broadsword
Brigadier
Ummm, ok I did wonder how many they would be able to field given their few nukes. Guess I’m a sucker.
Count me in. LOL.
Ummm, ok I did wonder how many they would be able to field given their few nukes. Guess I’m a sucker.
战恐局You do know that Victor Gao is being sarcastic with that reply to a journalist, right? Right?
No, he was being deadly serious. I just saw that clip in the last couple of days.You do know that Victor Gao is being sarcastic with that reply to a journalist, right? Right?
Ummm, ok I did wonder how many they would be able to field given their few nukes. Guess I’m a sucker.
Yes he was for a long time, and also a high-level negotiator for the Chinese government, with extensive networks across the western elites.I read that Victor Gao used to be a translator for Deng Xiaoping in his younger days?
61 RVs!!!!!! Holy fuck. Think of the number of decoys it could carry! So the 3000 White Balloons of Xi are real?Yes he was for a long time, and also a high-level negotiator for the Chinese government, with extensive networks across the western elites.
At this point, anyone who thinks it’s absurd or hilarious that he [clearly] operates under some form of official sanction, in addition to being a long-serving Party member in good standing, is quite frankly an idiot.
Edit: adding the snippet below, because I’m still quite shocked that people think it’s absurd that while he’s clearly not a military expert, he receives official briefs on things to say and things he can’t say.
“From 1983 to 1988, Gao was a translator for Deng Xiaoping. He was also a member of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs from 1983 to 1989 at the United Nations Secretariat in New York.
After leaving the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1988, Gao was recommended by Henry Kissinger to study at Yale University, where he earned a Juris Doctor degree from Yale Law School in 1993. Then he was a policy adviser for the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission from 1999 to 2000.
Gao has been an investment banker for Morgan Stanley. He is a director of the China National Association of International Studies and an executive director of Beijing Private Equity Association. Gao is the vice president of the Center for China and Globalization.
According to Foreign Policy, "Gao was once treated as a reputable interlocutor in U.S.–China relations."”
No, he was being deadly serious. I just saw that clip in the last couple of days.