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


To: Gib Bogle who wrote (164392)10/27/2020 10:22:03 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218140
 
Anything that seeks (radar / sonar), aims (rocket guidance), targets (chips), communicates (microphone), broadcasts (speakers / headsets), and actuates (electro magnets)

All the toys go cold-stop w/o China-China-China REE

The Japanese in 2010 captured a Chinese fishing boat captain who allegedly rammed a Japanese coast guard ship, and was going to do a show trial. Team China announced testing of REE weapon system to cut off Japanese industry, starting w/ the likes of Toyota. The Japanese announced release of fishing boat captain over the intervening weekend, completing successful REE weapon system and protected world peace.

My conjecture is that the REE system can work well in Nasdaq, but if I am wrong, than perhaps only half wrong, but if only and just half wrong, then not wrong.

Let’s see and wait.

Team China had already cut export of REE by up to 70% y-o-y, and inventories ex-China must be done.

I am as curious as anyone to see where the war escalates to



To: Gib Bogle who wrote (164392)10/27/2020 11:23:41 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 218140
 
would say Team China announcement is fairly and very transparent, leaves little in doubt, and the threat is clear and present, re coming cardiac arrest event

Only doubt being whether Team China only cuts off Lockheed directly or use block-chain to cut-off suppliers to Lockheed, or cut-off suppliers to suppliers of Lockheed, and also

henceforth require all REE sourced out of China to be transacted over WeChat using Digital Yuan, or even better, transacted over TikTok using Digital Yuan, requiring security deposit large-enough to matter, to ensure full enthusiastic compliance w/ China National Security legislation and allowing trusted entities to make a profit as reward to upholding national security, world peace, Yuan internationalisation, and and and

:0)

If all of the above sounds familiar, is because Team China just clip / copy / pasted Capitol Hill pronouncements as good as word for word, tic for tac, TikTok

globaltimes.cn

China may restrict rare-earth imports, issue financial blockades over US arms sale to Taiwan: analysts

China US Photo: VCG

China announced to sanction firms including Lockheed Martin, Boeing Defense, Raytheon as well as individuals and entities that are involved in arms sales to the island of Taiwan. The latest response with unprecedented scale and strength against firms, individuals and entities involved in the arms sale came after an event in China to commemorate a war against US aggression in Korea 70 years ago. It sends a clear signal that China's decision-making won't be disturbed by the US and any acts that have undermined China's sovereignty, security and development interests are bound to face serious consequences, analysts said.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian told a routine press conference on Monday that the sanctions were in response to recently approved US arms sales to Taiwan on October 21, which could have a total value of $1.81 billion.

The spokesperson reiterated that the US weapons sales to the island of Taiwan have severely violated the one-China principle and the provisions of the three China-US joint communiqués and seriously undermined China's sovereignty and security interests. China firmly opposes this and strongly condemns it.

China urges the US to cease arms sales to Taiwan and terminate any military connections with the island, he noted, adding that "China will continue to take necessary measures to safeguard the country's sovereignty and security interests."

Zhao did not outline the details of the sanctions at the Monday press conference. However, analysts reached by the Global Times on Monday floated theories that China's retaliations against such foul acts by the US could range from restrictions on rare earth imports to obstructing entry into the civilian market entry from the firms, individuals and entities involved.

China has many options at hand to give them a hard time, said Li Haidong, a professor at the Institute of International Relations of the China Foreign Affairs University.

A restriction on the rare earth supply chain is apparently one of them, as it could effectively hurt the firms' raw materials processing stage in their defense business sector. And limits on their civilian market entry in China could hurt them even more, as no sensible company could afford to lose the most vibrant market in the world, Li elaborated.

For instance, many of Lockheed Martin's key products, including F-35 fighter jets and Patriot missiles, rely on components made with rare earths, analysts said. China is the world's largest rare-earth exporter, and the US imports about 80 percent of the rare earth it needs from China, reports said.

Song Zhongping, a military expert and TV commentator, told the Global Times on Monday that Boeing might be affected the most by the new sanctions, as the broader Boeing company has larger scale civilian and commercial business connection in China than others on the list.

The individuals and entities on the sanction list are very likely to include US politicians such as Senator Marco Rubio who reportedly applauded the White House's approval, Song said.

On top of conventional sanctions against firms - such as simply ending their trade contracts - China could target high-tier employees more precisely by freezing their bank accounts in China, or restricting their travel to China as well as their business activities including exchanges with smaller firms in downstream supply chains in China, Wang Ya'nan, a defense industry expert and chief editor of Aerospace Knowledge, told the Global Times on Monday.

But Wang said he believed that the civilian business in China of these firms, especially Boeing, would be barely affected by the sanctions.

"Boeing applies very strict divisions in its defense and civilian businesses, and Beijing will only target the offensive defense sector of the company rationally," the expert said.

Boeing Defense is one of the broader company's three business units, and the other two are commercial and space units, according to its website.

Lockheed Martin does conduct some business in China in the new energy, civilian aviation and space industries, though not on a large scale, according to Weihutang, a program on military affairs affiliated with China Central Television.

According to CNN, the US State Department has approved sales to the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the US of 135 Standoff Land Attack Missile Expanded Response (SLAM-ER) missiles and related equipment estimated at more than $1 billion, 11 High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems M142 Launchers and related equipment for an estimated $436.1 million and six MS-110 Recce Pods and related equipment for an estimated $367.2 million.

The US may have become used to wantonly imposing sanctions in the international community, but must now prepare for sanctions itself if it continues to challenge China's bottom line on the Taiwan question, analysts said.



To: Gib Bogle who wrote (164392)10/27/2020 11:34:14 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218140
 
rare earths at work



I frankly do not get what folks see in the advantages of a trade war or any war w/ Team China, certainly a sizeable customer and definitely a secure supplier, even during a global pandemic

forbes.com

China Releases Video Of New Barrage Swarm Drone Launcher


David Hambling
12:17pm EDT

CETC, a state-owned Chinese company, has released a new video claiming to show the successful test of a ‘barrage swarm’ that launches 48 attack drones to saturate a target. It is described as the first practical Chinese swarming drone system.

The launch vehicle, with 48 cells for drones, is based on the Chinese version of the Hummer.

CETCThe details of the tests carried out in September were released on Tuesday by the Institute of Electronic Science and Technology of China. The drones are launched from a vehicle based on the Dongfeng Menshi, which evolved from a license-built version of the U.S. Hummer H1. The drones are launched with compressed air, then unfold their wings and fly to the target area with an electric-powered propeller. The kamikaze drones carry high-explosive warheads, potentially powerful enough to destroy tanks and other armor. The concept is similar to AeroVironment’s recently-unveiled SwitchBlade 600, but deployed in much larger numbers, with multiple drones aiming to swamp defenses.



China has long had tactical loitering munitions like the 20-pound CH-901, which cruises over the target area beaming back video for the operator to locate a target, then diving in to destroy it on command. In 2018 China displayed a launch vehicle with eight CH-901s, which would be launched one at a time. The difference here is the swarming technology, which means the operator only needs to designate the target. Swarming software ensures that the drones will fly together without colliding, and will co-operate to ensure that all targets are attacked rather than every drone going for the highest-value vehicle.

The video shows the operator tapping on a target from the drone’s-eye video displayed on a tablet computer, which the drones then home in on. And yes, it does look a lot like the drone attack sequence in recent Hollywood blockbuster Angel Has Fallen, which itself was probably inspired by the U.S. Navy’s LOCUST swarming attack drone project in development since 2015.

The video also shows swarming drones being launched from a helicopter.

The secret of the new Chinese system is likely to lie in a special chip, a ‘multifunction processing unit for swarm intelligence’ which the makers, CETC, announced last October. They claim this unit includes a complete flight control system, mission planning, intelligent decision-making, and dynamic networking between drones, as well as the ability to recognize targets and other objects. This sounds very much like a special-purpose swarm-enabled version of Intel’s INTC -2.3% Movidius AI processor, which has also been used to control smart drones. The developers claimed in 2019 that their chip had already bene used to successfully control drone swarms. Such a processor makes it possible to produce large numbers of drones at low cost, as the electronics tend to be the expensive part.

The exact type of the drone – and hence the performance, range, and warhead details – are not known. The CH-901 cruises for two hours at between 40 and 75 mph. In March, the PLA announced it was procuring two types of loitering munition, it is not known whether the swarming system will be one of them.

China is a major exporter of armed drones, and missile-armed Wing Loong drones have seen action in Libya.

Defending against this type of swarm is challenging. Jammers may not work against autonomous drones which do not have a direct link to the operator and which may navigate by landmarks (like AeroVironment’s AVAV +0.4% SwitchBlade) and do not rely on GPS. Air defense system like the U.S. Army’s new SHORAD-IM due in 2023, which mounts six missiles and a cannon, may not be able to knock down incoming drones fast enough. The best answer may lie in the U.S. Navy’s concept of counter-swarms able to outwit and outfight the attackers.

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