ALERT The Winds of War Blow in Korea and The Far East

jward

passin' thru
Sidhant Sibal
@sidhant


Breaking: India, Vietnam naval ships to undertake passage exercises in South China sea from 26th to 27th December
=--------------------------------

RT 8min
WION
@WIONews

29m

India and Vietnam will be conducting a joint naval drill in the South China Sea amidst heightened tensions with Beijing The two-day Passage Exercise (PASSEX) will start from tomorrow. Mohammed Saleh speaks to
@sidhant
for more
View: https://twitter.com/WIONews/status/1342316123912433666?s=20
 

Pinecone

Has No Life - Lives on TB

NK NEWS
@nknewsorg

19m

NEW: 2020 was Kim Jong Un's least active year for public appearances since he came to power in 2011. But Kim oversaw a surge of Politburo meetings, suggesting a shift to a more formal and inclusive governing style. Analysis by
@ColinZwirko
at NK Pro:
View: https://twitter.com/nknewsorg/status/1343406318359609345?s=20
It's not too late for Rocket Man to make his mark on 2020. No intel, just musing that it's been a horrible year and it's going out in style so far.
 

jward

passin' thru
Kim Yo Jong Is Ready to Become the First Woman Dictator in Modern History

Donald Kirk
Mon, December 28, 2020, 4:02 AM CST


Patrick Semansky - Pool /Getty Images

Patrick Semansky - Pool /Getty Images
SEOUL—The star of the younger sister of North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un has risen so fast and high in the country’s ruling firmament in 2020 as to make her appear as a stand-in for big brother if not his rival for power.
At 32, four years younger than Jong Un, Kim Yo Jong has made her presence known through shockingly tough statements that he had to have endorsed but she clearly wrote and recommended.
Undoubtedly her most famous—and most effective—blast was her denunciation in June of North Korean defectors for firing off balloons from South Korea laden with leaflets criticizing the North Korean regime.

Kim Jong Un’s Little Sister Is Back as North Korea’s Top Attack Dog
They were “human scum hardly worth their value as human beings,” “little short of wild animals who betrayed their own homeland,” she raged. It was “time to bring their owners to account” and ask “south (sic) Korean authorities if they are ready to take care of the consequences of evil conduct by the rubbish-like mongrel dogs who took no scruple to slander us while faulting the ‘nuclear issue’ in the meanest way at the most untimely time.”
Kim Yo Jong’s colorful rhetoric—more extreme than anything her brother has put out publicly since taking the reins after the death of their father, Kim Jong Il, nine years ago—struck a responsive chord here. South Korea’s national assembly, dominated by the ruling party of President Moon Jae-in, this month made it illegal to fire off not only leaflets but also candy bars and dollar bills and USB devices bringing traces of the good life south of the demilitarized zone to the hunger- and poverty-stricken North.

Moon himself adopted a turn-the-other-cheek policy after North Korean soldiers on June 16, at the behest of Kim Yo Jong, via the army, blew up the joint liaison office in the shuttered Kaesong Industrial Complex just north of the DMZ. The blast, heard for miles around, showed she had meant it when she warned South Koreans to “get themselves ready” for “shutdown” of the office “whose existence only adds to trouble.”
Kim Yo Jong’s harsh criticism was all the more disappointing for Moon considering that only the day before the explosion, on the 20th anniversary of the signing of a joint North-South agreement in Pyongyang between Kim Jong Il and South Korea’s late President Kim Dae Jung, he had called on both sides “to move forward, one step at a time, down the road to national reconciliation, peace, and reunification.”

Kim Jong Un Is MIA. His Sister Is on the Attack.
After Kim Yo Jong called his conciliatory words “a string of shameless and impudent words full of incoherence” and “shameless perfidy,” Moon left it to a spokesman to call her criticism “an insensible act that fundamentally damages the trust” supposedly built up at his four meetings with Kim Jong Un.
The fact that Kim Yo Jong so easily violated that trust means she’s more than just a power behind the throne. As the widely acknowledged boss of the fearsome Organization and Guidance Department, a mysterious agency that watches all that’s going on in the government, the ruling party and the top levels of the army, she has the authority to exact penalties ranging from exile to minor posts in the countryside to imprisonment and death.

Her exact title is first vice director of the OGD, said Lee Sung-yoon, a professor at Tuft University’s Fletcher School, “but her blue blood supersedes formal titles.” Lee, who is writing a book about her, said “she is the de facto No. 2 in the DPRK (North Korean) hierarchy and the only true confidante of consequence for Kim Jong Un.”
As if that alone were not quite enough, she is believed also to be first vice director of the United Front Department. The title, Lee said, may not seem all powerful, but the meaning is clear: “By the authority granted by her brother Kim Jong Un, the Party, and the State, she will henceforth punish South Korea, which she designated an ‘enemy.’”
Kim Yo Jong obviously could not have risen to such heights had she not been Kim Jong Il's daughter, but she’s shown remarkable charm, wit and strength in bypassing other family members.

One other brother, Kim Yong Chol, who’s three or four years older than Kim Jong Un, is said to have been discarded by their father as “too effeminate” to be a proper heir to any position. Photographed several years ago attending Eric Clapton concerts in Singapore and London, he’s known to be an avid guitar player himself. Within the tightly shut doors of one or more of the ruling family’s compounds, he is presumably strumming away—no harm done and no threat.
And there was the eldest half-brother, Kim Jong Nam, born of Kim Jong Il’s first mistress, discarded by their father as too much a playboy to be his heir and relegated to exile in Macao. Still seeing him as dangerous, Kim Jong Un in 2017 had him rubbed out, literally, by two young massage ladies as he was about to fly back to Macao from the Malaysian capital of Kuala Lumpur. North Korean saboteurs had paid the poor women, from Indonesia and Vietnam, to smear a liquid on his face that turned out to be a VX chemical agent that killed him within minutes.

Might Kim Yo Jong—possibly too shrewd for her own good—be risking a similar fate? Despite her best efforts, she cannot help but arouse concerns that big brother sooner or later will decide he’s had enough of her and isolate or even get rid of her, as he’s done with other members of his own family.
Could These Rivals Stop Kim Jong Un’s Little Sister From Taking Power?
Kim Jong Un “would not like the outside media characterizing him as potentially dead or dying and his sister as a potential replacement,” said Bruce Bennett, Korea expert at Rand. “That could undermine his position inside North Korea.” Still, “she may have been functioning strongly within North Korea,” dealing with internal matters while her brother works on “regaining the external media focus for himself.”

So how does she get away with rising to star power in the galaxy of North Korean leadership without so far getting into deep trouble with her brother?
If Jong Un is not all that happy to see Yo Jong talked about so much as a strong force, he still needs her. Packing 300-plus pounds on his 5-foot-7-inch frame, he’s battling undisclosed ailments believed to range from diabetes to heart disease. There’s even speculation that he may have contracted, who knows, a touch of COVID-19 – enough to keep him out of sight for rather lengthy periods.
Little sister has also been out of the limelight for weeks at a time, contributing to the impression of repression. Rising up in importance, she knows how to keep her head down. One sure way to disappear would be to undercut a paranoid character who can’t stand real competition but may not always be physically up to the job.

Where Is Kim Yo Jong? Kim Jong Un’s Sister Goes Missing From Big Party Meeting
President Moon’s special adviser on foreign affairs, Moon Chung-in, had the rare opportunity of seeing Kim Yo Jong in person at two summits with her brother in Pyongyang. She was “humble in appearance,” Moon told the Daily Beast. “She was well mannered… She didn’t speak a lot.”
Never mind that her position at her brother’s side would seem like proof positive of her upward trajectory in the hierarchy. A strong advocate of accommodation with the North, Moon does not agree that her presence at such vital meetings is evidence of her dramatic rise.

“In North Korea there’s only one leader,” said Moon, a retired professor who courts influential Americans and organizes conferences in search of support for President Moon’s soft-line approach. “She was a driver in improving relations between North and South Korea, but the term ‘second in power’ is a distortion.”
Evans Revere, former top diplomat in the U.S. embassy here, understands the game she’s playing. “Kim Jong Un evidently does not see her as a threat,” he said. “She has been careful not to overshadow KJU and has cultivated the image of someone who is clearly subordinate to him.”
Yo Jong had to have had a strong background role for some time before making her international debut at the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics in Korea in February 2018, watching the opening ceremony in the VIP box behind Vice President Mike Pence and then bearing an invitation from her big brother to President Moon to get together.
The image during the Olympics was that of a polite, earnest go-between, but early this year, after she was made an alternate member of the politburo of the ruling Workers’ Party, of which her brother of course is chairman, she began really acting up in public.

Dropping all pretense of politeness, she denounced the Moon government in Seoul for frowning on North Korean missile launches, saying “such a gangster-like assertion can never be expected from those with normal way of thinking.” No, she was careful not to refer to Moon by name but said the Blue House, the presidential residence and office complex, was behaving in a manner that was “perfectly foolish.” The response of Moon’s inner circle, she taunted, was like “a child dreading fire.”
Most recently, she showed her public face again, saying she would “never forget” how South Korea’s foreign minister, Kang Kyung-wha, had said North Korea’s claims of no cases of COVID-19 were “hard to believe.” Kang, she warned direly, “might have to pay dearly” for having uttered such words.
Kim Yo Jong’s greatest success, though, was getting Moon and his party’s national assembly majority to shut down the balloonists in the face of criticism among political foes here as well as human rights activists overseas even as Moon’s popularity rating was falling below 40 percent.

Foreign Minister Kang in a CNN interview defended the anti-balloon law as justified in a “highly militarily tense area where anything can go wrong, lead to even bigger clashes,” but John Sifton, Asia advocacy director at Human Rights Watch in New York, called it “a great disservice” to the people of both Koreas. South Korea, he said, “seems more interested in keeping Kim Jong Un happy than letting its own citizens exercise their basic rights on behalf of their northern neighbors.”
The real test of Kim Yo Jong’s influence may come in dealing with the incoming Biden administration. She once “dismissed the likelihood or necessity of further U.S.-North Korean dialogue,” Bruce Klingner, Asia expert at the Heritage Foundation, recalled, but “left the door open if Washington capitulated to Pyongyang’s demands.”
Formal titles aside, she’s “likely the second most powerful person in North Korea”—the one whom her brother “trusts the most,” said Klingner. Whether she would “become leader if her brother passed away suddenly remains unknown, but certainly that’s a much stronger possibility than only a few years ago.”

 

jward

passin' thru
You are at :Home»News»Chinese Submarine Drone Discovered Near Gateway To Indian Ocean

Sea Wing Submarine Drone
The Chinese-made Sea Wing underwater glider can be identified from key characteristics.

Chinese Submarine Drone Discovered Near Gateway To Indian Ocean
The latest underwater drone found by fishermen may indicate that China is surveying Indonesian waters. This may have strategic implications if it helps Chinese Navy submarines and warships enter the Indian Ocean.
H I Sutton 29 Dec 2020


Indonesian fishermen found an underwater drone on December 20th. Based on photographs we can say with some confidence that the drone is closely related to the Chinese Sea Wing family. The find was reported in local media (in Indonesian). It was discovered near Selayar Island in the South Sulawes, far away from China’s adjacent waters.

The find is close to two potential routes between the South China Sea and the Indian Ocean. These routes, the Sunda Strait and Lombok Strait, may be important in wartime. Intelligence gathered by the drone may be valuable to the Chinese Navy if their submarines intend to use these straits.

The object is a type of drone known as a glider. These are unpowered so must use something called variable-buoyancy propulsion. This involves inflating and deflating a balloon-like device filled with pressurized oil. This causes them to sink before rising to the surface again. As they do so they travel along, aided by wings. And as they go, they are gathering data on the ocean environment.
A fisherman in Selayar Island, South Sulawesi, has found a UUV:

Length: 225 cm
Tail: 18 cm
Wingspan: 50 cm
Trailing antenna: 93 cm

Very similar to China's 'Sea Wing' UUV, which, if it's true, raised many questions especially how it managed to be found deep inside our territory pic.twitter.com/RAiX8Xw2BK
— JATOSINT (@Jatosint) December 29, 2020
Indonesian based security & defense poster @Jatosint was quick to post the find on Twitter, and make the connection to the Chinese-made Sea Wing glider. Note that the device is upside down in the photos.
The data gathered can included temperature, turbidity, salinity, chlorophyll and oxygen levels. This data may sound innocuous and it is often used for scientific research. But it can also be extremely valuable to naval planners. Especially supporting submarine operations. The better a navy knows the waters, the better it is able to hide its submarines.

The US, France and other countries build and operate similar gliders. However, key characteristics of the Chinese type, which are not found on other similar underwater glides, are present. The nose cone has three circular sensor windows with the central one larger than the outer two. The wings have a folding mechanism and the antenna extends directly out of the center of the tail cone. The vertical stabilizer, like a tail fin, is seen underneath, Ordinarily the devicde would be up the other way with it pointing upwards,

Sea Wing gliders are known to be launched by China’s specialist survey ships. In December 2019 the survey ship Xiangyanghong 06 launched around 12 of the drones into the Eastern Indian Ocean. The one found may be one of these, but it seems unlikely given the ocean currents.

Another Sea Wing glider was found by Indonesian fishermen in March 2019. This was in the Riau Islands, much closer to the South China Sea. The exact variant of Sea Wing was different, but the craft was very similar. However this is enough to suggest that they were deployed at different times and likely in different places. Additionally, camera-like sensors were apparently still operating when it was recovered. This suggests that it was deployed more decently.

Where the glider was originally deployed, and what it was doin, remain unclear. But these craft can provide valuable military intelligence.

China previously protested when it found a similar U.S. Navy glider in international waters near its coast. On December 15, 2016 a Chinese ship plucked a U.S. Navy LBS-G ( Littoral Battlespace Sensing-Glider) out of the South China Sea. The glider was in the process of being recovered by USNS Bowditch. The drone was only returned after the incident escalated.

This incident is unlikely to escalate in the same way, but does serve to draw attention to China’s increasingly assertive maritime activities. These gliders may, in some cases, be innocent, but they are naturally viewed with suspicion. It may be evidence that China is reconnoitering potential submarine routes into the Indian Ocean, through Indonesian waters. Or some other naval plan.
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
You are at :Home»News»Chinese Submarine Drone Discovered Near Gateway To Indian Ocean

Sea Wing Submarine Drone
The Chinese-made Sea Wing underwater glider can be identified from key characteristics.

Chinese Submarine Drone Discovered Near Gateway To Indian Ocean
The latest underwater drone found by fishermen may indicate that China is surveying Indonesian waters. This may have strategic implications if it helps Chinese Navy submarines and warships enter the Indian Ocean.
H I Sutton 29 Dec 2020


Indonesian fishermen found an underwater drone on December 20th. Based on photographs we can say with some confidence that the drone is closely related to the Chinese Sea Wing family. The find was reported in local media (in Indonesian). It was discovered near Selayar Island in the South Sulawes, far away from China’s adjacent waters.

The find is close to two potential routes between the South China Sea and the Indian Ocean. These routes, the Sunda Strait and Lombok Strait, may be important in wartime. Intelligence gathered by the drone may be valuable to the Chinese Navy if their submarines intend to use these straits.

The object is a type of drone known as a glider. These are unpowered so must use something called variable-buoyancy propulsion. This involves inflating and deflating a balloon-like device filled with pressurized oil. This causes them to sink before rising to the surface again. As they do so they travel along, aided by wings. And as they go, they are gathering data on the ocean environment.

Indonesian based security & defense poster @Jatosint was quick to post the find on Twitter, and make the connection to the Chinese-made Sea Wing glider. Note that the device is upside down in the photos.
The data gathered can included temperature, turbidity, salinity, chlorophyll and oxygen levels. This data may sound innocuous and it is often used for scientific research. But it can also be extremely valuable to naval planners. Especially supporting submarine operations. The better a navy knows the waters, the better it is able to hide its submarines.

The US, France and other countries build and operate similar gliders. However, key characteristics of the Chinese type, which are not found on other similar underwater glides, are present. The nose cone has three circular sensor windows with the central one larger than the outer two. The wings have a folding mechanism and the antenna extends directly out of the center of the tail cone. The vertical stabilizer, like a tail fin, is seen underneath, Ordinarily the devicde would be up the other way with it pointing upwards,

Sea Wing gliders are known to be launched by China’s specialist survey ships. In December 2019 the survey ship Xiangyanghong 06 launched around 12 of the drones into the Eastern Indian Ocean. The one found may be one of these, but it seems unlikely given the ocean currents.

Another Sea Wing glider was found by Indonesian fishermen in March 2019. This was in the Riau Islands, much closer to the South China Sea. The exact variant of Sea Wing was different, but the craft was very similar. However this is enough to suggest that they were deployed at different times and likely in different places. Additionally, camera-like sensors were apparently still operating when it was recovered. This suggests that it was deployed more decently.

Where the glider was originally deployed, and what it was doin, remain unclear. But these craft can provide valuable military intelligence.

China previously protested when it found a similar U.S. Navy glider in international waters near its coast. On December 15, 2016 a Chinese ship plucked a U.S. Navy LBS-G ( Littoral Battlespace Sensing-Glider) out of the South China Sea. The glider was in the process of being recovered by USNS Bowditch. The drone was only returned after the incident escalated.

This incident is unlikely to escalate in the same way, but does serve to draw attention to China’s increasingly assertive maritime activities. These gliders may, in some cases, be innocent, but they are naturally viewed with suspicion. It may be evidence that China is reconnoitering potential submarine routes into the Indian Ocean, through Indonesian waters. Or some other naval plan.

1609312266187.png
 

jward

passin' thru
Jeongmin Kim
@jeongminnkim


Kim Jong Un's opening address of the Eighth Party Congress: “The execution period for the five-year plan expired last year, but the goals we set were immensely underachieved in almost all sectors." With Kim Jong Un: "The accumulated, bitter lessons are as precious as our achievements. All of these are the things ... we can’t buy with money ... a precious source of new victory going forward.” They are is set to discuss the new five-year economic plan.

View: https://twitter.com/jeongminnkim/status/1346586167282524160?s=20
 

Pinecone

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I guess that's one way for population control. Get rid of underachievers. Less to feed. What a sad mess that country is.
 

jward

passin' thru
North Korea's Kim says economic plan failed as rare party congress begins
By Hyonhee Shin
3 Min Read

SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said his five-year economic plan had failed to meet its goals “on almost every sector” as he kicked off the ruling Workers’ Party congress on Tuesday, state media KCNA reported on Wednesday.


Slideshow ( 5 images )
The rare political gathering, which Kim last hosted in 2016, has drawn international attention as he is expected to unveil a new five-year economic plan and address foreign policy, just two weeks before U.S. President-elect Joe Biden takes office.

In his opening speech, Kim said the country had achieved a “miraculous victory” by bolstering its power and global prestige since the last meeting, referring to military advances that culminated in successful tests in 2017 of intercontinental ballistic missiles capable of striking the U.S. mainland.

But the five-year economic strategy he set forth in 2016 had failed to deliver, he said, calling for a boost in North Korea’s self-reliance to tackle internal and outside challenges hindering its progress.

“The strategy was due last year but it tremendously fell short of goals on almost every sector,” Kim said, according to KCNA.


On the global pandemic, Kim lauded party workers for ensuring “stable situations against the coronavirus from beginning to end.”

They had “resolutely overcome difficulties in the face of an unprecedentedly prolonged, unparalleled global health crisis,” he added.

North Korea has not officially confirmed any coronavirus cases, although it reported thousands of “suspected cases” to the World Health Organization.

South Korean authorities have said an outbreak in the North cannot be ruled out as it had active trade and people movement with China before closing its border last January.


The congress, the country’s eighth and the second under Kim, was attended by 4,750 delegates and 2,000 spectators, Kim said.

In KCNA images, no one was seen wearing masks and participants did not sit apart, unlike at some other recent public events.

Kim was accompanied by top aides, including his sister and senior party official Kim Yo Jong, nominal head of state Choe Ryong Hae and Premier Kim Tok Hun.

The meeting will last some days, during which Kim is also expected to announce leadership changes - potentially involving his sister - and discuss other organisational, budget and audit issues.

Reporting by Hyonhee Shin; editing by Rosalba O’Brien and Richard Pullin
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
North Korea's Kim says economic plan failed as rare party congress begins
By Hyonhee Shin
3 Min Read

SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said his five-year economic plan had failed to meet its goals “on almost every sector” as he kicked off the ruling Workers’ Party congress on Tuesday, state media KCNA reported on Wednesday.


Slideshow ( 5 images )
The rare political gathering, which Kim last hosted in 2016, has drawn international attention as he is expected to unveil a new five-year economic plan and address foreign policy, just two weeks before U.S. President-elect Joe Biden takes office.

In his opening speech, Kim said the country had achieved a “miraculous victory” by bolstering its power and global prestige since the last meeting, referring to military advances that culminated in successful tests in 2017 of intercontinental ballistic missiles capable of striking the U.S. mainland.

But the five-year economic strategy he set forth in 2016 had failed to deliver, he said, calling for a boost in North Korea’s self-reliance to tackle internal and outside challenges hindering its progress.

“The strategy was due last year but it tremendously fell short of goals on almost every sector,” Kim said, according to KCNA.


On the global pandemic, Kim lauded party workers for ensuring “stable situations against the coronavirus from beginning to end.”

They had “resolutely overcome difficulties in the face of an unprecedentedly prolonged, unparalleled global health crisis,” he added.

North Korea has not officially confirmed any coronavirus cases, although it reported thousands of “suspected cases” to the World Health Organization.

South Korean authorities have said an outbreak in the North cannot be ruled out as it had active trade and people movement with China before closing its border last January.


The congress, the country’s eighth and the second under Kim, was attended by 4,750 delegates and 2,000 spectators, Kim said.

In KCNA images, no one was seen wearing masks and participants did not sit apart, unlike at some other recent public events.

Kim was accompanied by top aides, including his sister and senior party official Kim Yo Jong, nominal head of state Choe Ryong Hae and Premier Kim Tok Hun.

The meeting will last some days, during which Kim is also expected to announce leadership changes - potentially involving his sister - and discuss other organisational, budget and audit issues.

Reporting by Hyonhee Shin; editing by Rosalba O’Brien and Richard Pullin
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Uh oh....
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
China Makes It Harder For US Spy Satellites To Spot Hypersonic Missiles

BY TYLER DURDEN
ZERO HEDGE
WEDNESDAY, JAN 06, 2021 - 22:30

China's transporter erector launcher (TEL), which carries and fires DF-17 hypersonic missiles, has received a stealth camouflaged cover that makes it more challenging for the US and allies to identify via reconnaissance satellites, according to state-run newspaper Global Times.

TEL is a ground-based vehicle with an integrated prime mover (tractor unit) that can carry and elevate a DF-17 into a firing position.

The upgraded TEL was spotted in a video celebrating the founding of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) Rocket Force last week and was published initially on the Chinese website 81.cn.

According to the video, the camouflaged missile transporter has a hypersonic missile encased inside a shell as it traverses desert terrain.


Shanghai-based news website eastday.com said the TEL is an upgraded version specifically for hauling DF-17s.

The PLA debuted the DF-17 during a military parade in late 2019. At the time, the TEL hauling the DF-17 had no cover and the entire missile was exposed.



Camouflaged missile transporters come as DF-17s are being fielded at military installations in Southeast China.
The missiles have already been deployed in the Fujian and Zhejiang provinces, which are in striking range of Taiwan.



Beijing's increased militarization of its southeast coast is very suggestive of preparations for an invasion.

China Makes It Harder For US Spy Satellites To Spot Hypersonic Missiles | ZeroHedge
 
Taiwan is one of the the world's premiere chip fab production centers, and other precision high-tech production and manufacturing.

South Korea is another.

U.S. used to have such manufacturing capabilities - decades ago.

Without Taiwan and South Korea, the world's high-tech gadget appetites would be curtailed to a trickle, for at least a decade or more, while such precision manufacturing is re-shored onto CONUS, Germany and perhaps another. Where the capital would come from, to pay for such re-shoring, is unknown.

China seizes Taiwan and controls their high-tech manufacturing, and the western world will feel the crunch. Then, if China decides to become even more jiggy, South Korea could find themselves embroiled in one situation or another, slowing? stopping? their high-tech production powerhouse.

Interesting.


intothegoodnight
 
Last edited:

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Taiwan is one of the the world's premiere chip fab production centers, and other precision high-tech production and manufacturing.

South Korea is another.

U.S. used to have such manufacturing capabilities - decades ago.

Without Taiwan and South Korea, the world's high-tech gadget appetites would be curtailed to a trickle, for at least a decade or more, while such precision manufacturing is re-shored onto CONUS, Germany and perhaps another. Where the capital would come from, to pay for such re-shoring, is unknown.

China seizes Taiwan and controls their high-tech manufacturing, and the western world will feel the crunch. Then, if China decides to become even more jiggy, South Korea could find themselves embroiled in one situation or another, slowing? stopping? their high-tech production powerhouse.

Interesting.


intothegoodnight

If that ball starts rolling it is likely to bounce in directions not envisioned very quickly....
 

jward

passin' thru




Reuters
@Reuters

6m

China draws comparison between storming of U.S. Capitol, HK protests http://reut.rs/2L1wPhP
BEIJING (Reuters) - China drew a comparison on Thursday between the storming of the U.S. Capitol by supporters of President Donald Trump and last year’s often-violent pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong, but noted that no one had died when demonstrators took over the legislature of the China-ruled city.


Slideshow ( 3 images )
Clips of the chaotic scenes from Washington aired repeatedly on Chinese state television.

Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told a daily briefing said that while events in Hong Kong in 2019, when the city’s legislature was stormed, were more “severe” than those in Washington, “not one demonstrator died”.

Relations between Beijing and Washington are at their worst in decades over a range of disputes, including China’s heavy clampdown on Hong Kong, and Chinese diplomats and state media often draw attention to news of violence or chaos in the United States.

Months of anti-government protests in Hong Kong in 2019 included the July 1 storming of the city’s legislature, in a campaign for democratic reforms that Beijing ultimately quashed with new national security legislation. One man died after falling from a parking lot during one protest in the city.


Police in Washington said four people died and 52 were arrested after Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday in an attempt to stop Congress from certifying President-elect Joe Biden’s election victory.

“We also wish that U.S. people can enjoy peace, stability and security as soon as possible,” Hua said.

Hua also condemned U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s comments in which he said Washington may sanction those involved in the arrest of over 50 people in Hong Kong and will send the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations to visit Taiwan.

A comment with thousands of favourable votes on China’s Twitter-like Weibo said the Washington protests were “over 90%” the same as those in Hong Kong. European leaders were showing “double standards” in condemning one but not the other, it said.


“The response and words used by some in the U.S. to what happened in Hong Kong in 2019 were completely different to what they used for today’s ongoing events in the U.S.,” Hua said.

Around the world, leaders expressed shock and concern, condemning the attempted subversion of democracy.

“What happened today in Washington DC is not American, definitely,” French President Emmanuel Macron said in a video message on Twitter.

Russia’s deputy U.N. Ambassador Dmitry Polyanskiy likened the images to protests in Ukraine that toppled Russian-backed President of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovich in 2014.

“Some of my friends ask whether someone will distribute crackers to the protesters to echo the Victoria Nuland stunt,” he tweeted, citing a 2013 visit to Ukraine when then-U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland offered food to protesters.
 

jward

passin' thru
A Glimpse Of China's Mysterious Stealth Bomber Shown In Video
Tyler Durden's Photo

by Tyler Durden
Thursday, Jan 07, 2021 - 22:25
The evolution of the pandemic and economic crash and President Trump's' push for deglobalization by slapping China with tariffs resulting in the fracturing of supply chains have heightened tensions between Washington and Beijing.
In response to soaring tensions, China has rapidly modernized its forces with stealth fighters and hypersonic weapons.
Late last year, China was expected to unveil the Xian H-20 supersonic stealth bomber, effectively doubling its country's striking range.
However, that didn't happen, but this week, the People's Liberation Army (PLA) Air Force gave the first glimpse of the stealth bomber's design in the service's 2021 recruitment video released on Tuesday, according to Global Times.
"In the closing minute of the video, an unknown aircraft rendered in computer-generated imagery enters the stage. It is covered in a white blanket and only the front outline can be seen, which suggests that the aircraft boasts a flying wing design with two intakes on the back of the plane. It has no visible tail wings and no winglets on the tips of the wings," Global Times said.
Mysterious Stealth Bomber (clip from video)

The only view of the mysterious plane, likely the H-20, without a cover, is the aircraft's view from a reflection on the googles of a pilot's helmet.
Mysterious Stealth Bomber In Reflection Of Pilot's Googles (clip from video)

Wei Dongxu, a Beijing-based military analyst, told the Global Times that the newly released video featuring an aircraft similar to US' Northrop Grumman B-2 Spirit suggests the plane is likely the H-20.
"This could mean that China has achieved a generation-leaping development in bomber planes and become in possession of a world-class strategic stealth bomber," Dongxu said.
With a range of 5,300 miles and internal weapon bays, which could carry hypersonic missiles, the H-20 would likely have striking capabilities to hit many US bases in the Pacific Ocean.
Courtesy of BofA is a map of US military bases and presence in the Pacific Ocean and, specifically, in proximity to China.

Now it's only a matter of time before China releases the H-20 at some future airshow to show the world its next-generation bomber as Beijing could become the world's top superpower by the end of the decade.
posted for fair use
 

jward

passin' thru
Global: MilitaryInfo
@Global_Mil_Info

4m

Big news? Yes. North Korea has kept nuclear and long-range missile plans "quiet" since 2018. Hinting at a possible return of a variety of missile (SRBM, IRBM, SLBM, ICBM) test(s) and nuclear test(s) in 2021, despite COVID-19 & sanctions. Tensions will increase once they occur.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Global: MilitaryInfo
@Global_Mil_Info

4m

Big news? Yes. North Korea has kept nuclear and long-range missile plans "quiet" since 2018. Hinting at a possible return of a variety of missile (SRBM, IRBM, SLBM, ICBM) test(s) and nuclear test(s) in 2021, despite COVID-19 & sanctions. Tensions will increase once they occur.

I still say we'll be seeing a high altitude nuke test or mid Pacific combo ICBM/nuke test at some point from them....
 

jward

passin' thru
NK NEWS
@nknewsorg


BREAKING: “The current state of North-South relations has returned to the period before the announcement of the Panmunjom Declaration, and the dream of reunification has become even more distant,” said North Korea
 

jward

passin' thru
bits of Ankit's initial analysis


Ankit Panda
@nktpnd

18m

Will likely add to this tomorrow, but here are some preliminary thoughts/impressions on the nuclear/military aspects of the 4th day report at North Korea’s 8th Party Congress.

Significant: "...national defense scientific research has ... finished the research into development of warheads of different combat missions including the supersonic gliding flight warheads for new type ballistic rockets and is making preparations for their test and production"
_________________________
Incredibly fascinating: for the first time, Kim reveals that North Korea was conducting work into naval nuclear propulsion from submarines (something I revealed in my book). Also implies that the July 2018 submarine (Romeo mod) not be an SSB.
1610168662939.png

___________________________________
On the new 11-axle ICBM, which remains unnamed here (but analysts have taken to calling it the "Hwasong-16"). Implies that the large payload fairing may be intended for a "more powerful warhead," but MIRVs appear elsewhere (above).
1610169095109.png
 

jward

passin' thru
Indo-Pacific News - Watching the CCP-China Threat
@IndoPac_Info

2m

#China’s New Rules Could Hit #US Firms and Send a Message to Biden An order issued on Saturday empowers #Beijing to tell companies to ignore U.S. restrictions and allows them to sue other businesses if they comply.
2) China fired back at the Trump administration on Saturday with new rules that would punish global companies for complying with Washington’s tightening restrictions on doing business with Chinese companies.
View: https://twitter.com/IndoPac_Info/status/1347963418607685633?s=20
 
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