Category: China

Chinese Military Releases Video Looking for Recruits Who Want To “Kill, Kill, Kill”

I could only imagine what the reaction in the US would be to an Army recruiting video looking for people to “Kill, Kill, Kill!”:

China’s military is appealing to the younger generation with a slick new recruitment video featuring aircraft carriers, tanks and special forces troops, all set to a rousing rap-rock soundtrack.

 

With lyrics such as “just waiting for the order to kill, kill, kill,” the video appears aimed at millennials brought up on violent first-person shooter video games such as “Call of Duty.” While no potential opponents are identified in the clip, it cautions that “war can break out at any time,” and asks “are you ready?”

 

The clip, available Wednesday via a link on the Defense Ministry’s official website, appears as the 2.3 million-member People’s Liberation Army is downsizing in an effort to boost its war-fighting capabilities. Chief among those steps is a cut of 300,000 personnel, while the navy, missile corps and air force are receiving more attention and funding.  [Associated Press]

You can read more at the link.

Was Chinese Citizen Linked to Helping Defectors Murdered By North Korea?

I would not be surprised if this was North Korean payback for restaurant defections that happened last month.  If this was a murder by the North Koreans I wonder what the Chinese reaction will be to Kim regime agents murdering Chinese citizens?:

china north korea image

An ethnic Korean clergyman with Chinese nationality has been found dead in a northeastern Chinese town close to the border with North Korea, a North Korea watcher said on Sunday, raising suspicions that the North could possibly be involved in his death.

The body of the priest, identified by his surname Han and known for his activities in support of North Korean defectors, was found Saturday afternoon, the watcher said, speculating that he may have been murdered.

Chinese police have immediately launched a probe into Han’s death.

Han is known for serving at Changbai Church in Changbai County, Jilin Province, a region that is populated by the Chaoxian people, or ethnic Koreans living in China.

“Han had been active in supporting North Korean defectors,” the watcher said. “Murder seems the most likely cause of his death.”  [Yonhap]

You can read more at the link.

US Flies A-10s and Helicopters Over Territory Contested By China

Here is the latest on the South China Sea front where the US is expanding efforts to demonstrate to China the US commitment to freedom of navigation:

Filipino fishermen say they’ve seen more Chinese coast guard ships than usual around the contested Scarborough Shoal, which China effectively took over in 2013 after a tense standoff with Philippine vessels.

Although fishermen have been complaining they’re being driven away by Chinese ships, the Philippine Department of Defense said it could not confirm an increase in Chinese presence at the shoal, 145 miles (230 kilometers) from Luzon island.

Meantime, the U.S. Air Force flew its first mission over the Scarborough area as part of a new Air Contingent force stationed in the Philippines. It involved four A-10C Thunderbolt jets and two Sikorsky HH-60 helicopters.

The mission: establishing air and maritime “domain awareness” and “assuring all nations have access to air and sea domains throughout the region in accordance with international law,” according to a U.S. military statement.

Free navigation “is extremely important, international economics depends on it — free trade depends on our ability to move goods,” said Col. Larry Card, commander of the Air Contingent, part of stepped-up U.S. assistance to its Philippine ally.  [Associated Press]

You can read more at the link.

China Publishes Cartoon Warning Against Dating Foreigners Because They Could Be Spies

Via a reader tip (thanks MTB Rider!) comes this hilarious Chinese cartoon warning Chinese against dating foreigners because they could be spies!  This is even funnier considering how the Chinese intelligence services are well known for using female spies to strike up romantic relationships with Americans that have access to sensitive information.  Maybe the US military should publish a cartoon like this to hand out!  😉

DAVID: Dear, do you still need to keep secrets from me? I’m just taking a look to use in academic articles. XIAO LI: Uhh, OK then.

Are you a foreigner in China who likes to meet locals, and have been known to strike up romantic relationships with gifts and flattery? If so, you should know that you are showing the telltale signs of being a spy.

China is beefing up its defenses against foreign espionage, and they’re hoping to raise public awareness of this danger to national security with its first-ever National Security Education Day held last week.

As reported by China Law Translate, one of the propaganda materials released was called “Dangerous Love” that was seen in residential areas of Xicheng, Beijing.

The 16-panel cartoon follows the story of Xiaoli, a Chinese woman who works in an information department of the country’s civil service. Xiaoli is wooed by a foreigner named David who eventually convinces Xiaoli to hand over sensitive material. Police eventually confront Xiaoli with the revelation that David is in fact a spy, and that she herself is guilty of violating Chinese law regarding state secrets.

As with a number of recent Chinese propaganda releases, “Dangerous Love” uses cartoons as a way to make its content and intentions very clear to its readers.  [The Nan Fang]

You can read the whole series of cartoons at the link.

Report Claims that Chinese Customs Taking Bribes to Avoid North Korean Sanctions

Who knows if this is true or not, but I would not be surprised at all if China is claiming one thing to the international media about enforcing sanctions and then in reality continuing to let banned items into North Korea to sustain the Kim regime’s military:

china north korea image

Although inspections at border customs offices have officially intensified as China takes measures to abide by international sanctions targeting North Korea (UNSCR 2270), it is being been reported that Chinese companies and their North Korean counterparts have been disguising military supplies as everyday merchandise in order to smuggle them through customs checkpoints.

“There is a lot of talk about how the new sanctions are harsher than those adopted in years past, but illegal smuggling through border customs is continuing relatively unimpeded,” a source in North Hamgyong Province told Daily NK on April 1.

This is because the North Korean Ministry of People’s Armed Forces operates a number of entities acting under the pretense of ordinary trading companies, trading entities and mobilization offices that are tasked with bringing banned items into North Korea.

“In particular, the Kumunsan Trade Company and a munitions branch called ‘Sung Kang Office,’ are using bribery and illicit methods to smuggle supplies despite the sanctions. These items include tires, stainless steel, machine components, acetone, industrial lubricant, and raw materials needed for gunpowder production. The items are labeled as normal goods in order to get them past the customs guards,” the source added.        [The Daily NK]

You can read more at the link.

China Blames the West of Launching Disinformation Campaign with Leak of Panama Papers

The Panama Papers have shown links to secret offshore companies from major Chinese politicians to include President Xi.  This is definitely a huge blow to to Xi who has been pushing anti-corruption reforms within China when his own family is hiding money.  In response to this the Chinese government is claiming this is all lies and have launched a massive campaign to scrub all information on the Panama Papers from the Chinese Internet:

A huge leak of tax documents that revealed the secret offshore accounts of relatives of former and current Chinese leaders, including President Xi Jinping, could be a part of a “disinformation” campaign by Western forces, a newspaper published by China’s Communist Party said Tuesday.

The revelation came after a year-long investigation by more than 100 media groups worldwide into 11.5 million documents, leaked from Panama-based law firm Mossack Fonseca, found offshore financial transactions by influential figures such as aides to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Dubbed the “Panama Papers,” the leaked documents were obtained by a German newspaper Sueddeutsche Zeitung and shared with media organizations worldwide by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists.

In an editorial titled “Powerful force is behind Panama Papers,” the state-run Global Times newspaper said, “The documents revealed do have basic political targets.”

“In the Internet era, disinformation poses no major risks to Western influential elites or the West,” it said. “In the long run, it will become a new means for the ideology-allied Western nations to strike a blow to non-Western political elites and key organizations.”  [Yonhap]

You can read more at the link.  The release of the Panama Papers does make me wonder if western intelligence agencies did have anything to do with  the release of the documents?  This would be a great shot across the bow to China and Russia to do more to stop North Korea’s provocations and nuclear ambitions or face the release of more embarrassing documents.

Tweet of the Day: China International Hub of Money Laundering

Argentine Coast Guard Sinks Chinese Fishing Boat

This is what the ROK and everyone else should do to these thug Chinese fishermen who violate territorial waters and then endanger the lives of Coast Guaed personnel responding to their illegal actions:

Buenos Aires (CNN)Argentina’s coast guard says it sank a Chinese fishing vessel that was fishing in a restricted area off the South American country’s coast.

The Argentine Naval Prefecture chased and eventually sank the Lu Yan Yuan Yu 010 vessel after detecting it illegally fishing within the country’s exclusive economic zone, officials said Tuesday.

First, according to a statement from the Argentine coast guard, warning shots were fired. The Chinese vessel, Argentine authorities said, responded by turning off its lights and deliberately trying to crash.

“On distinct occasions, the offending boat realized maneuvers aimed at colliding with the coast guard, putting not only its own crew at risk, but also the personnel of the coast guard,” the statement said.  [CNN]

You can read more at the link. 

Picture of the Day: Giant Chinese Cruise Ship Visits Incheon

Cruise ship comes to Incheon with Chinese tourists

Quantum of the Seas, the largest cruise ship plying Northeast Asia, docks at Songdo Port in Incheon, west of Seoul, on March 4, 2016, carrying some 4,800 Chinese tourists. The 167,000-ton ship can carry up to 4,900 passengers and 1,500 crew members. South Korea is expecting more than 1.5 million people to visit Korea on cruise ships this year. (Yonhap) 

Has China Finally Gotten Serious With Sanctions on North Korea?

At least on the surface for international consumption it appears that China has finally gotten serious with implementing sanctions on the Kim regime, but I have to wonder how stringently they will stop all the black market and shady ways they can move money and goods into North Korea?:

north korea nuke

Even before the Security Council passed Resolution 2270, the UN’s harshest sanctions on North Korea, Chinese officials acted. Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, China’s largest bank, reportedly froze the accounts of North Korean customers in Dandong, the Chinese city across the Yalu River from the North. It appears Bank of China, China Merchants Bank, and Bank of Dandong also dropped North Koreans.

After 2270, China put 31 of Pyongyang’s vessels on a “blacklist” and prevented one of them from docking. Two others are now sailing away from Chinese ports.

Because at least 75 percent of the North’s trade is with China, Beijing could bring down its ally if it continues to enforce the Security Council’s new measures.

The Kim regime, therefore, could be confronted with “an existential crisis,” Scarlatoiu says. Wu Dawei, China’s always discreet point man on North Korea, seems to agree. In comments made a few days ago to Pulse News, a South Korean site, he said the North “signed its own death warrant.”The Kimster, therefore, has much to think about. One thing we know: He’s not going to sit back and accept his demise. So what will he do?  [Daily Beast]

The whole article is worth reading at the link.