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CHINA THREAT SNAPSHOT-3As we continue our series on the China threat snapshot, we must ask ourselves how our the everyda...
18/02/2025

CHINA THREAT SNAPSHOT-3

As we continue our series on the China threat snapshot, we must ask ourselves how our the everyday people and patriot groups responding?

Some here in the PNW have been for the last 5 years working together. Building coalitions and some leaders which include national leaders are laying out the threats they see in conference calls and INTEL chats. Everyone is sharing information of what is going on in there states.

Recently a group of national leaders have started a national NET, consisting of leader from various groups all around the U.S. and be guided by JJ founder of AmRRON. AmRRon is a proven entity for HF communications and has been around several years. Most recently groups have been working on how to communicate in a grid down scenario which seems very likely if you have been following out reports on the Chinese transformers littering the U.S.

When confronted with the possibility of a grid down by China you start to think things like supply chain issues and the sheer panic it would bring to the public. Do you have food stored up?, Do you have medicine on hand? Water?, Do you have comms? Gas? Can you protect your homeor your bugout spot?

Here in the PNW we know that everything south of Aberdeen is comprimised. Vantage, Yakima, Sunnyside, Dayton, Walla Walla is also comprimised. We also know that Bonnerville is also on the SCADA network which is what is being hacked. Bonnerville supplies most of WA, ID, OR and northern California. We know from public records and reporting from NPR that China owns property next to JBLM and Fairchild AFB and there was a recon by a group onto the Cheney property on the backside of Fairchild and found interesting things.

Whatever is to come it has been pushed back due to the corruption in the CCP. The purge going on right now is due to XI finding that some of his generals were selling food, gas and other things on the black market. XI has now set a hard date for 2027 to move on Taiwan and then make moves against us so we cannot respond.
In "The Secret Speech of General Chi Haotian" it is stated "Solving the american issue will solve our Taiwan issue"..To some it means they will move Simultaneously. We will see

https://homeland.house.gov/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/CCP-Threat-Snapshot.pdf

CHINESE THREAT SNAPSHOT -2We have already laid out an extensive map with many overlays. When looking at the map from our...
18/02/2025

CHINESE THREAT SNAPSHOT -2

We have already laid out an extensive map with many overlays. When looking at the map from our previous post, we looked harder into the ports. At these ports are Chinese cranes that off load and load conatiner ships at ports such as Seattle, San Francisco, Long Beach, Galveston and New York.

In this report done by The Select Committee on the CCP, we see much like the Transformers at utility companies around the U.S. these cranes can also be accessed remotely. This is what key findings they found.

The Committees make the following factual findings:

• ZPMC, or a third-party company contracted with ZPMC, installed cellular modems onto STS cranes that are currently operational at certain U.S. ports. These installations fall outside the scope of any existing contract between the affected U.S. ports and ZPMC.

This incident is not isolated—in February 2021, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) discovered intelligence gathering equipment near or on ZPMC STS cranes on arrival to the Port of Baltimore.

• ZPMC has repeatedly requested remote access to its STS cranes operating at various U.S. ports, with a particular focus on those located on the West Coast. If granted, this access could potentially be extended to other PRC government entities, posing a significant risk due to the PRC’s national security laws that mandate cooperation with state intelligence agencies.

• By design of contract, and often at the request of ZPMC, all non-ZPMC operational STS crane components are shipped to the PRC by third party companies—particularly from Sweden, Germany, and Japan. These components are then installed by ZPMC engineers without oversight from the original manufacturer, raising significant concerns about the integrity and security of the final assembled crane.

• The U.S. maritime sector is dangerously reliant on equipment and technology produced, manufactured, assembled, or installed in the PRC. This includes ship-to-shore cranes, container handling equipment, and various other critical maritime infrastructure components. This dependency is largely driven by noncompetitive pricing that favors PRC SOE’s, technological disparities, and the lack of viable domestic manufacturer alternatives.

• The contracting practices between PRC SOE’s and U.S. ports, as well as other maritime stakeholders, fail to adequately prioritize security. During the Commi_ees’ investigation, we reviewed multiple contracts between ZPMC and U.S. ports and were alarmed to find no provisions prohibiting or limiting unauthorized modifications or access to equipment and technology bound for U.S. ports. Consequently, ZPMC and other PRC SOE’s are not contractually barred from installing backdoors into equipment or
modifying technology in ways that could allow unauthorized access or remote control, enabling them to compromise sensitive data or disrupt operations within the U.S. maritime sector at a later time.

• Most, if not all, global crane manufacturing companies that serve as alternatives to ZPMC maintain ties to the PRC. These companies are either directly vulnerable to supply-chain disruptions or indirectly susceptible to PRC pressure due to their business dealings within PRC.

• The PRC's geopolitical ambitions and assertiveness, particularly regarding Taiwan, raise concerns about the security of U.S. maritime supply chains. The Commi_ees’ investigation found that in a potential future dispute with the United States over Taiwan, the PRC could restrict or manipulate the supply of critical components or materials essential to U.S. maritime infrastructure, including STS cranes. Such actions could severely disrupt U.S. commercial activities and hinder the DoD’s ability to deploy supplies and Resources to the Indo-Pacific region.

• In recent years, U.S. federal agencies, including the FBI, have alerted U.S. ports and industry partners about the PRC’s efforts to establish a strategic presence at certain U.S. ports. On February 1, 2023, the FBI’s Office of the Private Sector issued an advisory highlighting indicators of malicious PRC-activity relating to the U.S. maritime sector. The advisory warned U.S. ports and industry partners to be vigilant for specific PRC activity, including, but not limited to:

o Unusual visits, investments, expansions, renovations, joint own
ership, or acquisition of port/maritime infrastructure by PRC gov
ernment entities and SOEs at strategic U.S. ports;

o Increased marketing or selling of PRC SOE equipment to U.S.
ports that could be remotely disrupted or used to gather infor
mation benefiting PRC national security;

o Unusually low quotes or bids for U.S. maritime equipment or ser
vices from PRC SOE’s or their affiliates; and

o Increased outreach from Chinese entities regarding the operations of U.S. ports, particularly their ships, cranes, docks, telecommunications, data, offices, employees, security, and intermodal connections with rail and highway transportation.

• The Committees found that due to inadequate management by the port authority, MARAD, and DoD, Guam struggles to onsistently receive grant funding, achieve strategic port status, maintain or enhance its cyber security posture, and avoid the risks associated with installing PRC-made equipment at its port.

https://homeland.house.gov/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/Joint-Homeland-China-Select-Port-Security-Report.pdf

21,000 CHINESE NATIONALS RUSHED TO NEW YORK WHILE OTHERS FLOCKED TO  DC, L.A. AND CHICAGO ON BUSES FROM TEXASTexas has b...
15/02/2025

21,000 CHINESE NATIONALS RUSHED TO NEW YORK WHILE OTHERS FLOCKED TO DC, L.A. AND CHICAGO ON BUSES FROM TEXAS

Texas has bussed more than 105,300 migrants to sanctuary cities around the US since it launched its program to move them out of the state.

The first busload of migrants from the Lone Star State arrived in Washington, DC in April 2022 a few blocks from the US Capitol and just directly in from of the Fox News office where cameras were rolling.

Gov. Greg Abbott has now sent over 12,500 border crossers to the nation's capital.

New York City has received the most of all the destination cities, with over 39,100 sent to Gotham since August 2022.

A whooping 32,200 migrants have been transported Chicago since August 2022.

The surprise arrival of migrants in those three cities caused chaos and shock, with local officials blasting Abbott for not giving them any advanced warning.

New York officials accused the Republican governor of playing politics by sending migrants to Democratic-run cities and called his use of migrant to score points 'cruel.' 'Our city has been, and will always be, a city of immigrants that welcomes newcomers with open arms,' Mayor Eric Adams said at the time.

But what a difference a few hundreds migrants makes. Just two months later, Adams had declared an emergency, asking for help to handle the 61,000 migrants that were in the city's shelters in October 2022. Given that Texas has only bussed some 39,000 two years later, not all of the people in Big Apple shelters were sent there by Abbott.

Some 21,000 Chinese migrants have made their way to New York since October 2022, according to the New York Times. Chinese nationals are largely entering the country through Arizona and California, not the Lone Star State.

As recent DailyMail.com reporting revealed, many of these Asian migrants have the money to travel from the border to their final destinations. Unlike the hordes of South American migrants arriving in Texas, who often cross the border without a penny to their name.
Since Texas border cities like El Paso and Eagle Pass are not their final destination, local governments and non-profits have begrudgingly signed on to Gov. Abbott's bus program, which offers free rides who any migrant who volunteers.

Migrants have to sign a waiver before boarding a charter out of Texas in cities like McAllen, Laredo, Brownsville, Del Rio, Eagle Pass and El Paso.

From their, the migrants are dropped off to the city of their choice, which is most often New York, Chicago and Denver.

The transportation has cost the state a staggering $86.1 million or about $1,650 per migrant from April 2022 to October 2023.

The Mile High City, which only started getting migrants in May --- has received 16,600 migrants from Abbott so far.

Abbott has sent 3,400 people to Philadelphia and another 1,500 to Los Angeles.

North cities like New York and Chicago have whined that they could not handle the financial burden of caring for migrants, meanwhile a city like Eagle Pass, Texas, saw 23,000 migrants in just one week in December.

New York City has an annual budget of $100,000 billion compared to Eagle Pass, whose 28,000 residents operate on a budget of $18 million.

“Texas communities like Eagle Pass and El Paso should not have to shoulder the unprecedented surge of illegal immigration caused by President Biden’s reckless open border policies,' Abbott stated in September.

Since Biden took office in 2021, more than 4.3 million migrants have been encountered by US Border Patrol crossing into Texas, federal statistics show.

The amount of migrants Abbott has bused out of the state is just 4% of all those who have crossed into the Lone Star State.

And yet, Abbott has caused chaos and and dominated the national narrative with just 105,000 migrants.

'I think what he's trying to bring attention to is that fact that there is a crisis, and that it does need to be addressed,' Eric R. Welsh, a partner at Reeves Immigration Law Group in LA told DailyMail.com.

Despite lawsuits against the charter companies to try to stop the buses from arriving in New York and Chicago, Abbott has just changed his tactics, and started flying migrants into those cities.

In a statement Friday, the governor promised to continue to 'fill the dangerous gaps created by the Biden Administration’s refusal to secure the border.'

STUNNING ADMISSIONAccording to Chinese diplomat Chen Haoqi, at least since 1997, Chinese-Americans and Chinese-American ...
15/02/2025

STUNNING ADMISSION

According to Chinese diplomat Chen Haoqi, at least since 1997, Chinese-Americans and Chinese-American organizations have worked directly with the Chinese Consulate to conduct influence operations inside the U.S. to support the foreign policy of Communist China.

WHAT THE PENTAGON'S NEW REPORT  ON  CHINESE  MILITARY POWER China’s military is both corrupt and increasingly capable. Y...
15/02/2025

WHAT THE PENTAGON'S NEW REPORT ON CHINESE MILITARY POWER

China’s military is both corrupt and increasingly capable. Yesterday, the Pentagon released its 24th China Military Power Report since Congress initiated its mandate in 2000, offering revelations unavailable elsewhere. The document reveals new details of the most dramatic military buildup since World War II, ongoing challenges that Chairman Xi Jinping and his party army are addressing with determination, and context to interpret what it all means. The bottom line: endemic corruption and lingering personnel and organizational weaknesses must be weighed against the Chinese Communist Party’s unrivaled ability to marshal resources and its ongoing production and deployment of advanced military systems on an unmatched industrial scale. Xi commands a system riven by brutal elite power struggles, but he is determined to pursue control over Taiwan with an increasingly potent toolkit. With deadly seriousness, he continues to advance sweeping organizational reforms to maximize relevant warfighting capabilities in fulfillment of his Centennial Military Building Goal of 2027, even at the cost of short-term churn and challenges.

Dramatic Developments: Nuclear Weapons, Manifold Missiles, Operational Options

Nothing looms larger than China’s determined advancements in nuclear weapons — arguably the ultimate military capability. By the report’s suspense date of “early 2024,” China already had more than 600 operational nuclear warheads, a surge from the more than 500 tabulated in last year’s edition. All of China’s roughly 400 intercontinental ballistic missiles can reach the continental United States.

China will likely have more than 1,000 operational warheads by 2030, most fielded on systems capable of ranging America’s homeland, many deployed at higher readiness. Stockpile growth will continue through 2035, which the Pentagon’s 2023 report projected “in line with previous estimates” and by which time the 2022 edition anticipated 1,500 warheads. Additional advanced nuclear delivery systems likely under development include strategic hypersonic glide vehicles and fractional orbital bombardment systems, the latter at least partially demonstrated in a 2021 test. These frontier efforts draw on potent dynamics, with the report judging that China “has the world’s leading hypersonic missile arsenal.”

Three new silo fields add 320 silos for solid-propellant intercontinental ballistic missiles. China is also more than doubling its DF-5 liquid-propellant intercontinental ballistic missile force to likely 50 silos. As part of an effort to upgrade older intercontinental ballistic missile families, including with multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles, at least 30 new silos will hold the DF-5C. The Pentagon also anticipates possible silo and rail deployment of DF-41 road-mobile intercontinental ballistic missiles, which have up to three warheads each.

Already, China’s rocket force keeps some nuclear forces on heightened alert. New silo-based intercontinental ballistic missiles, at least three early warning satellites, and Russian assistance portend movement toward “early warning counterstrike” posture — what the United States terms “launch on warning.” In 2023, China test-launched two intercontinental ballistic missiles from training silos in western China. This suggests at least some new silo-based units will assume a launch on warning posture.

As the second leg of China’s nuclear triad, Type 094 Jin-class ballistic missile submarines conduct near-continuous at-sea deterrence patrols. They can deploy the JL-3 submarine-launched ballistic missile, which can reach the continental United States from South China Sea or Bohai Gulf bastions. Type 094 production continues beyond today’s six deployed hulls, even though the improved Type 096 — to employ a submarine-launched ballistic missile with multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles — is slated to begin production in the mid-2020s. The Pentagon allows for the possibility of 096 delays motivating the 094’s continued production, while alternatively positing “an effort to accelerate [China’s] sea-based nuclear capability as Xi has directed.” Xi’s rush to prepare for possible war over Taiwan on his watch supports the latter explanation. Rounding out China’s nuclear triad, the H-6N bomber can carry an air-launched ballistic missile, while an H-20 stealth bomber with a range of more than 10,000 kilometers is under development.

To rapidly build additional nuclear warheads, China needs copious plutonium. Moscow is literally fueling Beijing’s nuclear weapons production. Russia has provided highly enriched uranium nuclear fuel assemblies to China’s two fast breeder reactors, the first already completed. In one of countless fabrications that the Pentagon documents, Chinese officials insist CFR-600 reactors are for peaceful and civilian purposes. This belies the amount of Russian-provided highly enriched uranium China has received for these reactors, which is “more than the entire amount removed worldwide under U.S. and International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) auspices in the last three decades.”

Beijing’s nuclear buildup reflects determination to have usable military options on every rung of the escalation ladder. The urgency to do so is amplified by perceptions that China faces military competition, crisis, and possibly even conflict with America — the last most likely regarding Taiwan. Accordingly, China seeks to deter American and allied intervention in a Taiwan-related scenario if possible and control escalation if necessary: “The [People’s Liberation Army’s] expanding nuclear force will enable it to target more U.S. cities, military facilities, and leadership sites than ever before in a potential nuclear conflict.” That overriding priority is the only sufficient explanation for the dramatic departure under Xi from previous relative numerical restraint in nuclear weapons.

Beyond the nuclear weapons backstop, Beijing’s “counter-intervention” strategy and multi-domain precision warfare operations overwhelmingly emphasize multifarious missiles capable of delivering a full range of conventional payloads to all conceivable targets. For example, China has simulated “Joint Firepower Strike Operations” against Taiwan, in part by live-firing PCH191 close-range ballistic missiles in its 2022 exercises, and drilling with the missile in its 2023 exercises. This precision missile system would play a critical role in joint fires during a Taiwan campaign. These drills similarly showcased significant maritime force readiness and surge capacity. Additionally, China’s four Type 093B Shang III guided-missile nuclear attack submarines, three of which may be operational by some time next year, may have land-attack cruise missiles — a trend likely to spread to major warships.

Given concerns about U.S. Navy and allied forces’ involvement, China has leveraged decades of emphasis on ballistic missiles into five different types of anti-ship ballistic missiles. China’s first anti-ship ballistic missile, the DF-21D, is capable of rapid in-field reloading. The DF-26 anti-ship ballistic missile variant can rapidly be swapped with conventional and nuclear land-attack alternatives—the DF-26 is capable of nuclear precision strikes, potentially with low-yield optionality. In addition to conventional anti-ship and conventional and nuclear land-attack payloads, China’s numerous DF-17s have a hypersonic glide vehicle to evade U.S. and allied radar and ballistic missile defense.

DF-27 ballistic missiles with a 5,000- to 8,000-kilometer range are newly deployed. In addition to their conventional anti-ship mode, they can carry hypersonic and conventional and nuclear land-attack payloads. Potential targets include Guam, Alaska, and Hawaii.

Finally, the YJ-21 hypersonic anti-ship ballistic missile has been test-fired from a Type 055 Renhai cruiser. China’s eight massive carrier-escorting Renhais merit special emphasis, with their advanced sensors and communications, as well as 112 vertical launch tubes accommodating multifarious missiles: land-attack, anti-ship, anti-air, and anti-submarine.

Across the Board: Pushing Frontiers in Power Projection

While Taiwan and other disputed sovereignty claims within the First Island Chain are clearly China’s primary military focus, it is simultaneously pursuing a “world-class” military — equal or superior to the U.S. military — in keeping with its 2035 and 2049 development goals. This inherently requires global reach and cutting-edge operations in all domains. For further details regarding China’s dramatic launch rates, orbited systems including satellites and space planes, and ground- and space-based counterspace capabilities of concern, readers should consult the U.S. Space Force’s “Space Threat Fact Sheet.”

The world’s second largest defense budget, which the Pentagon estimates at $330 to $450 billion, offers sufficient resources for comprehensive progress. China’s status as the world’s fourth largest arms supplier provides additional revenue. At more than 2 million active, 510,000 reserve, and 500,000 paramilitary personnel, the world’s largest military force has the people to cover its comprehensive missions.

China’s navy already has more than 370 ships and submarines (including more than 140 major surface combatants) — not counting the 22 Type 056 Jiangdao corvettes it transferred to the coast guard or the approximately 60 Type 022 Houbei missile catamarans it retains. The Pentagon forecasts 395 battle force ships by 2025, including 65 submarines, and 435 by 2030, including 80 submarines. The Office of Naval Intelligence’s continued lack of an update to its 2015 report on China’s Navy is a glaring omission that one hopes will be rectified soonest.

Rapidly approaching American technology standards, and finally powered by workable indigenous engines, China’s air force has 51 Y-20A heavy lift transports, whose up to 2,400-nautical-mile range may be extended by 16 Y-20U tankers. In addition to its base in Djibouti, where China stations 400 marines, it seeks bases and access points to extend its forces’ reach.

Conclusion: Corruption, Competence, Capabilities

One of the most important questions that emerges from the Pentagon’s new report is: “How good is China’s military, and what does it all mean?” Part of the answer lies in the first and second of its three “Special Topics,” respectively covering the impacts of corruption in China’s military and political training in the force. The report’s early 2024 suspense date precludes it from including the latest personnel details, most dramatically the recent fall of Adm. Miao Hua from the Central Military Commission. However, the report provides ample context for understanding these important issues writ large.

In its dedicated section on corruption, as elsewhere across its many pages, the Pentagon document does an admirable job of explaining what many all too often confuse if not actively misrepresent — “2027” is absolutely not a U.S. government construction or estimate per se, but rather Xi’s own grand plan: the Centennial Military Building Goal, a capabilities development deadline requiring China’s armed forces, inter alia, to give Xi a full toolbox of military operational options against Taiwan by 2027. The report rightly highlights the corruption-related investigations and removal of 15 high-ranking military officers and defense industry executives between July and December 2023. It speculates that this could have disrupted China’s 2027 modernization goals.

That statement should be understood in light of the tremendous military progress that the Pentagon documents throughout, which is clearly ongoing despite the impact of politicized corruption investigations and their imposition of costs on China’s military to the extent that some “dirty laundry” occasionally emerges — but they are fundamentally a speedbump, not a showstopper. With some of the world’s greatest military resources at his command, Xi is pressing ahead with determination. If Xi were not safely in command of China’s military, he would not have visited Spain, Brazil, Peru, and Morocco — or anywhere abroad—in November 2024. If there were prohibitive concerns about their disloyalty or disarray, China’s armed forces would not have been directed to conduct extensive operations around Taiwan just now. If the imprisonment of former China State Shipbuilding Corporation chairman Hu Wenming, who oversaw China’s aircraft carrier development program, and his general manager Sun Bo reflected fundamental defects in naval shipbuilding, we would not be facing the formidable armada hitting the waters today.

Despite all the drama and “palace intrigue,” we must never lose sight of an important paradox: China has the world’s largest bureaucracy to propagandize its greatest strengths while hiding (or at least dismissing) its greatest weaknesses. America, by contrast, ultimately bares all for all to see. It is an elementary analytical error to confuse the respective great powers’ “dirty laundry” with their “designer clothes.”

China’s “designer clothes” include some of the world’s most numerous and diverse missile systems, whose frontier technologies include some of the world’s most advanced hypersonic glide vehicles — a force to be reckoned with, by any measure. The relentless development and deployment of the impressive hardware documented throughout the report would be simply impossible if corruption and executive removals left China’s defense industry in disarray.

China’s “dirty laundry” includes endemic graft, pay-to-play, and other influence peddling, and its periodic weaponization in brutal elite political struggles, sometimes with direct impact within its party army. It’s not a bug — it’s an enduring feature of a system in which the party is inherently above the law. Admiral Miao Hua’s fall is but the latest example. There have been many others, and there will be many more. Indeed, given the way investigations tend to unravel personal patronage networks, some big new shoes may be dropping soon.

On the one hand, Xi undoubtedly faces elite power competition, particularly when he makes decisions that turn out to be unsuccessful or controversial (such as his longtime support of his former loyalist Miao). But on the other hand, Xi clearly continues to engage in ambitious military restructuring efforts that prioritize improvements in warfighting capabilities. These efforts would only be possible and desirable for a leader reasonably secure in his position and thus able to impose some of the most demanding requirements conceivable on China’s armed forces. A weak and vulnerable leader, by contrast, would be far more likely to “go along to get along” with superficial military showcasing and coddling of prominent military stakeholders, or a more “hands-off” approach akin to that of Xi’s predecessor Hu Jintao.

The most sweeping, telling recent element of Xi’s continued defense reforms, as discussed throughout the report, is arguably his disestablishment of the Strategic Support Force on 19 April 2024 — the very force he created in 2015. He has reassigned its subordinate forces, the Aerospace Force and the Cyberspace Force, directly under the Central Military Commission. To these, he has added a new Information Support Force. These reforms are challenging, as the Pentagon explains in detailing their complex nature, but are required to give China’s military the best possible network and communication systems management to enable the successful prosecution of high-end warfare against the most capable opponent(s). The last is clearly what Xi is prioritizing.

Another revealing element of ongoing military reforms under Xi documented in multiple sections of the report is the transfer in 2023 of many shore-based units, including 300 fighter aircraft (e.g., all JH-7 maritime strike fighter-bombers) as well as all H-6J maritime strike bombers, from the navy to the air force so that the former can focus on carrier aviation, the latter on command and control as well as integrated air defense. China’s air force thus acquired fixed-wing combat aviation units, radar and air defense units, and related facilities that had long belonged to its navy, which surely opposed relinquishing them. Only a powerful, warfighting-focused leader would have the capability and intention to kick the hornet’s nest of interservice rivalry in the service of advancing unforgiving combat power.

In sum, nothing revealed in the report suggests problems sufficient to frustrate Xi’s pursuit of his top-priority target: military modernization to help assert control over Taiwan first and foremost. The purging of former Central Military Commission vice chairmen Xu Caihou and Guo Boxiong in 2014 and 2015, respectively, was far more significant than Miao’s fall as a lower-ranking commission member. Yet in the decade since, China has attained the most dramatic military buildup since World War II, with definite improvements in organization and human capacity in addition to the “designer clothes” hardware that all but overflows from the report’s data-packed pages. The best explanation for all that the Pentagon, and we readers, can see is that Xi is accepting political and organizational risk up front to maximize his system’s strengths and his own ability to advance his larger goals perhaps somewhat further down the road.

This is the bigger picture that we lose sight of at our own risk. Revealing China’s weaknesses to deter and buy time is part of the strategy we need, but only part; we must not fool ourselves into complacency. The other part is recognizing that Xi is a man on a mission with a military to match and urgently shoring up defenses and deterrence while we still have time.

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