Tag: Beijing

  • Beijing’s bravado betrays growing case of nerves

    Chinese state media has just announced the imminent test flight of a new long-range stealth bomber called the Hong-20. A “military expert” told reporters that “usually, the development of equipment an

    ANALYSIS/OPINION:

    Chinese state media has just announced the imminent test flight of a new long-range stealth bomber called the Hong-20. A “military expert” told reporters that “usually, the development of equipment and weaponry of the People’s Liberation Army is highly confidential.”

    Revealing the bomber name before trials shows the Chinese aviation industry is gaining more confidence, the expert boasted.

    If there was ever an example of “projection,” this is it. The Chinese are not “confident;” they are scared.

    The communist regime, which by the way just confirmed it is holding over 1 million of its citizens in ‘re-education’ camps in the restive western region of Xinjiang, is acting like a deer in the headlights. In the face of real “Trumpian” confidence radiating from Washington, China’s leaders are acting like the schoolyard bully who for the first time just got punched in the face, and figured out they don’t like it one bit.

    President Trump has done the one thing Beijing thought would never happen — he is using the full weight of American power for the first time since World War II, economic, political, moral and yes, even military power. And it’s working.

    We should expect more bravado and parading of weapons from China, which is desperate to turn American public opinion against Mr. Trump’s hard line. There has been lots of love shared between the American elites and those in Beijing over the last few decades. That is over now. The globalist game is over. The hollowing out of America is over.

    I don’t believe the narrative in the mainstream U.S. media created about the People’s Republic. I have never believed the Wall Street apologists for the dictators.

    The experts claim that China’s economy is well on its way to surpassing the United States in terms of GDP. But, that was before Mr. Trump stopped letting Beijing treat trade as a one-way street. China’s economy is actually a house of cards, propped up by uncollectable debts and exploitative trade practices. The government has to build empty “ghost cities” just to keep people employed and not rioting. Did I mention the re-education camps? That all doesn’t sound like a stable, growing society to me.

    Meanwhile, in the U.S., we are in the midst of a real reset, one that will benefit the country in the long run. There will be some short-term pain — as we are seeing in the American stock market — as we forge new expectations and the old ways of doing business pass by the wayside.

    We’ve just learned that China is trying to influence next month’s midterm elections. They must be thinking, “For God’s sake we can’t let Trump consolidate power, or we are finished!”

    We should expect more malign behavior, more fear-mongering in the South China Sea, more spy technology embedded in our communications equipment, more military parades, and more general Chinese chest-thumping.

    The Chinese will continue to lash out, as cornered creatures tend to do, and now the leadership’s deceptions are being exposed for all the world to see. President Trump is threatening the very hold on power of the Chinese Communist Party. In their world, they cannot allow this to happen.

    Ronald Reagan won the Cold War and tore down the Iron Curtain.

    Donald Trump may be doing the same thing, only this time in the Pacific, frustrating the insidious Chinese plan to undermine America without firing a shot, and threatening the communists’ hold on power in Beijing.

    L. Todd Wood is a former special operations helicopter pilot and Wall Street debt trader, and has contributed to Fox Business, The Moscow Times, National Review, The New York Post and many other publications. He can be reached at LToddWood.com.

  • Beijing accuses White House of trade bullying as new U.S. tariffs take effect

    In the latest escalation of the U.S.-China trade war, Beijing on Monday accused Washington of “economic bullying” just as trade tariffs on $200 billion of Chinese made goods came into effect.

    In the latest escalation of the U.S.-China trade war, Beijing on Monday accused Washington of “economic bullying” just as trade tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese made goods came into effect.

    The hard-hitting attack on President Trump was delivered in an official white paper released by the Xinhua news agency and features Beijing’s argument that the U.S. is intimidating other countries through economic measures, damaging the global economy and using “trade bullyism practices.”

    Considered Beijing’s most comprehensive public statement in the tariff war thus far, the white paper, which runs 36,000 words, keeps with Beijing’s stance of not personalizing the conflict by never mentioning Mr. Trump by name.

    It does, however, lash out at his administration’s “America first” economic policies, criticizing them for threatening the world’s established multilateral free trade agreements and restating Beijing’s position that the only way to stop the battle is through cooperation.

    “Cooperation is the only right option and only win-win cooperation can lead to a better future,” the white paper said.

    To justify the trade war, Mr. Trump has long accused China of stealing technologies from America and unfairly subsidizing Chinese state-owned enterprises.

    To punish them, Mr. Trump has argued for the U.S. to clamp down on Chinese imports and since July, roughly half of all Chinese good shipped to the U.S. have become subject to new duties.

    The latest round of tariffs, which kicked in at 12 p.m. Monday, Beijing time, target almost 6,000 Chinese imports, including bicycles, furniture, handbags, rice and textiles, with smartwatches and high chairs reportedly exempt.

    China, meanwhile, has responded by slapping tariffs on more than 5,000 U.S. goods, from honey to industrial chemicals, worth an estimated $110 billion.

    Over the weekend, China recalled its naval chief from the U.S. to protest sanctions Washington slapped on Chinese entities for procuring Russian-made military equipment.

    Chinese Vice-Premier Liu He, who is leading trade talks with the U.S., also cancelled a trip to Washington in protest of the tariffs.

  • China-Africa summit: Xi denies cash being spent on self-importance tasks

    President Xi Jinping gives a speech during the opening ceremony for the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on September 3, 2018 Symbol copyright Getty Images Image caption China’s investments come with no “political strings”, the president says

    China doesn’t put money into “vanity initiatives” in Africa and is helping the continent build its infrastructure, President Xi Jinping has said.

    He pledged an extra $60bn (£42bn) for the continent’s building, as he opened a summit with African leaders in Beijing to boost relations.

    China is the single biggest bilateral financier of infrastructure in Africa.

    However critics warn that African nations have been going into unsustainable levels of debt with the Asian giant.

    Mr Xi admitted there was a need to look on the industrial viability of a few initiatives and make co-operation more practicable.

    The $60bn pledge is over and above the $60bn China presented to Africa at the same summit in 2015 in South Africa’s main city, Johannesburg.

    Debt from China’s hobby-free loans, due by means of the tip of 2018, could be written off for a few negative African states, Mr Xi mentioned.

    China might also arrange a peace and security fund and would continue to supply free military help to the African Union, he added.

    China lent around $125bn to Africa among 2000 and 2016, in line with information compiled by way of the China-Africa Research Initiative at Washington’s Johns Hopkins College School of Complex World Studies.

    (more…)

  • Airbnb cancels Great Wall sleepover festival

    The Chinese Wall Symbol copyright airbnb.com Symbol caption The Great Wall stretches for lots of kilometres throughout northern China

    Airbnb has known as off a competition offering to chance to spend an evening at the Nice Wall of China.

    The ad campaign asked other folks to jot down a 500-phrase essay on overcoming cultural obstacles and promised a “as soon as-in-a-lifetime” probability for the winner.

    But the plan sparked blended comments and issues that it could contribute to the ancient structure being damaged.

    And in step with Chinese media, Airbnb had by no means won approval from native government to run the development.

    Airbnb said it “deeply revered the feedback” and so had “made the decision not to move forward with this experience”.

    Image copyright airbnb.com Symbol caption The lodging came with a promise of entertainment and education

    There additionally have been serious worries the ancient construction might be damaged by the development.

    Others said it used to be flawed for a firm like Airbnb to milk the landmark for promoting and PR purposes.

    according to Chinese Language state media, the cultural commission in Beijing’s Yanqing district which oversees the stretch of the wall the place the sleepover was deliberate, said it was once now not conscious about the event and no approval have been given.

    Airbnb to percentage consumer information with China Airbnb halts thousands of bookings in Japan

    Airbnb stated in a press release on Wednesday that “whilst there was an agreement in place that used to be the foundation for the assertion of this experience” it was once now being cancelled, it appears as a result of the feedback.

    “certainly one of the objectives of our Evening At The Good Wall was to spotlight how everybody can play a component in honoring and retaining this improbable piece of global historical past,” it said, stressing that the company had worked with professionals to assist teach people concerning the wall and upkeep efforts.

    One man’s mission to walk The Wall with a drone the primary men to stroll the nice Wall

    Individuals Who had entered the contest can be contacted about alternative ways they could “explore and uncover wonderful reports in China”, it mentioned.

    Night at the nice Wall was once the most recent case of Airbnb providing distinctive spots by way of user competitions.

    Previous such locations included staying on a reef in the great Barrier reef, in a analysis submarine from the Blue Planet II or the fort of ancient determine at the back of the Dracula legend in Romania.

  • Beijing blast: Small explosive device induce close to US embassy

    A police officer is seen near the U.S. embassy in Beijing, China 26 July 2018 Symbol copyright Reuters Symbol caption Police have accumulated outdoor the embassy development in valuable Beijing

    A Person has induce a small explosive software with regards to the u.s. embassy in Beijing, officials have confirmed.

    Apart from the attacker, there have been no injuries suggested and officials say police replied immediately.

    Video and photographs posted on social media display smoke emerging from the vicinity of the embassy within the middle of the Chinese capital with crowds gathering.

    State media outlet Global Occasions tweeted that native citizens had heard a “thunder-like bang”.

    A statement from the u.s. embassy in Beijing said a device, which they described as a bomb, had exploded at around 1300 local time (0500 GMT) at the south-east corner of the compound.

    Beijing police known as it a “suspected firecracker instrument” which caused a hearth. The bomber injured his hand during the incident, but there has been no danger to his lifestyles and he used to be straight away despatched to hospital.

    Police gave his surname as Jiang, and stated he was once from the internal Mongolia province.

    The BBC’s Stephen McDonell on the scene says that ordinary activities have on the grounds that resumed at the embassy, with other people nonetheless lining up for visa applications.

    There had been in advance stories that police had taken away a woman who had attempted to set herself on hearth close to the embassy at 1100 local time, a few hours earlier than the pronounced blast.

    it is unclear if the 2 incidents have been linked.

    Attacks on sites in the Chinese Language capital are uncommon. the most serious incident in contemporary years saw a automotive ploughing into a crowd at Tiananmen Square in 2013, killing five other folks including the attackers. China blamed the incident on Muslim Uighur separatists.

  • China says there’ll be ‘no winner’ in global trade war

    Chinese President Xi Jinping and South African President Cyril Ramaphosa Symbol copyright PHILL MAGAKOE Symbol caption Presidents Xi and Ramaphosa – rejecting protectionism

    China has instructed developing international locations there could be no winner in a global business war.

    Chinese President Xi Jinping called on Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (BRICS) to reject protectionism.

    South African President Cyril Ramaphosa additionally warned of the have an effect on that tariff threats by US President Donald Trump could have on developing countries.

    They had been talking at a three-day assembly of BRICS leaders in Johannesburg, South Africa.

    The BRICS nations include more than FORTY% of the global population however have by no means worked as a co-ordinated financial bloc.

    “we should always be resolute in rejecting unilateralism,” Xi mentioned at the establishing ceremony. “a global industry struggle have to be rejected because there’ll be no winner.

    “Unilateralism and protectionism are mounting, dealing a severe blow to multilateralism. China will proceed to improve itself with its door wide open.”

    Collateral injury

    Xi additionally mentioned the collective upward push of emerging markets and creating nations “is unstoppable and will make global construction more balanced”.

    Last week, President Trump mentioned he used to be ready to impose tariffs on all items imported from China – worth $500bn (£380bn).

    Mr Ramaphosa mentioned: “we are involved through the upward thrust in unilateral measures which can be incompatible with Global Industry Group laws and are concerned in regards to the affect of those measures, particularly on creating international locations.”

    South African Industry Minister Rob Davies stated the rustic used to be struggling collateral harm from the u.s. tariffs on metal and aluminium. He mentioned 7,000 South Africans work in jobs affected by the metals price lists and makes an attempt to get an exemption from the united states executive have been unsuccessful.

    An additional 22 international locations are collaborating in this week’s summit, 19 of them from Africa.

    After the hole rite President Ramaphosa introduced that China had promised investments worth $14.7bn into South Africa.

  • Liu Xiaobei heads China’s U.S. hacking operations

    The activities of one of China’s cyber spymasters has been revealed for the first time in a government report on Beijing’s unfair trade practices made public last week.

    The activities of one of China’s cyber spymasters has been revealed for the first time in a government report on Beijing’s unfair trade practices made public last week.

    The role of People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Maj. Gen. Liu Xiaobei, until recently the director of the Third Department of the PLA General Staff known as 3PLA, was disclosed. The Chinese military hacking group has been linked by U.S. intelligence agencies to massive cyberattacks and data theft from the U.S. government, military and private sector for more than a decade.

    Gen. Liu’s current status is not known, but 3PLA is now the core unit of a new service-level military organization known as the Strategic Support Force whose main component is called the Cyber Corps. The Cyber Corps also absorbed the PLA’s psychological warfare unit called 311 Base, which conducts information warfare — disinformation and influence activities.

    It was the first time the U.S. government publicly identified one of China’s senior military hackers, an indication that he may face U.S. sanctions in the future.

    Four years ago, the U.S. government indicted five midlevel PLA hackers who were part of a Shanghai-based group known as Unit 61398.

    The Cyber Corps is believed to employ 100,000 hackers, language specialists and analysts at its headquarters in the Haidian District of Beijing. Branch units are located in Shanghai, Qingdao, Sanya, Chengdu and Guangzhou.

    The recently published report by U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer highlights Beijing’s unfair trade practices and reveals that Gen. Liu directed cyberspying operations on U.S. companies during talks with officials from the state-owned China National Offshore Oil Corp. (CNOOC). The investigative report is the basis for Trump administration plans to impose tariffs on Chinese technology products and to curb investment by Chinese firms in the coming weeks.

    The detailed report, citing U.S. government information, says CNOOC ordered the 3PLA to spy on several U.S. oil and gas companies engaged in cutting-edge shale gas technology. The report outlines two cases involving U.S. companies that were hacked by 3PLA.

    The Chinese military hackers in one case broke into a U.S. company’s network and stole details of its plans for negotiating a deal with CNOOC.

    “CNOOC attributed their ultimate success in the negotiation with U.S. Company 1 to the information that CNOOC had received from the intelligence services,” the trade report said without identifying the American company.

    The report added that “senior Chinese intelligence officials, including a PLA director, Liu Xiaobei, endorsed the use of the intelligence information” in the talks between CNOOC and the company.

    CNOOC also employed the 3PLA in a second case to spy on five U.S. oil and natural gas companies, seeking key data relating to operations, asset management, the movements of senior company officials, shale gas technology, research on lab procedures, fracking technology and fracking formulas.

    “These examples illustrate how China uses the intelligence resources at its disposal to further the commercial interests of Chinese state-owned enterprises to the detriment of their foreign partners and competitors,” the report said.

    The Chinese are using cyberattacks as part of an industrial policy of supporting science and technology development.

    Former Pentagon China specialist Mark Stark in 2015 identified Gen. Liu as 3PLA director, a former deputy director and political commissar of the electronic spying agency often compared to the National Security Agency.

    An NSA document made public by renegade former contractor Edward Snowden revealed that 3PLA’s Technical Department is one of the Chinese government’s most aggressive cybertheft actors, with 19 confirmed and nine other possible cyberunits under its command, according to information as of 2013.

    The other major cyberspying organization is the Chinese Ministry of State Security, which runs six known and 22 suspected cyberspying units.

    China also has seven other Chinese-based cyberattack units that are listed by the NSA as “unattributed” to the Chinese government.

    Another leaked NSA document revealed the massive scope and costly damage inflicted by Chinese military cybertheft.

    Under the title “Chinese exfiltrated sensitive military technology,” the NSA lists radar design, including numbers and types of modules; detailed jet engine schematics such as the methods used to cool gases; aircraft wing leading and trailing edge treatments on stealth jets; and an aft deck heating contour map.

    “Many terabytes of data [have been] stolen,” the NSA stated.

    In a Chinese cybertheft operation code-named Byzantine Hades, the NSA in 2013 logged more than 30,000 incidents, 500 of which were described as significant intrusions of Pentagon computer systems. More than 1,600 network computers were penetrated, compromising 600,000 user accounts and causing over $100 million in damage to rebuild networks.

    A 2014 report by the CIA-based Open Source Enterprise identified Gen. Liu, 62, as an encryption specialist and director of Technical Reconnaissance Department, another term for the 3PLA. He was born in Hongan County, Hubei province, dubbed the “No. 1 country of generals” for the many famous PLA revolutionary-era generals who hail from there.

    In a political propaganda video in 2013 called “Silent Contest,” Gen. Liu said the United States is the main target of Chinese cyberoperations because it is the birthplace of the internet and controls its core resources.

    “The U.S. adopted a double standard regarding internet control: Internally, the U.S. implemented tight control, while externally, the U.S. wantonly expanded,” he said. “The U.S. took advantage of its absolute superiority of the internet and vigorously promoted network interventionism in order to reinforce ideological penetration, and it secretly supported hostile forces to create obstructions and conduct acts of sabotage.”

    Gen. Liu has accused the United States of trying to subvert Communist Party rule in China through influencing the Chinese public via the internet. He made clear in published interviews that China is engaged in information warfare against America.

    “The internet has become a new field and platform for ideological struggle,” he said. “Accordingly, we must not lower our guard; [we] must take control of the commanding height of the internet and maintain both the initiative and discourse power.”

    Gen. Liu, in another report, criticized the United States for suborning Chinese academics and targeting the PLA.

    “Recalling what the U.S. has done over the past 30 years, whether they win over academics by taking advantage of foundations or affect major decision-makers by utilizing ideological penetration, U.S. actions have enjoyed great success within China’s academic and ideological circles,” he said.

    “The last obstacle is China’s military,” he added. “Even if the U.S. cannot disintegrate China’s armed forces or turn China’s military against itself, the U.S. can at least suppress the combat wisdom and willpower of China’s armed forces.”

    CHINESE TECHNOLOGY THEFT COST

    Speaking of Chinese information thievery, the U.S. trade representative report on Chinese unfair trade practices estimates that Beijing’s intellectual property theft costs Americans $225 billion to $600 billion annually in lost information. The losses are one reason the Trump administration is imposing $50 billion to $60 billion in tariffs on imports from China.

    Those tariffs, however, do not cover the additional billions of dollars in losses caused by China’s cyberthefts, administration officials said.

    A new report by a commission of the National Bureau of Asian Research bolsters the U.S. trade representative’s report, noting that China is behind 87 percent of all intellectual property theft incidents globally.

    “The scourge of IP theft and cyber espionage likely continues to cost the U.S. economy hundreds of billions of dollars a year despite improved laws and regulations,” the report by the Commission on the Theft of American Intellectual Property states.

    CHINA’S FALLING SATELLITE

    Sometime this week, a bus-sized Chinese satellite is expected to fall out of orbit and come back to Earth. The impact area of the Tiangong-1 space station is expected to enter the atmosphere sometime from Saturday to Wednesday, and although it is expected to burn up, some pieces may reach the surface.

    The impact zone covers the entire continental United States.

    Defense analysts are calling on China to use one of its new anti-satellite missiles to destroy the falling space station to prevent any debris from posing a danger.

    That was what the Navy successfully did back in 2008 when a nonfunctioning National Reconnaissance Office satellite was destroyed with a modified Navy SM-3 anti-missile interceptor fired from a ship west of Hawaii.

    By exploding the falling NRO satellite, the blast created smaller pieces — all of which burned up in the atmosphere.

    • Contact Bill Gertz on Twitter at @BillGertz.

  • China tries to gauge North Korea nuclear offer

    President Trump praised China for helping drive North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s toward potential denuclearization talks with Washington, but a cautious Beijing has barely even reacted to reports thi

    President Trump praised China for helping drive North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s toward potential denuclearization talks with Washington, but a cautious Beijing has barely even reacted to reports this week that Mr. Kim is offering to halt all nuclear and missile tests while such negotiations play out.

    Despite its status as the North’s ally and main link to the outside world, the Chinese government has not made an official statement on the claim by South Korean officials that Mr. Kim made the offer during talks with them this week, and the newspaper of the ruling Communist party even questioned whether the offer really happened.

    “North Korea still has not confirmed the South’s version of events,” stated an editorial in the Global Times, noting that Pyongyang’s own official state newspaper, the Rodong Sinmun, had said Pyongyang’s actual plan is to proceed with the “advance” of the nation’s “nuclear weaponry.”

    U.S. officials said the editorials underscored ongoing “puzzlement” inside the White House over the true nature of the offer South Korean officials claim Mr. Kim made with regard to missile and nuclear tests.

    South Korean President Moon Jae-in’s office said in a statement Tuesday the North in direct talks had expressed a “willingness to hold a heartfelt dialogue with the United States on the issues of denuclearization” and “made it clear that while dialogue is continuing, it will not attempt any strategic provocations, such as nuclear and ballistic missile tests.”

    But Mr. Moon on Wednesday tried to tamp down expectations for the detente and ease fears that the talks could separate Seoul from Washington and other allies urging a hard line on the North’s nuclear and missile programs. He noted many of the sanctions of the North were imposed by the U.S. or through the United Nations, and would only be eased by “substantive progress” on denuclearization.

    “These international efforts cannot be loosened by inter-Korean dialogue,” Mr. Moon told a meeting of South Korean party leaders in Seoul. “We don’t aim for that to happen and it’s also impossible.”

    The issue, according to Michael Pillsbury, a Mandarin-speaking Pentagon consultant and head of Chinese strategy at the Hudson Institute in Washington, is that “that there seems to be no direct message from North Korea to the U.S. government.”

    “This is all being filtered through the South Korean government,” Mr. Pillsbury said, adding that Chinese officials, who are generally regarded as having better sources on the inner workings of the Pyongyang regime, are still unsure about what is on the table.

    According to the Global Times editorial, the Chinese government so far “does not see a major shift in North Korea’s negotiating position,” said Mr. Pillsbury, who warned in an interview that “there is often a price to pay just to learn that North Korea has not made any real concessions.”

    Joseph DeTrani, a former CIA official who served as the State Department’s special envoy to the North Korean talks that broke down in 2009, said the Chinese have appeared to be “as surprised as everyone else” about South Korea’s claim that Mr. Kim has offered to halt tests and discuss denuclearization with Washington.

    “We’ve got to sit down with the North Koreans and not have anything go through filters,” said Mr. DeTrani. “It’s got to be direct so we can figure out what’s going on, what does Kim Jong Un want, and does he know what he’s doing?”

    President Trump has expressed guarded optimism about the prospect for such talks, but it’s not clear when and whether the talks will occur. South Korean officials said they hope details could take shape during a direct meeting slated for late-April between the North and South Korean presidents.

    Some analysts say Beijing is poised to claim credit for any future progress on U.S.-North Korea talks and may even seek concessions from Washington in exchange for influencing the regime in Pyongyang. The North Korean offer came at the same time Mr. Trump was putting the finishing touches on steel and aluminum tariffs that administration officials were primarily sparked by massive Chinese overproduction and dumping abroad.

    Patrick Cronin, who heads the Asia-Pacific Security Program at the Center for a New American Security in Washington, said Tuesday that if the talks turn out to be successful, “China will then be seeking to extract favors and take credit for it.”

    “The Chinese are all over us on this,” Mr. Cronin said, asserting that Beijing will want concessions from Washington “on trade” relating to everything from “solar panels to aluminum and steel.”

    Seth McLaughlin contributed to this article.