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    Viskas gerai su tuo balionu. Skrido jis lėtai ir Pentagonas buvo užsimaskavęs ką reikia. Leidimas numušti jau buvo duotas trečiadienį ir patys kariškiai rinkosi kada. Vienas dalykas saugumas. Iš tokio aukščio krentantis objektas gali nukristi bet kur maždaug 10 km spinduliu. Pati prikabinėta įranga buvo maždaug Boeing737 dydžio. Bet dar svarbiau, kad krentant į vandenį didesnė tikimybė, kad kai kurie įrangos fragmentai išliks veikiantys. Ir tokios įrangos perėmimas yra daug svarbesnis dalykas.

    Va kas dar įdomu. Kodėl kinai ėmėsi tokios provokacijos prieš pat Blinkeno vizitą. Panašu, kad Xi nevisai valdo situaciją. Eina šnekos, kad ten vyksta kovos tarp "ekonomistų" ir "generolų". "Ekonomistai" už artimesnius santykius su vakarais , "generolai" už konfrontacinę politiką ir draugystę su kacapynu. Ekonomistai paskutinius mėnesius ėmė viršų, bet čia gali būti generolų demaršas ir badymas vėl išlįsti į lyderiaujančias pozicijas.

    Comment


      Chinese Ports Full of Empty Containers; Foreign Investors Accelerating Withdrawal
      YouTube · China Observer
      https://youtu.be/EUy5iRv7ilY
      Kinijjoje stoja ekonomika dėl JAV "ekonomikų atskyrimo politikos" ir draugas Si užjudėjo, sklinda gandai, kad jau kovo 21 lankysis Maskvoje, IMHO paslėpta arba nelabai žinutė JAV: "stabdom su tom sankcijom (atskyrimais) arba mes rusams ginklus duosim"

      Comment


        Parašė Dundorfas Rodyti pranešimą
        Chinese Ports Full of Empty Containers; Foreign Investors Accelerating Withdrawal
        YouTube · China Observer
        https://youtu.be/EUy5iRv7ilY
        Dedant neaiškios kilmės šaltinius visada verta pasitikrinti, ką jie atstovauja ir kam priklauso

        Kanzhongguo (Chinese: 看中國), also known as Vision Times, is a Falun Gong-affiliated Chinese language weekly newspaper.[1] It was founded in 2001 as a website, www.secretchina.com. In 2006, it began publishing weekly print versions in major U.S. cities and Australia (as Vision China Times) where large Chinese communities exist. In 2007, print versions were launched in Europe.[2]

        Vision Times operates multiple YouTube channels, including China Observer, China Insights and Vision Times Post.
        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kanzhongguo

        Comment


          Parašė John Rodyti pranešimą

          Dedant neaiškios kilmės šaltinius visada verta pasitikrinti, ką jie atstovauja ir kam priklauso


          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kanzhongguo
          Tai galiu tau 10 linkų apie dabartines Kinijos ekonomines bėdas:

          https://www.rfa.org/english/news/chi...023144718.html

          https://www.scmp.com/economy/china-e...orders-dwindle

          Net oficiozas pripažysta issue, tik sako nieko čia baisaus, aišku geriau oficialia linija kinietiška tikėti, jie niekad nemeluoja.
          https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202303/1286454.shtml

          Ir šiap ma tas paveiksliukas, kai žiūri John i savo xatos likučius, kur matosi raketos likučiai su smulkiu užrašu "Made in China".

          Comment


            Parašė Dundorfas Rodyti pranešimą

            Tai galiu tau 10 linkų apie dabartines Kinijos ekonomines bėdas:

            https://www.rfa.org/english/news/chi...023144718.html

            https://www.scmp.com/economy/china-e...orders-dwindle

            Net oficiozas pripažysta issue, tik sako nieko čia baisaus, aišku geriau oficialia linija kinietiška tikėti, jie niekad nemeluoja.
            https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202303/1286454.shtml

            Ir šiap ma tas paveiksliukas, kai žiūri John i savo xatos likučius, kur matosi raketos likučiai su smulkiu užrašu "Made in China".
            Nu va, gali ir normalesnių šaltinių įdėti, kai kas nors primina uodegą. Pasistenk taip ir toliau
            O šiaip siūlyčiau turėti Caixin prenumeratą ir ten rasi viską, ką reikia žinoti apie Kinijos ekonomiką.

            Comment


              ES formalizavo ir patvirtino mechanizmus, skirtus kovai prieš trečiųjų šalių (ehm.. ehm.. t.y.Kinijos) inicijuojamas ekonomines spaudimo priemones.
              https://www.reuters.com/world/europe...on-2023-03-28/

              BRUSSELS, March 28 (Reuters) - The European Union has agreed to allow retaliation against countries that put undue economic pressure on EU members to change their policies, such as the trade restrictions the bloc says China has imposed on Lithuania.
              Representatives of the European Parliament and the Council, the grouping of EU countries, reached a provisional deal on the anti-coercion instrument (ACI) early on Tuesday.


              Under the ACI, EU governments would vote on whether a third country's economic measure amounted to coercion.
              If dialogue failed, the bloc could impose restrictions, such as higher import tariffs or limited access to EU public tenders. The entire process would take up to one year, although the threat of retaliation is designed to serve as a deterrent.
              "Sometimes it's necessary to put a gun on the table, even knowing that is not used day-by-day. This instrument is a last resort," Lange said.
              The legislation should take effect in the second half of 2023 and is envisaged more to apply to new instances of economic coercion, rather than existing cases.
              Kinų politbiuro spauda iš karto suregavo labai jautriai.

              https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202303/1288220.shtml

              While some Western media outlets and European politicians have gone to great lengths to elevate Lithuania's political provocations over the Taiwan question into the EU's economic and trade sphere, the fact about who is the culprit for intensified tensions between China and Lithuania is crystal clear and there is no room for any change of concept.

              It is Lithuania that has breached the one-China principle by allowing the establishment of a "representative office" under the name of "Taiwanese" in Vilnius. This has clearly constituted a political trampling on China's core interests and grossly interfered in China's internal affairs. Supporting the secessionist forces on the island of Taiwan is a serious political provocation that cannot be confused with economic and trade issues.

              Moreover, Lithuania has no position and no right to use its own mistakes to hijack the EU's China policy. Lithuania's deliberate provocations against Beijing on the Taiwan question are also a sabotage of the joint foreign policy and solidarity of the EU, which respects the one-China principle. The EU should punish such rule-breaker, instead of protecting it. Otherwise it will set a bad precedent. Tolerance of such practice could sow the seeds of policy division and chaos in the bloc.

              If the EU not only turns a blind eye on Lithuania's provocations against China, but also helps the Baltic nation to push back against China, it would cause serious consequences for China-EU relations.
              How can anyone ask China and Chinese companies to maintain and develop normal trade relations with Lithuania after the latter trampled on China's bottom line and challenged its sovereignty?

              Dėve dėve, juokinga kaip užtrigerinome kinų komunistus.. Vien tik provocations, sabotage, ir seriuos consecuences...
              If a lion could speak, we could not understand him.

              Comment


                Parašė John Rodyti pranešimą

                Nu va, gali ir normalesnių šaltinių įdėti, kai kas nors primina uodegą. Pasistenk taip ir toliau
                O šiaip siūlyčiau turėti Caixin prenumeratą ir ten rasi viską, ką reikia žinoti apie Kinijos ekonomiką.
                Instrukcijos aiškios. O ką daryti kitur radus ko nereikėtų žinoti?

                Comment


                  Parašė mantasm Rodyti pranešimą

                  Instrukcijos aiškios. O ką daryti kitur radus ko nereikėtų žinoti?
                  Visur kitur yra melas ir neteisybė. Partija nurodo kas yra patikimos žinios.

                  Bet šiaip juokinga kad komunistai savo propagandinį partijos laikraštuką pakišo po paywall'u.
                  If a lion could speak, we could not understand him.

                  Comment


                    Parašė mantasm Rodyti pranešimą

                    Instrukcijos aiškios. O ką daryti kitur radus ko nereikėtų žinoti?
                    Kreiptis į mane. Aš, pasikonsultavęs su Vinipuhu, approvinsiu arba atmesiu šaltinių patikimumą.

                    Comment



                      Žiniasklaida: Xi Jinpingas pareiškė, kad ruošiasi karui
                      https://www.delfi.lt/news/daily/worl....d?id=92945607

                      Comment


                        Skambi antraštė, Varlamovo telegrame:
                        Забавно, конечно, как работают СМИ.

                        В начале марта в Китае была ежегодная сессия парламента. Там звучали разные важные речи и интересные предложения (https://t.me/chinaposter/2276).

                        С момента закрытия сессии парламента прошло уже более двух недель, и тут американский журнал пишет (https://www.foreignaffairs.com/unite...ng-china-war): «Си заявил, что Китай готовится к войне»! Статья написана как обычный вброс, потому что китайцы всегда говорят что-то типа «мы вообще за мир, но если что, надо быть готовыми к войне».

                        То есть 1) информационного повода нет, и 2) две недели уже прошло. Но вот взяли и опубликовали.

                        И сразу все такие: ⚡️⚡️⚡️ СИ ПРАКТИЧЕСКИ ОБЪЯВИЛ ВОЙНУ ТАЙВАНЮ ⚡️⚡️⚡️

                        Comment


                          Parašė digital Rodyti pranešimą
                          Skambi antraštė, Varlamovo telegrame:
                          Na bet pats minėjai ne kartą, kad konkrečiai Varlamovas ir šiap generikai "varlamovai" yra angažuoti, gaunasi foreignaffairs.com vs Varlamovas. hm.

                          Aišku yra pas kiniečius to ne vienareišmiškumo, taikos planas dėl karo Ukrainoje:
                          https://www.fmprc.gov.cn/mfa_eng/zxx..._11030713.html

                          1. Respecting the sovereignty of all countries. <- Laimi Ukraina valio mes gi sakėme, kad mes už visų šalių suverenumą
                          2. Abandoning the Cold War mentality. The security of a country should not be pursued at the expense of others. The security of a region should not be achieved by strengthening or expanding military blocs. <- Laimi Rusija, valio mes gi sakėme, kad NATO blokai negali plėstis.

                          Bet anyway IMHO, draugas Si turi didelių planų, namie reikalai šiap sau eina ir eis ir jam reikės kažkokios spec. operacijos, ty daug šansų.
                          O dabar kažkur skaičiau, kad SI turi kažką parodyti, nes Kinijoje gi ten elituose visi suka SUN TZU makiavelines varkes, kitaip nepakiltų, o imperatorius turi būti pats gudriausias visus apstatyti, kitaip draugai nesupras. Vat pradžiai tyliai sėdėjo metus, žvalgėsi ir dabar jau nebegali sėdėti turi rodyti saviems (ir kiba pasauliui), kad jis ten tas pats sukčiausiais.
                          Paskutinis taisė Dundorfas; 2023.03.30, 17:49.

                          Comment


                            Varlamovas dirba Putinui ir yra FSB šnipas ir propagandistas, tai jo klausyti nereiktų

                            Comment


                              Įdomiai čia varlamovas užsitrigerino. Dvi savaitės ir daugiau praėjo. Šiaip Foreign Affairs save pozicionuoja kaip bimonthly magazine, jų spausdinta versija taip ir eina. Internetinėje versijoje platinama operatyviau, bet ta medžiaga iš esmės ir eina į spausdintinę versiją. Užsitrigerino, kad bimonthly leidinys praėjus dviem savaitėm po įvykio išspaudino

                              Comment


                                Tai skaitykit ką pasakė, o ne kas pasakė. Labai lengva patikrinti/palyginti su senom Xi kalbom - ar čia buvo kažkas naujo?

                                Comment


                                  Apie Kinijos pasiruošimą karui skalambija iš visų pusių. Tik rusijos pralaimėjimas gali sustabdyti xi planus.

                                  -

                                  Comment


                                    Parašė gerietis Rodyti pranešimą
                                    Apie Kinijos pasiruošimą karui skalambija iš visų pusių. Tik rusijos pralaimėjimas gali sustabdyti xi planus.

                                    Kas dar skalambija apart visokių rusų "ekspertų", ar yra kokių nors įrodymų apie tą pasiruošimą?

                                    ​​​​​​
                                    Flickr

                                    Comment


                                      Čia šiek tiek labiau realistiškas vaizdas, kokioje situacijoje yra EU ir Kinijos santykiai ir kas šiuo metu yra svarbu Lietuvai, as opposed to neaišku iš kur atsiradusių ir neaišku kam įdomių Rusijos pseudoekspertų pezalai

                                      Comment


                                        Nesu tikras ar apie šitą Foreign Afairs straipsnį buvo kalbėta, bet vertas dėmesio

                                        https://www.foreignaffairs.com/unite...ring-china-war

                                        Chinese leader Xi Jinping says he is preparing for war. At the annual meeting of China’s parliament and its top political advisory body in March, Xi wove the theme of war readiness through four separate speeches, in one instance telling his generals to “dare to fight.” His government also announced a 7.2 percent increase in China’s defense budget, which has doubled over the last decade, as well as plans to make the country less dependent on foreign grain imports. And in recent months, Beijing has unveiled new military readiness laws, new air-raid shelters in cities across the strait from Taiwan, and new “National Defense Mobilization” offices countrywide.

                                        It is too early to say for certain what these developments mean. Conflict is not certain or imminent. But something has changed in Beijing that policymakers and business leaders worldwide cannot afford to ignore. If Xi says he is readying for war, it would be foolish not to take him at his word.


                                        WEEPING GHOSTS, QUAKING ENEMIES

                                        The first sign that this year’s meetings of the National People’s Congress and the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference—known as the “two-sessions” because both bodies meet simultaneously—might not be business as usual came on March 1, when the top theoretical journal of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) published an essay titled “Under the Guidance of Xi Jinping Thought on Strengthening the Army, We Will Advance Victoriously.” The essay appeared under the name “Jun Zheng”—a homonym for “military government” that possibly refers to China’s top military body, the Central Military Commission—and argued that “the modernization of national defense and the military must be accelerated.” It also called for an intensification of Military-Civil Fusion, Xi’s policy requiring private companies and civilian institutions to serve China’s military modernization effort. And riffing off a speech that Xi made to Chinse military leaders in October 2022, it made lightly veiled jabs at the United States:


                                        In the face of wars that may be imposed on us, we must speak to enemies in a language they understand and use victory to win peace and respect. In the new era, the People’s Army insists on using force to stop fighting. . . . Our army is famous for being good at fighting and having a strong fighting spirit. With millet and rifles, it defeated the Kuomintang army equipped with American equipment. It defeated the world’s number one enemy armed to the teeth on the Korean battlefield, and performed mighty and majestic battle dramas that shocked the world and caused ghosts and gods to weep.
                                        Even before the essay’s publication, there were indications that Chinese leaders could be planning for a possible conflict. In December, Beijing promulgated a new law that would enable the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) to more easily activate its reserve forces and institutionalize a system for replenishing combat troops in the event of war. Such measures, as the analysts Lyle Goldstein and Nathan Waechter have noted, suggest that Xi may have drawn lessons about military mobilization from Russian President Vladimir Putin’s failures in Ukraine.

                                        The law governing military reservists is not the only legal change that hints at Beijing’s preparations. In February, the top deliberative body of the National People’s Congress adopted the Decision on Adjusting the Application of Certain Provisions of the [Chinese] Criminal Procedure Law to the Military During Wartime, which, according to the state-run People’s Daily, gives the Central Military Commission the power to adjust legal provisions, including “jurisdiction, defense and representation, compulsory measures, case filings, investigation, prosecution, trial, and the implementation of sentences.” Although it is impossible to predict how the decision will be used, it could become a weapon to target individuals who oppose a takeover of Taiwan. The PLA might also use it to claim legal jurisdiction over a potentially occupied territory, such as Taiwan. Or Beijing could use it to compel Chinese citizens to support its decisions during wartime.

                                        Since December, the Chinese government has also opened a slew of National Defense Mobilization offices—or recruitment centers—across the country, including in Beijing, Fujian, Hubei, Hunan, Inner Mongolia, Shandong, Shanghai, Sichuan, Tibet, and Wuhan. At the same time, cities in Fujian Province, across the strait from Taiwan, have begun building or upgrading air-raid shelters and at least one “wartime emergency hospital,” according to Chinese state media. In March, Fujian and several cities in the province began preventing overseas IP addresses from accessing government websites, possibly to impede tracking of China’s preparations for war.


                                        XI’S INNER VLAD

                                        If these developments hint at a shift in Beijing’s thinking, the two-sessions meetings in early March all but confirmed one. Among the proposals discussed by the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference—the advisory body—was a plan to create a blacklist of pro-independence activists and political leaders in Taiwan. Tabled by the popular ultranationalist blogger Zhou Xiaoping, the plan would authorize the assassination of blacklisted individuals—including Taiwan’s vice president, William Lai Ching-te—if they do not reform their ways. Zhou later told the Hong Kong newspaper Ming Pao that his proposal had been accepted by the conference and “relayed to relevant authorities for evaluation and consideration.” Proposals like Zhou’s do not come by accident. In 2014, Xi praised Zhou for the “positive energy” of his jeremiads against Taiwan and the United States.

                                        Also at the two-sessions meetings, outgoing Premier Li Keqiang announced a military budget of 1.55 trillion yuan (roughly $224.8 billion) for 2023, a 7.2 percent increase from last year. Li, too, called for heightened “preparations for war.” Western experts have long believed that China underreports its defense expenditures. In 2021, for instance, Beijing claimed it spent $209 billion on defense, but the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute put the true figure at $293.4 billion. Even the official Chinese figure exceeds the military spending of all the Pacific treaty allies of the United States combined (Australia, Japan, the Philippines, South Korea, and Thailand), and it is a safe bet China is spending substantially more than it says.

                                        But the most telling moments of the two-sessions meetings, perhaps unsurprisingly, involved Xi himself. The Chinese leader gave four speeches in all—one to delegates of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference, two to the National People’s Congress, and one to military and paramilitary leaders. In them, he described a bleak geopolitical landscape, singled out the United States as China’s adversary, exhorted private businesses to serve China’s military and strategic aims, and reiterated that he sees uniting Taiwan and the mainland as vital to the success of his signature policy to achieve “the great rejuvenation of the Chinese ethnos.”

                                        In his first speech on March 6, Xi appeared to be girding China’s industrial base for struggle and conflict. “In the coming period, the risks and challenges we face will only increase and become more severe,” he warned. “Only when all the people think in one place, work hard in one place, help each other in the same boat, unite as one, dare to fight, and be good at fighting, can they continue to win new and greater victories.” To help the CCP achieve these “greater victories,” he vowed to “correctly guide” private businesses to invest in projects that the state has prioritized.

                                        Xi also blasted the United States directly in his speech, breaking his practice of not naming Washington as an adversary except in historical contexts. He described the United States and its allies as leading causes of China’s current problems. “Western countries headed by the United States have implemented containment from all directions, encirclement and suppression against us, which has brought unprecedented severe challenges to our country’s development,” he said. Whereas U.S. President Joe Biden’s administration has emphasized “guardrails” and other means of slowing the deterioration of U.S.-China relations, Beijing is clearly preparing for a new, more confrontational era.

                                        On March 5, Xi gave a second speech laying out a vision of Chinese self-sufficiency that went considerably further than any of his previous discussions of the topic, saying China’s march to modernization is contingent on breaking technological dependence on foreign economies—meaning the United States and other industrialized democracies.Xi also said that he wants China to end its reliance on imports of grain and manufactured goods. “In case we’re short of either, the international market will not protect us,” Xi declared. Li, the outgoing premier, emphasized the same point in his annual government “work report” on the same day, saying Beijing must “unremittingly keep the rice bowls of more than 1.4 billion Chinese people firmly in their own hands.” China currently depends on imports for more than a third of its net food consumption.

                                        In his third speech, on March 8 to representatives from the PLA and the People’s Armed Police, Xi declared that China must focus its innovation efforts on bolstering national defense and establish a network of national reserve forces that could be tapped in wartime. Xi also called for a “National Defense Education” campaign to unite society behind the PLA, invoking as inspiration the Double Support Movement, a 1943 campaign by the Communists to militarize society in their base area of Yan’an.

                                        In his fourth speech (and his first as a third-term president), on March 13, Xi announced that the “essence” of his great rejuvenation campaign was “the unification of the motherland.” Although he has hinted at the connection between absorbing Taiwan and his much-vaunted campaign to, essentially, make China great again, he has rarely if ever done so with such clarity.


                                        TAKING XI SERIOUSLY

                                        One thing that is clear a decade into Xi’s rule is that it is important to take him seriously—something that many U.S. analysts regrettably do not do. When Xi launched a series of aggressive campaigns against corruption, private enterprise, financial institutions, and the property and tech sectors, many analysts predicted that these campaigns would be short-lived. But they endured. The same was true of Xi’s draconian “zero COVID” policy for three years—until he was uncharacteristically forced to reverse course in late 2022.

                                        Xi is now intensifying a decadelong campaign to break key economic and technological dependencies on the U.S.-led democratic world. He is doing so in anticipation of a new phase of ideological and geostrategic “struggle,” as he puts it. His messaging about war preparation and his equating of national rejuvenation with unification mark a new phase in his political warfare campaign to intimidate Taiwan. He is clearly willing to use force to take the island. What remains unclear is whether he thinks he can do so without risking uncontrolled escalation with the United States.
                                        If a lion could speak, we could not understand him.

                                        Comment


                                          Parašė Lettered Rodyti pranešimą

                                          Kas dar skalambija apart visokių rusų "ekspertų", ar yra kokių nors įrodymų apie tą pasiruošimą?

                                          ​​​​​​
                                          pataisymas: ne "rusų "ekspertų"", o ukrainiečių žurnalisto (beje po rusijos sankcijomis).
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