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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Maurice Winn who wrote (149476)7/2/2019 6:22:33 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218197
 
re long-arm laws, it is mind-boggling that suspect msm rags such as Newsweek are spoon-feeding the electorates that team America can tee-up and hope to sustain and actually be effective w/ rubbish laws such as <<Countering America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act>> ... my premise is that the electorates are misguided, but let's wait & see

suspect that as team USA weaponises more usual day-to-day utilities, there would be less to weaponise, until one day there is nothing left to weaponise - a guess

https://www.newsweek.com/china-buy-russia-jets-sanctions-1446974

China May Buy More Advanced Russian Jets, Ignoring U.S. Sanctions

By Tom O'Connor On 7/1/19 at 6:19 PM EDT

China is reportedly considering an offer to purchase more advanced Russian fighter jets, once again ignoring U.S. sanctions.

The state-run Tass Russian News Agency cited the Federal Service for Military-Technical Cooperation as saying Wednesday it was "expecting a response from China on our offer to purchase modern weapons and military equipment manufactured in Russia, including additional batches of Su-35 fighter jets."

The aircraft is an upgraded version of the Sukhoi Su-27 and Beijing already bought two dozen for some $2.5 billion.

Official China Central Television column Weihutang issued a report of its own Saturday suggesting that a second batch could help to further modernize the Chinese air force's aging fleet. On Sunday, however, Chinese air defense expert Fu Qianshao told Chinese Communist Party tabloid The Global Times that there would likely be another reason for the purchase.

Fu argued that, rather than simply bringing China's aerial capabilities up to date, such an acquisition would secure more spare parts and dedicated personnel involved in the Su-35 program. He also suggested that the purchase could have political and economic elements, demonstrating close ties between China and Russia at a time when their relationship with the U.S. deteriorated.


A fleet of China-owned Sukhoi Su-35s is deployed in this undated photo, shared by the Chinese air force to social media site Sina Weibo. Russia has offered to sell China another batch of the upgraded fighter jet. Chinese People's Liberation Army

This explanation was accepted by Michael Peck, writing Monday for The National Interest. The Diplomat's senior editor Franz-Stefan Gady also commented on the potential purchase, explaining Thursday that the Chinese Su-35 "can reportedly be with air-to-air and air-to-ground missiles, unguided rockets, guided bomb units and unguided bombs including the R-27 (AA-10 'Alamo'), R-73 (AA-11 'Archer'), RVV-family air-to-air missiles, as well as Kh-35E (AS-20 'Kayak') anti-ship missiles."

Sukhoi described the Su-35 as "a multi-purpose, super-maneuverable fighter of the fourth-plus-plus generation" that received its "baptism of fire" through its participation in Russia's campaign against rebels and jihadis seeking to overthrow the government in Syria. The aircraft was said capable of tracking up to 30 air targets at once and engaging eight, among other high-tech feats.

China first signed a deal to buy 24 Su-35s back in 2015 and the Federal Service for Military-Technical Cooperation reported last April that the delivery was complete. In September, the State Department announced it would be sanctioning the Equipment Development Department of China's Central Military Commission over its acquisition of Russia's "Su-35 combat aircraft and S-400 surface-to-air missile system-related equipment."

The first-ever use of the Countering America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act angered both Moscow and Beijing, with Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Geng Shuang arguing at the time that Washington "seriously violated the basic norms governing international relations and seriously damaged the relations between the two countries and the two militaries."

The following day, Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin pledged to do more business in their respective national currencies to minimize their dependence on the U.S. dollar at the Eastern Economic Forum in Russia's Vladivostok. Beijing has also joined Moscow for a record number of joint military exercises in recent years as Putin signed on to Xi's ambitious Belt and Road Initiative envisioning hundreds of billions of dollars worth of infrastructure projects across the globe.

The U.S. has attempted to push back against China's growing economic clout abroad and has at the same time challenged its broad territorial claims in the contested waters of the South China Sea. The Su-35 has at times been dispatched for patrols in the disputed region, where China has repeatedly warned the U.S. Navy against "freedom of navigation" within the Pacific maritime borders claimed by Beijing.



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (149476)7/2/2019 9:14:55 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218197
 
Should expect intern camps at some juncture ...

In case folks are waiting for the clarion call w/r to trumped-up charges based on testing chips of his own design

scmp.com
US federal court finds Chinese-American engineer Shih Yi-chi guilty of exporting military-grade semiconductorsShih Yi-chi, an electrical engineer and former adjunct professor at UCLA, illegally sent chips to a firm in Chengdu, the US Justice Department charged


… and in case of doubt

scmp.com

Fear mounts that Chinese-American scientists are being targeted amid US national security crackdown‘Any scientist should be very worried because this is hurting US science and technology,’ says a professor who was arrested and is now suing the FBIConcerns are raised about bias and ethnic profiling



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (149476)7/2/2019 9:23:25 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218197
 
Confirmation, sort of, of November 2020 H-Day

Maybe even an election-day present

scmp.com
Why the US may be supercharging China’s tech ambitions with its Huawei ban

Although counterintuitive, the US may be prolonging its lead in software and hardware over China by relaxing its ban on Huawei

Chua Kong Ho

Published: 6:00am, 3 Jul, 2019

The US Commerce Department placed Huawei and 70 of its affiliates on a blacklist in mid-May, a move that banned US companies from doing business with the Chinese telecoms gear giant without permission.

Since then, American companies have scrambled to figure out the legal boundaries of their compliance. From Google and Microsoft to Qualcomm and Intel, the line-up of US suppliers laid bare the reliance that Huawei, and by extension, China, has on American technology.

So when President Donald Trump said over the weekend at the G20 meeting in Osaka, Japan, that he was relaxing the ban on Huawei, one can imagine the collective sigh of relief at the Chinese company’s Shenzhen headquarters. But American companies too will be keeping their fingers crossed that the mercurial US leader will deliver.

That is because beyond the resumption of an important source of revenue for American tech companies, a relaxation of the trade ban may remove the impetus for Huawei to roll out a proprietary backup operating system for its phones, tablets and other devices, and blunt the pace of developing its own semiconductors.

Although counterintuitive, the US may be prolonging its lead in software and hardware over China by relaxing the ban as opposed to going all out to try and crush would-be challengers.

US chip makers pressed Trump to give Huawei a break. Here’s how

But as a Chinese saying goes, even a rabbit will bite when cornered, and Huawei is no rabbit.

Huawei crossed US$100 billion in annual revenue last year, putting it in the league of global companies like Google’s parent, Alphabet. Even after taking a hit from US sanctions, Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei said he expects the company to maintain about the same level of revenue this year and next.

Huawei spent US$15.3 billion on research and development last year, trailing only Amazon, Alphabet and Samsung Electronics. The company is in everything from mobile to cloud computing to smart city management. It is the global market share leader in telecommunications network equipment that is critical for the roll-out of ultra-fast 5G networks, which when fully implemented promises to power everything from autonomous cars to virtual reality to smart cities.

At last week’s Innovfest Unbound tech conference in Singapore, Huawei was one of the major sponsors and held presentations throughout the day at its stand showcasing its various technologies. When I passed by, the place was jam-packed with people listening to a Huawei presenter detailing the accuracy of its computer vision abilities.

The US trade ban in mid-May has forced Huawei into overdrive to ensure its survival. As the Post reported, Huawei first started working on its own OS back in 2012 when the US Justice Department began investigations into the company. What is holding the company back has been the lack of an ecosystem of apps as well as its compatibility with Android, the dominant OS in the market today.

Inside Huawei’s secretive plans to build an operating system to rival Android

In a classic chicken-and-egg situation, developers have little incentive to build apps for an OS that is not on the market, while Huawei has little reason to introduce the OS without the accompanying ecosystem. But that has changed with the US ban, and Huawei’s mobile chief, Richard Yu Chengdong, was quoted as saying the new OS could be ready in the coming year.

Google and Microsoft understand what is at stake with a Huawei OS, no matter how immature or incomplete it is at the start. Huawei insiders have said that the two American companies have been active in helping the company deal with the US government, because they cannot afford to lose Huawei, and perhaps more importantly, potentially other Chinese smartphone companies as customers should they switch to a Huawei OS.

It is important to note that the only major US smartphone maker, Apple, has its own separate OS and ecosystem.

Reports suggest that US chip firms Intel, Qualcomm and Xilinx have also been lobbying against the Huawei ban, as they stand to lose billions in revenue from losing the Chinese giant as a customer.

Ironically, the best course of action to ensure US superiority in tech may be to supply Huawei and China’s tech ecosystem so as to remove the economic argument for producing inferior alternatives.

Bewildered by US actions, Huawei has sharpened its focus on China

In this scenario, Chinese companies would have no chance for full self-sufficiency as long as they remain reliant on US tech, thus preserving America’s global lead.

But whether the economic argument alone is enough to return the tech world to the pre-ban status quo is debatable. A prevalent view in China is that the US is suppressing Huawei because it realised it has no champion able to take it on in 5G.

But what if Chinese companies no longer believe they can have reliable access to American technology to run their phones, laptops and data centres, or supercomputers? The simple answer is to pour in even more resources into building their own, even if economically it does not make sense.

That may be reflected in President Xi Jinping’s call last May for China to go all-in for scientific self-reliance when the same US strategy of withholding tech from ZTE crippled China’s No. 2 telecoms gear manufacturer. In China’s favour is a large domestic market that can generate demand for home-grown tech.

It is hard to imagine that having been held in a chokehold not once, but twice, that China Inc. would be happy just because the US says it will loosen its grip.



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (149476)7/3/2019 9:59:38 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 218197
 
bullish

shall spend some time ruminating on the possibilities

reuters.com

Trump repeats call for U.S. to play 'currency manipulation game'

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald Trump on Wednesday repeated his call for the United States to match efforts by China and Europe to manipulate currencies and pump money into their economies.

“China and Europe playing big currency manipulation game and pumping money into their system in order to compete with USA. We should MATCH, or continue being the dummies who sit back and politely watch as other countries continue to play their games - as they have for many years!” Trump tweeted.

Reporting by Susan Heavey; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama