November 26, 2024

Geopolitics

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Christians bore the brunt of Syria conflict
The world seems to have forgotten about Syria. You could excuse this after a dozen years of bloody conflict, humanitarian catastrophes and a jarring earthquake in February. Equally there’s a global crisis overload from the Middle East to Eastern Europe and looming in East Asia. Read More.
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World's top crime syndicate? That would be the CCP
The communist regime in Beijing is involved in the trafficking of illegal drugs, protected wildlife, and humans. It launders cash and participates in ransomware attacks. It steals intellectual property. As a matter of state policy, it murders people for their organs. Read More.
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Specialists: Nuclear threat from China is ‘real’ and ‘rising’
The growing nuclear threat posed by China is “potentially catastrophic” and the United States needs to bolster its deterrence to deal with it, a group of senior specialists have warned. Read More.
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U.S. tax dollars going to projets in China, Russia
U.S. taxpayers are funding projects in China and Russia which include funding Chinese tech support for the U.S. military, a report said. Read More.
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North Korea named to U.S.-funded WHO's Executive Board
Here's what American taxpayers are getting for their money: The WHO has named North Korea to its Executive Board. Read More.
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North Korea-Iran: Rogue state strategic alliance to watch
For 40 years, the two isolated states have been cooperating on missile technology. Every step of the way, they have defied international sanctions while building two of the most threatening missile programs on the planet. Read More.
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Chinese in America called on to 'serve the motherland'
Chinese "compatriots" in the United States are being called on to "serve the motherland." Read More.
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Erdogan still standing as Turkey weighs its destiny
Another earthquake has jolted Turkey. But contrary to the seismic calamity which devastated large parts of eastern Turkey in February killing more than 50,000 people this was an electoral jolt whose political shockwaves and aftershocks continue to rattle the entire country from Istanbul, through the Anatolian plain to far off Mt. Ararat on the Armenian frontier. Read More.
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S. Korea vote hacked? Election officials not cooperating
The National Election Commission (NEC), a constitutional independent institution established to manage South Korea's elections, has refused to cooperate with an investigation into North Korea hacking attempts made on the NEC and the equipment it uses which is used in other nations' elections, a report said. Read More.
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Jimmy Lai’s son: Hong Kong is not a ‘safe place to do business’
The Chinese Communist Party’s brutal crackdown on political and civil rights has made it unsafe to do business in Hong Kong, the son of an imprisoned media tycoon toldd multinational corporations in an address to a U.S. congressional hearing on Thursday. Read More.
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Taiwan's U.S. envoy rejects defeatism by Buffet, tech chiefs
Taiwan’s unofficial ambassador to the United States reiterated that, despite China’s threats, Taiwan should not be counted out. Read More.
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Pakistan paramilitary forces arrest former PM Khan
Violent protests erupted throughout Pakistan following the arrest on Tuesday of former Prime Minister Imran Khan, reports say. Read More.
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Americans trapped in Sudan are on their own
There’s blood in the Nile. The mighty river separating Sudan’s capital city Khartoum has seen fighting erupt between two rival factions of the Army. Read More.
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CIA nudges Brazil to align with anti-U.S. Marxists
Suddenly, it seems, the United States is surrounded by Marxist-led countries throughout the entire Western Hemisphere. Ernest Hemingway’s famous quotation — “How did you go bankrupt? Two ways. Gradually, then suddenly” — best describes the Marxist encirclement that suddenly appeared around the USA. Read More.
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South Korea wanted tactical nukes, Biden said no
After a decade of North Korea’s and China’s alarming nuclear and missile buildup, plus nuclear and missile tests, a poll from the South Korean firm Data Research released on March 1, 2023 stated that 70 percent of South Koreans support indigenous development of nuclear weapons. Read More.

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