Call Me Stormy

Finding righteous currents in turbulent times

Archive for the tag “South China Sea”

They’re In Your Car?

Chris Chappell reports that the U.S. Department of Commerce is set to ban Chinese and Russian software and hardware in vehicles due to national security concerns.

Chappell said the Bureau of Industry and Security found during the rulemaking process that cars with Chinese and Russian technology, especially cars with external activity or autonomous driving capabilities, present an undue and acceptable risk to the U.S. He explains further, plus also discusses how the U.S. and Canada have united in the South China Sea and ponders whether China will sell TikTok to Elon Musk.

China Has Gone Too Far!

China’s continued aggression in the East China Sea and the South China Sea may have gone too far. And much to the CCP’s surprise, countries are fighting back!

Chris Chappell reports that the China Coast Guard launched its craziest attack yet against the Filipino military, using knives and axes to puncture rubber boats in an effort to intimidate the sailors. He says the arrogance of the CCP was in full display, since the attack came on the heels of Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.’s pronouncement that if any Filipino were killed by such an attack it would be very close to an act of war. Chappell explains further.

Phillippines Has Had Enough!

China has been fishing in the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone for years and it’s been building up islands that the Philippines claims belong to it.

Chris Chappelle reports that when the Philippines tries to defend its territory, China will often fight back, creating dangerous confrontations in the South China Sea. The Philippines has had enough and is now preparing to take on China militarily. In this episode of China Uncensored, Chappelle looks at the Philippines’ military spending plan, how it’s leaning on friendly countries to arm itself and a new class of weapon that could give them the edge.

No Shots Fired

Chris Chappell reports that China has been acting like a big bully to its neighbors in the South China Sea for decades. And it can get away with that because no one’s standing up to it.

Because of their bully status in the region and the reluctance of anyone to take a stand against them, China now has its eyes on taking the South China Sea without a shot being fired. Chappell reports further, including a look at ASEAN, the body best able to challenge China, the progress it’s made militarily and why Laos’ chairmanship could undo all that effort.

Philippines Feels China’s Wrath

For the second time in two days earlier this week, the China Coast Guard has gone on the offensive against Filipino ships for allegedly violating maritime law in the South China Sea.

The Coast Guard accosted the alleged incursion by the Philippines, blasting its boats with water cannons, disabling communication and navigation systems. The day before, another Filipino ship was severely disabled and had to be towed to shore. The Filipino boats were on a resupply mission to the outpost on the Second Thomas Shoal.

Chris Chappell explains further, plus also discusses how China was caught red-handed exporting products made with prison slave labor.

Coronavirus A 20-Year Project

Investigative journalist George Webb tells the Shaun Attwood podcast that the coronavirus and the advent of Covid-19 that swept the planet is a 20-year project.

Webb says the project is deeply tied to two major events in history–the Nazis’ sinister program during and after World War II (Operation Paperclip) and the retrieval of intel from Russian scientists after the fall of the Soviet Union. He has the details, plus offers his take on the machinations of the Biden Crime Family, China’s effort to control the shipping lanes and oil and gas reserves in the South China sea, plus more.

More Power For Xi Jinping

As if Xi Jinping was not already classified a certifiable crazy man, the China Communist Party leader took it up a notch when he awarded himself more war powers and increased control over the Chinese military, courtesy of the revised National Defense Law that went into effect Jan. 1. And, Xi says, he’s using the revision to protect CCP’s development interests ad the country’s economy.

What exactly does that mean? More trouble for the South China Sea, Taiwan and any Biden-China dealings that may arise. The policy shift weakens the role of the State Council in formulating military decisions, handing the newfound power to the Central Military Commission, run by–you guessed it–Xi Jinping. Here’s more from China Uncensored.

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China Missiles Hit Target Ship

China may have successfully sunk a target ship during a missile launch in the South China Sea. If the reports of the incident are true, the U.S. military may be changing its operational calculations.

Last August, China launched a barrage of medium-range missiles into the South China Sea in retaliation for a U.S. Naval spy plane that flew over a China Naval drill just days before. It was originally thought that the missiles hit water, but according to a People’s Liberation Army insider in China, the missiles may actually have hit a target ship. If that’s true, it’s the first time China has demonstrated that its anti-ship missiles can hit their target. Of course, the mysterious report has a lot of holes in it. We still don’t know how many missiles were fired, whether the ship was moving or how fast and whether we can believe the PLA source who said this happened.

China Uncensored’s Chris Chappell fleshes out the details, plus discusses how President Trump wants to ban investment in companies linked to the Chinese military, the Great Reset if Joe Biden is declared the winner and the return of Henry Kissinger, who wants our country to cooperate with China.

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Is WWIII Imminent?

Is WW3 Nearing? President Donald Trump recently ordered the US Navy to destroy any and all Iranian gunboats that harass our Naval vessels, warships have been deployed near Venezuela, Russian jets are intercepting US jets, and now the US has deployed warships to the South China Sea. Dramatic escalations around the world could signify a coming world war. Or perhaps it’s international conflict as usual.

It’s possible that as we lose focus on the Democratic and Republican election fight due to the international crisis we start to hyper-focus on these international tensions instead. But it could also be that the crisis is causing desperation. Could this lead to World War Three?

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Mattis on Pentagon Audit

In his first televised interview in almost a year, Secretary of Defense James N. Mattis sits down with Peter Robinson to discuss a wide range of issues facing the United States Armed Forces at home and across the globe. Earlier this year, Secretary Mattis published the National Defense Strategy, the first such document in a decade. Secretary Mattis describes why the document is an important blueprint for the Armed Forces and what he hopes to accomplish by publishing it.

After a moving story about a captured Iraqi suicide bomber, Secretary Mattis describes the complicated nature of our relationship with China and the possible flash points in the South China Sea. A discussion follows about Europe and how political controversies with Russia affect our military relationship and why Secretary Mattis believes NATO is not a threat to them.

Moving on to the Middle East, Secretary Mattis defines our mission in Syria, comments on the use of chemical weapons, and explains why that theater is the most complex security conundrum he’s seen in his forty-year career. He says that the refugees coming out of Syria are more traumatized than refugees he’s seen anywhere else in the world. He discusses the need to work with the international community on the refugee crisis as, “It is a tragedy much worse than anything BBC or CNN can show.”

In the Far East, Mattis describes how a coordinated effort across different departments of the U.S. federal government and allied countries have achieved a dialogue that may lead to the denuclearization of North Korea. Secretary Mattis also makes the case that the Iranian regime and the Iranian people are different constituencies with different priorities and agendas. He relates how he is reforming the Pentagon’s provisioning and spending policies and why it’s important for the military (the seventeenth largest economy in the world) to be a responsible steward of the nation’s tax dollars. More from the Hoover Institution.

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