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I don't disagree. I limited my post to air power because I think that's an area where there really is a big one sided advantage. The majority of North Korea's aircraft were outdated back in the 90's and the advances in technology that have occurred since then would make it extremely difficult for any of their fighters to put up meaningful resistance to modern air forces. Active missiles coupled with multi target radars make those aircraft equipped with them 5 or more times more valuable than other aircraft based on the number of missiles that they can have in the air at once. An air war with Korea won't differ very much from the one between NATO and Iraq during Gulf I. That was essentially the kind of battle that western air forces have been created to fight. The kind of equipment available to NK doesn't have any advantages to exploit that I can see. There isn't any kind of asymmetry between military aircraft today and those from 2-3 generations ago. The modern ones are trying to do all the same things, but they do them better.
You're absolutely right. And realistically, even if NK had roughly equivalent air power they'd still get crushed because a.) the US Air Force is orders of magnitude larger than anything NK can field, and b.) the US military is significantly better trained than anything NK can field. One of the biggest differentiators for military force is training, and the US spends huge, huge amounts on making sure that their soldiers/sailors/airmen get regular, effective, and representative combat training. They get lots of time hands on using and practising with the instruments that they're expected to wield.
Wiki tells me that it's estimated that NK pilots get ~20 hours of air time a year. Even if they had Raptors they'd get themselves creamed at that rate. Google seems to think that it's a fairly fair fight between an F22 and a MiG-29 as long as the MiG gets within visual range without getting an AMRAAM to the face, but even in equal machinery an experienced pilot is going to destroy an inexperienced pilot every day of the week and twice on Sundays.
Air superiority is one area where NK will likely never be able to compete. They might be able to shoot down whatever the US puts up with surface to air stuff, but they'll never get solid air support of their own. Unless China or Russia sends their own air force in to support them, which is a whole other nasty kettle of fish.