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coolgod

Brigadier
Registered Member
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Dutch foreign ministry: EU will respond to new Chinese export rules​

AMSTERDAM, July 4 (Reuters) - It will be up to the European Union to respond to new rules introduced by China requiring a license to export two metals widely used in semiconductor manufacturing, the Dutch government said on Tuesday.

“To what extent this will have consequences for the European and Dutch economy will depend on how China carries it out,” the statement said. “Given the authority that the European Union has in trade policy, it’s primarily up to the EU to address China about these measures.” (Reporting by Toby Sterling)

The Dutch just learnt a useful lesson from China.

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China: EU who?
 

CMP

Captain
Registered Member
No one is going to just send a tit-for-tat nukes, it does not make any sense. The moment strategic ICBMs start flying, countries will unload their arsenals at adversaries.
Completely agreed. I just had to spell it out like that in ELI5 style because 56860 seems to think that the only thing Russia will do from losing Moscow to nukes is to nuke New York.

Another one!
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I have never seen an intelligent Romain in my life, let alone a LeRoi. All smooth brained NPCs.
 
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tokenanalyst

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
No one is going to just send a tit-for-tat nukes, it does not make any sense. The moment strategic ICBMs start flying, countries will unload their arsenals at adversaries.
The first nukes will probably be silo killers ground burst explosions and most of US silos are in the hearth farmland, if Russians nukes are more salted than expected you will have a lot of radioactive soil dust into air that will contaminate a huge portion of the US. And the same will be for Russia. And that is just the beginning. Then come industrial centers, military command centers, airfields, political center and finally after all of that then will be revenge nuking of cities and populations centers, the final objective will be genocide.
 

xypher

Senior Member
Registered Member
The first nukes will probably be silo killers ground burst explosions and most of US silos are in the hearth farmland, if Russians nukes are more salted than expected you will have a lot of radioactive soil dust into air that will contaminate a huge portion of the US. And the same will be for Russia. And that is just the beginning. Then come industrial centers, military command centers, airfields, political center and finally after all of that then will be revenge nuking of cities and populations centers, the final objective will be genocide.
Yeah, hence the whole stuff about US nuking Russia makes zero sense. They very well might bomb the power plant and blame it on Russians though.
 

GZDRefugee

Senior Member
Registered Member
Another one!
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View attachment 115468
It's beginning to sink in that the Chinese international students dominate here despite the fact that they're not top-of-the-class in China.

I'm always grateful that my family is former faculty at Fudan; lets me touch base with Chinese academics on a regular basis.
 

ACuriousPLAFan

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Those dotted lines (which the Vietnamese authorities claim to represent China's Nine-Dashed Line claim over the South China Sea):
1. Doesn't even have 9 dash, only 8; and
2. Is located somewhere in the Arctic Ocean and north of Siberian Russia, i.e. nowhere near Vietnam.

You're really funny, Hanoi.
Ah yes. After Hanoi, now Manila is planning to become the funny one too!

 

H2O

Junior Member
Registered Member
How does attacking Zaporizhzhia get NATO into the war?

I believe Tony Blair came up with a convenient excuse. Think R2P.


Trading Moscow for New York is worth it when democracy is on the line. No price is too large to pay to uphold the principles of democracy and freedom. As a Chinese, I support this development.

Throw in London, Rome, and Brussels and you have a deal.
 

Strangelove

Colonel
Registered Member
So African nations will have better infrastructure than India, thanks (partly) to India?


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Top Indian diplomat heads to Tanzania as New Delhi races Beijing to woo Africa​

The continent has become the second-largest recipient of credit from India in the past decade

Top Indian diplomat heads to Tanzania as New Delhi races Beijing to woo Africa

Indian Minister of External Affairs S Jaishankar. ©

Indian External Affairs Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar embarked on a four-day official visit to Tanzania on Wednesday, as New Delhi steps up its efforts to build ties in Africa and match China’s influence in the continent.

Jaishankar’s visit will include a trip to Zanzibar, where a water supply project funded by India is being implemented. India’s top diplomat will then co-chair the 10th Joint Commission Meeting with his counterpart in Dar es Salaam, the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) said in a press release.

During the visit, Jaishankar will meet with the members of the Parliamentary Friendship Group for India and inaugurate an India-Tanzania business meeting. He will also be addressing the Indian diaspora and inaugurating a bust of Hindu teacher Swami Vivekananda in Dar es Salaam, the MEA added.

In particular, New Delhi is increasing its efforts in the education sphere, with the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) opening a campus in Zanzibar in October 2023. Named IIT Madras, the facility will be one of three overseas campuses of India’s leading tech school, with the other two being in Abu Dhabi and Kuala Lumpur.

Africa has become the second-largest recipient of credit from India as New Delhi looks to catch up with China in tapping the continent’s potential. Managing director of India’s Export Import Bank, Harsha Bangari, told Bloomberg that 42 African nations have received about $32 billion or 38% of all credit extended by India in the past 10 years – which is just a few percentage points below India’s neighbors.
Describing the bank as an instrument of India’s “economic diplomacy,” Bangari said New Delhi has opened up 195 project-based lines of credit worth about $12 billion across Africa – three times the number it has in its own region in the last decade.

China accounts for 12% of Africa’s $700 billion external debt. Beijing is the continent's largest trading partner and its fourth-biggest source of investment, according to official data. Bilateral trade between Beijing and the continent stood at $282 billion in 2022. In the first five months of this year, China’s total import and export volume with Africa reached $113.5 billion, up by over 16% year-on-year.
Bilateral trade between India and 48 African countries stood at $74.86 billion in 2021-22, witnessing growth of nearly 60% year-on-year, according to data from India’s Ministry of Commerce and Industry. Speaking at an event in New Delhi last month, Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal said India and Africa can go beyond doubling bilateral trade to $200 billion by 2030, considering that the regions have a combined population of 3 billion which is rising steadily.

He also called for a deep study of bilateral trade relations, country by country, that can identify further opportunities for growth.
 
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