAD or the entry of a US aircraft carrier into this security-sensitive area. China would not want another front opened were it ever necessary to confront the US and other parties concerned in the South and East China Seas.

But the imminence of a nuclear North Korea is pressuring China to put North Korean denuclearization on the front burner, probably to give this a higher priority than simply maintaining the status quo. It is creating a new horizon where the critical interests of both China and the US are converging closely enough to necessitate co-operation. Also on this emerging horizon, military actions are excluded, because both South Korea and Japan would not run the risk of being the target of a nuclear attack by North Korea. The new horizon requires rational alternatives. This danger could be transformed into an opportunity, as previously neglected alternatives reemerge and the urgency of the situation pressures the actors to lower their expectations and meet in the middle.

Any rational solution should include critical demands from all parties and fall into a common negotiation set in which they would all have the political room and capability to accept, especially China.

The developments can be summarized this way: 1) the US and China are co-operating on the North Korean nuclear issue through a compromise solution; 2) they have agreed and proposed a rational way for Pyongyang to relieve itself from nuclearization by addressing North Korean security concerns in terms of parallel pursuits; and 3) North Korea would have to face very tough sanctions unless and until it comes to the negotiating table.

The US and China co-operated in passing UNSCR 2270 in March. It is the harshest set of non-military UNSCR sanctions, prohibiting all weapons trade, restricting North Korean financial transactions, as well as some imports and mineral exports that could hit 30-40 percent of its total exports. Unlike in the past, Chinese President Xi Jinping pledged full implementation of the sanctions and the European Union adopted new sanctions expanding the prohibited imports list and tightening financial transactions.

With its hands released from perennial problems in Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran and recently even Cuba, the Obama administration is now in a position to deal with the Asian question. Though the South and East China Sea conflicts will continue for decades, the administration can mobilize its last year in office to resolve the North Korean nuclear issue.

Manhak Kwon is a professor of Kyung Hee University in South Korea, specializing in North-South Korean Relations and Northeast Asian Peace and Security. He was a member of the Presidential Commission on Policy Planning and an advisor to the Minister of Unification.

e59dfda104
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages