Thursday, May 22, 2014

China, Your Words Are Meaningless - Put Up or Shut Up

China features in today's news, in two events related to terrorism and rebellion. ~~~~~ Attackers threw bombs from two SUVs as they plowed through shoppers at a busy street market in China's restive northwestern region of Xinjiang on Thursday, killing 31 people and wounding more than 90, according to local officials. Eyewitnesses said the cars drove toward each other, tossing explosives as they went, and then plowed into each other head on, causing further explosions. The attack in the city of Urumqi was the bloodiest in a series of violent incidents over recent months that Chinese authorities have blamed on radical separatists from the country's Moslem Uighur minority. Xinjiang Uighurs are ethnically Turkic Moslems. They make up about 45% of the region's population and 40% are ethnic Han Chinese. China re-established control in Xinjiang in 1949 after crushing a short-lived rebellion in the state of East Turkestan. Since then, China has undertaken large-scale immigration of Han Chinese, and Uighurs fear erosion of their traditional culture. Some Uighurs say their traditions are being crushed - a charge that sounds very much like the Tibetan charge that China is sending Han Chinese as immigrants to Tibet in an effort to destroy Tibetan culture and bring Tibet under control. Uighur activists contend that restrictive and discriminatory policies favoring the ethnic Chinese immigrants are fueling the bloodshed. Experts say that the knowledge that Moslems elsewhere are rising up against their governments also contributes to the insurrection. An air flight from Shanghai to Urumqi was diverted Thursday and landed at Nanjing for security reasons, the official Chinese Xinhua news agency reported. In other related Chinese government action, security measures have been announced for key areas of Beijing. Xinjiang lies in China's far west, bordering Central Asia. China says it is pouring money into the region. In 2009, tensions erupted and riots in Urumqi left 200 people dead. Beijing blames the tension between China and the Uighurs on a series of violent incidents by Uighur separatists, including an attack in Beijing, where a car ploughed into pedestrians in Tiananmen Square, killing five people, and attacks at railway stations in Urumqi and Kunming. Earlier this week, Chinese courts jailed 39 people as part of what the authorities called an operation to curb the spread of audio and video materials inciting terrorism. Those jailed included a 25-year old who had incited hatred in comments made in chat rooms and a father who had preached extremism to his son, the Xinjiang Supreme Court said. ~~~~~ Also today, Russia and China vetoed a UN Security Council resolution that would have referred the Syrian crisis to the International Criminal Court for investigation of possible war crimes. The vetoes prompting angry responses from the proposal's supporters who said Russia and China are blocking justice and should be ashamed. This is the fourth time the two countries have used their veto power as permanent Security Council members to prevent action against the government of President Bashar al-Assad. Sixty-five countries supported the French-drafted resolution that demanded a path to justice in the conflict, which has entered its fourth year, has cost 160,000 lives and has displaced millions of people since it began in March 2011. France circulated the proposal last month after briefing the Security Council on the photographic evidence of systematic mass killings of detainees, some by starvation, provided by the anonymous "Caesar." The draft resolution called for an ICC mandate to investigate crimes against humanity and war crimes committed in Syria. Russia's veto was signalled in advance, but supporters of the draft resolution insisted the proposal still had symbolic and moral value. ~~~~~ Dear readers, China always demands that it be treated as a full-partner world power. Yet, China is systematically destroying the Tibetan and Uighur cultures. It has secret gulag prisons where political dissidents are tortured. It is engaged in using naval aggression to force its Asian neighbors to accept China as their regional superpower. It blocks its citizens' free access to the Internet. It sponsors a military-led cyberspying net to steal commercial know-how and technology. It refuses to do anything to try to bring the Syrian civil war to an end, preferring to side with an equally uncivilized Russia. This is not a country that deserves to be treated as a world power or a regional superpower...or any kind of positive and civilized power at all. And no amount of posturing will change this. China, your words are meaningless -- put up or shut up.

7 comments:

  1. A bright, well educated, attractive girls while at college is overcome by the quest to “CHANGE” a fellow student who offers the world nothing. Is handsome, a lousy student, a slob about his appearance, a social dug users. Neither one belongs or could exist in each other’s world. But our little co-ed is sure she can make Billy Bum into the man of her dreams.

    Women are believers that they can change men into what they want in a boyfriend or husband. This is a story or the heart that repeats itself over and over thousands of times a day.

    Well the same setup (not of the heart) exists in Foreign Affairs … the thought that a country that is thousands of years old, so set in their ways that not even civilian uprisings can change their approach to life, that life is not precious, that change is actually bad for the countries well fair, that life as it was a thousand years ago is quiet alright today. But this backward running country wishes to play on the big stage with the most modern of nations and wants to at time dictate the game. Welcome friends to China.

    We are trying to swim upstream against the current, and the current is century old China. A country cloaked in secrecy, war lord mentality, and hundreds of millions of citizens that are simply trying to scrape out a living.

    “Lord grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.”

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  2. For some reason I think this was a diversionary tactic of Obama & Holder to down play the VA problems the White House is facing. This Cyber war with the Chinese will get some play time and then fizzle out to obscurity.

    This has been Obama Method of Operation (MO) since day one - when a problem arises cover it with something else.

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  3. Another ploy by the WH spin doctors to pull the attention away from the Benghazi investigations. But I do wonder who will Obama sacrifice to the investigators this time, maybe Hillary Clinton herself? Or with 2 years left does Obama just not care except to save his own?

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    1. “We need trust among allies and partners. Such trust now has to be built anew.” — German Chancellor Angela Merkel

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  4. De Oppressor LiberMay 23, 2014 at 8:16 AM

    Governments’ spying on other governments is a fact of life. There is a down right need for it. If a country is not in the spying game - they don’t have a dog in the international world scheme of things fight. The government that is content to sit on the sidelines and not play in the game, but rather get their information second hand is not protecting their citizens fully and properly.

    But the other side of that coin is governments spying on private industries or better stealing private commerce information which is wrong, unacceptable, insupportable, and cannot be justified at all.

    What the likes of Westinghouse or Alcoa is up to internally is their business and only their business. Corporate developed information is sacred to them and no one else. Stealing business information is akin to “rape” and should be punishable.

    There used to be a saying …” Roebuck never told Sears what he was up to!” and they were partners.

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  5. It’s easy to forget what intelligence consists of: luck and speculation. Here and there a windfall, here and there a scoop.

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  6. De Oppressor LiberMay 23, 2014 at 8:59 AM

    The Chinese do not take American warnings seriously. And why should they? General Fang Fenghui, China’s chief of general staff received last week military honors at the DOD while his country’s vessels are deliberately creating turmoil and directly challenging American interests.

    We do need to question the Pentagon's strategy on mil-mil relations and whether there is genuine reciprocity by China in providing high-level access to critical facilities and personnel that Gen. Fang got from his recent US visit.

    A showcase tour of China's first aircraft carrier (as Secretary Hagel received a few months back) does not cut it. And beyond that, PLA's No. 1 cyber-intelligence target is the US military-security agencies and defense industries. Does the Pentagon really believe that treating an adversary as a friend is a clever ploy to win hearts and minds of PLA's hardliners? Has the Pentagon confused itself with the State Dept? Are they really so clueless about their counterparts in Beijing?

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