Miscellaneous News

Arnies

Junior Member
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This US admin has been by far the worst just watch by the end of before Biden exits office they won't have any allies left in the whole larger Asian continent. All he was doing this entire time was bumping heads with allies over petty things. Example he threatened to sanction Nigeria on the first day he came to office and had war of words with the Nigerian leader that is just super randomly lmao I couldn't even believe it when I saw it Biden and the Nigerian President going back and forth over petty stuff. Do you know over what? LBGT that is crazy right? lmao
 

Arnies

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Xi Focus: Xi calls for building China's strength in science, technology​

Source: Xinhua| 2021-10-26 23:22:49|Editor: huaxia

Chinese President Xi Jinping, also general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, visits an exhibition of China's achievements in scientific and technological innovation during the 13th Five-Year Plan period (2016-2020) in Beijing, capital of China, Oct. 26, 2021. (Xinhua/Xie Huanchi)

BEIJING, Oct. 26 (Xinhua) -- Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee, on Tuesday called on the country's scientific and technological workers to continue striving to build China's strength in science and technology.

Xi, also Chinese president and chairman of the Central Military Commission, made the remarks when visiting an exhibition of China's achievements in scientific and technological innovation during the 13th Five-Year Plan period (2016-2020) in Beijing.

Xi noted that China had made significant scientific and technological advances during the period. As China embarks on a new journey to build a modern socialist country in all respects, scientific and technological innovation will play a vital role in promoting the country's overall development, he said.

Xi called on the scientific and technological workers to develop confidence, seize opportunities, and scale new scientific and technological heights, so as to help accelerate the development of science and technology toward greater self-reliance and self-strengthening.

Xi encouraged them to make greater contributions so that China will be a leading country in science and technology.

The exhibition features more than 1,500 pieces of equipment and models. Among them are the Chang'e-5 lunar probe, the Mars rover, the quantum computer prototype Jiuzhang, and the deep-sea manned submersible Fendouzhe.

Li Keqiang, Li Zhanshu, Wang Yang, Wang Huning, Zhao Leji, and Han Zheng, who are members of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee, and Vice President Wang Qishan also visited the exhibition. Enditem

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NiuBiDaRen

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This article is just a farce and Australian hyberbolic nothing more or less..

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China could invade Taiwan ‘soon,’ says former Australian PM Abbott​

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Oct 29, 07:02 PM

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WASHINGTON ― A former Australian prime minister said Friday he thinks
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could “soon” invade Taiwan or otherwise escalate the situation and that the West should now be planning its military and economic response.

“I think we need to be prepared to think the unthinkable,” former Prime Minister Tony Abbott said at a Wilson Center event here.

“I think it’s highly possible that at some point in time, perhaps quite soon, China might up the ante, either with a blockade of the so-called rebel province ― to teach the Taiwanese that they ... need to make some kind of an accommodation with Beijing ― or perhaps even a full-scale invasion,” he added.

Abbott earlier this month made geopolitical waves when he accused China of being a bully and expressed enthusiastic support for Taiwan while visiting the democratically ruled island.

China, which claims Taiwan as its own territory, has
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of the island by flying fighter jets toward Taiwan ― a trend Abbott said he expects to “get more intense.”

Abbott sees Chinese leader Xi Jinping as emboldened by the West’s mild reaction to China’s takeover of Hong Kong. Unlike Hong Kong, Taiwan would offer military resistance, but it would still need outside backing, he said.

“In the absence of support from others, the Taiwanese might regard it as an unequal and ultimately hopeless struggle. And that’s why I think it’s important for Taiwan’s fellow democracies to provide all the solidarity that we can,” Abbott said.

U.S. President Joe Biden set off alarm bells in Beijing early this month by saying the U.S. has a firm commitment to help Taiwan defend itself in the event of a Chinese attack. Though the White House later played down the remarks, Abbott said he was “encouraged” by Biden’s comments and that there’s more broadly been a “rhetorical escalation” from the West.

Abbott’s appearance came weeks after the unveiling of a U.S.-British deal to supply nuclear-powered submarines to Australia, which supplanted a prior French deal to supply Australia with its own submarines.

On Friday, Abbott reiterated his calls for Australia to take over one or more retiring U.S. Los Angeles-class or U.K. Trafalgar-class submarines soon because the new nuclear-powered subs won’t arrive for years. The nuclear-powered submarines he’s proposing for the interim would augment the Collins-class submarines in Australia’s inventory, he said.

“We need better, bigger, faster more wide-ranging submarines not in two decades time but now,” he said, adding that “the challenges are pressing, the peril is not far off.”

Both the U.K. and France have dispatched carrier groups to the region, and the Royal Navy’s Astute submarine was on a port call to Perth on Friday. Abbott said he hopes the U.K. will send more naval assets and use Singapore’s facilities, as the U.S. Navy does.

“I think it’s very important for Britain and France, which have long had a Pacific presence, to increase that Pacific presence, given that east Asia is probably now the most strategically important part of the world,” he said.

Abbott also called for enhanced
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, saying it could be a “powerful addition” to the Five Eyes intelligence arrangement.

U.S. military officials have called China the “pacing challenge.” On Thursday,
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said the rate at which China’s military is developing capabilities is “stunning,” while U.S. development suffers from “brutal” bureaucracy.

In spite of a Biden administration defense budget that prioritizes technology development, Abbott said “the gap is likely to get wider, not smaller in the years to come.

“Is the U.S. increasing its capabilities at the same rate as China is? I think the short answer is no,” he said.

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Not kidding that face mask that Abbott was wearing is pretty nice
 

windsclouds2030

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Opinion: The State Department gets serious about the global technology race​


Creation of a new State Department office is usually a snooze, even for diplomats. But Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s announcement Wednesday that he’s creating a new Bureau of Cyberspace and Digital Policy is worth noting — because it’s part of a much broader effort by the Biden administration to get serious about the global technology race.

The new bureau will coordinate international cyber and digital policy, working through obscure United Nations organizations and other bodies that regulate technology and set standards for its use. The bureau must be approved by Congress, but Blinken is immediately creating a new “special envoy for critical and emerging technology” who will carry the U.S. agenda into the regulatory trenches.

Meanwhile, Chris Inglis, who as national cyber director is President Biden’s top cyber adviser, is crafting a strategy aimed at making cyberspace a more benign and better protected domain. His idea is that through new technology and better security, cyberspace can again become a zone of enrichment and freedom, rather than of risk and authoritarian control.

Biden is rolling out his tech initiatives piece by piece, but the idea is to create a broad matrix of partnerships that will create and enforce new global norms and standards for digital technology. Officials envision a lattice of different groups: The “Quad,” which partners India, Japan and Australia with the United States; the Trade and Technology Council, which joins the United States with the European Union; and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, which unites the world’s 38 advanced industrial democracies.

These initiatives are China-focused. The aim is to check Chinese President Xi Jinping’s ambition to dominate what he described in 2018 as the “commanding heights” of technology by mobilizing a coordinated response by “the West” (forgive the antiquated term). The danger is that, absent such U.S. diplomatic leadership, Beijing will gradually take control of the digital infrastructure while the technologically advanced democracies are slumbering.

“Tech policy” is the new “trade policy,” so to speak. The Biden administration (like the GOP) unfortunately remains allergic to the Trans-Pacific Partnership, or TPP, ceding that ground to China, which is racing to join the organization that the United States created and then abandoned. Biden’s team is trying to insert its coordinated global tech agenda into the vacuum, in part as an alternative to multilateral trade partnerships like TPP.

Negotiating the new tech framework over the next year will fall largely to the special envoy and colleagues on the National Security Council staff such as Senior Director for Technology Tarun Chhabra, who have been honing the plans for months. Over time, the new Bureau for Cyberspace and Digital Policy will become the locus — coordinating the daily battles in regulatory bodies around the world.

The bureau, in theory, will coordinate with private companies such as Microsoft, which have been leaders in developing global “rules of the road” for cyber in the years when Washington disdained such guardrails, fearing they would limit American dominance. Those days, when the United States could rely on the first-mover advantage of its founding role in creating the Internet are past.

Blinken announced the new bureau Wednesday in a speech describing State’s broader modernization effort. In addition to the increased stress on cyber policy, he said the department will add new resources to deal with global health security after the
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pandemic; climate change; and multilateral diplomacy. All good ideas, but they all need money — for a department that over the decades has been woefully underfunded. Underfunded modernization plans would be a step backward, not forward.

Covering the State Department off and on since the late 1970s, I’ve seen modernization efforts like this come and go. One problem often is that good diplomacy is a forward-leaning and sometimes dangerous business, but Congress oversees the department on a zero-defect philosophy. It’s easy to talk about greater global engagement, but one incident like the 2012 Benghazi attack can generate endless finger-pointing — and put our diplomats back in the bunker.

Blinken addressed the bunker-mentality problem directly Wednesday: “A world of zero risk is not a world in which American diplomacy can deliver. We have to accept risk and manage it smartly.” U.S. diplomacy needs to improve its game, especially after the fiasco of the Afghanistan pullout. Global tech policy is a good place to start.

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Antony Blinken; Chris Inglis (National cyber director); Avril Haines (Director of national intelligence); David S. Cohen (Deputy Director, CIA); Ely Ratner (Assistant secretary of defense for Indo-Pacific security affairs); Lisa Monaco (Deputy attorney general); Jen Psaki (White House press secretary) all belong to the WestExec Advisors, a secretive high-powered Washington consulting firm founded by Antony Blinken and Michèle Flournoy. Michèle Flournoy is also a co-founder of the Center for a New American Security (CNAS), and linked to the Boston Consulting Group (a strategic partner of WestExec) as well as the Booz Allen Hamilton.

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