The Duran Podcast - Blinken warns China. Sanctions, Proxy War and Regime Change
Episode Date: April 27, 2024Blinken warns China. Sanctions, Proxy War and Regime Change ...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, Alexander, let's talk about Blinkin's visit to China.
And the viral moment that is being shared all over social media is the people that's the person that came to greet Lincoln at the airport.
And it is fun to see that video.
It's gone viral and everyone's joking about it.
But it does show a lot.
it does really reveal a lot as to as to what to expect in this meeting between Blinken and his Chinese counterparts.
So let's talk about it.
Blinken is the bad cop.
Yellen a couple of weeks ago was the good cop.
And Blinken is coming to deliver an ultimatum to the Chinese.
What are your thoughts?
Well, the Chinese are absolutely furious about it.
Now, I've been speaking to people like Sofia Midgift, who of course keeps track of things in China
and opinion there.
And she says that Chinese social media has been on fire about this.
The Chinese media generally has been on fire about this.
I've seen echoes of this in Global Times and others.
The Chinese feel that yet again, we've had a situation where Xi Jinping was persuaded by the Biden administration to come to San Francisco.
he had that meeting with Biden back in November.
It looked for a time as if things, you know, steps have been taken to steady the ship.
And what's happened instead is that as the weeks have passed, the US has been pressing forward with its various policies.
We've had the TikTok ban.
We've had the arming of Taiwan.
People overlook that these are important parts of this package that has just passed past, past,
Congress on Saturday.
The seizure of the $5 billion of Russian assets in the United States is also relevant to this
because, of course, if the United States can seize Russian assets,
give itself the legal power to do that, then of course you can do the same to Chinese assets.
Don't forget that.
So, I mean, that's something that the Chinese have also taken note of.
And then, of course, we've had this astonishing set of briefings that have been given to the Wall Street Journal and to the Financial Times,
which say that if the Chinese don't basically stop their trade with Russia, stop providing Russia with all these machine tools and chips and all of that,
then the US will start imposing sanctions on the Chinese financial.
financial system. And the Chinese are absolutely furious about that. They say that once again,
the United States is showing its duplicity and its hypocrisy. Nothing like this was mentioned to
Xi Jinping when he went to San Francisco in November, which he'd been certainly reluctant for a time,
if you remembered, even to go there. But the Americans have sweet talk, the Chinese and are they coming
back and they're making all these threats. And the Chinese are making it very clear that if
Blinken does indeed come along with these threats and these demands of this kind of ultimatum,
then the Chinese are not going to accept it. They're going to push back. There's even apparently
comments on Chinese social media asking why Blinken was allowed to come to China at all.
that after those briefings that appeared in the Wall Street Journal and the financial times,
China should have withdrawn the invitation.
So, you know, that's the kind of mood that there is in China at the moment.
And the fact that he's not been well received at the airport is a minor thing.
The fact that Xi Jinping appears to be on a tour to Chongqing in the far west of China,
which presumably means that he isn't going to be in Beijing to meet Blinken.
I don't know whether a meeting with Brinkin was ever planned.
Well, that might also be interesting too.
But on top of all of that, the Chinese have now issued a 3,000 word position paper setting
up where they want relations with the US to go.
And it is clearly intended to put the Chinese in a position where when they meet with Lincoln,
they have they're able to go on the attack and that's presumably what's going to happen there this is going to be a very very stormy
an angry meeting between the americans of the chinese all right so you've mentioned in in a past video
how the the trade with russia narrative is is the cover story the real reason for this this trip and this
ultimatum from, from Blinken and the Biden White House is to basically tell China to knock it off.
Knock it off with bricks, knock it off with the SCO, all of your alternative financial systems and your
alternative institutions in the multipolar world, knock it off or else.
How does China react to that? I imagine that even if China gives an, and,
inch of ground. They've lost this game of chicken. That's really what we have going on here. It really
is a game of chicken. It's the U.S. saying, I dare you. I'm coming to China, and I am daring you
to go against us, to not listen to us and to go your own way and do all these things that
you're doing. I dare you to go ahead and do that. And if you do that, then we're going to unleash
sanctions hell on you. What is going to be the Chinese reaction? And this is just a quick
note, just a quick note, this also is relative to TikTok, because TikTok in a way is the Biden
White House saying either sell us TikTok, divest from TikTok, or we're shutting it down. And
if China does divest from TikTok, then you know the U.S. is going to ask for more and more and more
from China. So there's a lot of moving pieces here with this game of chicken. The Chinese are not
going to give an inch, and they've already said as much. I mean, they understand fully well
that this business about the Russia-Chinese trade, the scale of which, there's a good article
actually about this in the financial times, the scale of which any way is overstated, actually.
I mean, it's risen an awful lot, but it's risen to the level that you would expect
between two such big economies. China-Russia trade.
was artificially low for a very, very long time
because the Russians prefer to trade with Europe.
Now that that's ended, it's basically Chinese Russia trade
is rising to its natural level.
And that's, I mean, that's all that there is to say about that.
Obviously, the Russians are able to buy chips
and machine tools from China, and they will continue to do so.
But lots of countries buy chips
and machine tools.
There are lots of these things.
The Russians can make machine tools themselves.
They've got a major increasing their machine tools industry very fast.
This is all a completely fake narrative again.
It's a narrative constructed to justify sanctions.
And the Chinese, I think, believe that sanctions are coming.
You remember, was it about a year ago when the US began to sanction Chinese?
officials. That was the time when we coined the expression, the escalatory escalator, that the
Americans were starting a sanctions to start sanctions, and from that moment on, the sanctions
would get stronger and stronger. Now, it looks like they're going to start sanctioning Chinese
banks, which the Chinese expect to happen. I mean, that's, I think,
their assumption that that's inevitable now.
So what the Chinese are going to do is a number of things.
Firstly, they're stallpiling.
They are buying gold.
They are buying every conceivable thing that you can buy
that their economy would need for the next year or two.
You know, commodities.
That's why prices of commodities are rising and rising so fast.
Secondly, they're going to get closer to the Russians.
Because it makes sense, because Russia is their way of applying pressure on the Americans.
That's the second thing.
And the third thing they're going to do is they're going to push on even harder
building up those global and financial trading systems that they have been talking about.
And we've just heard news that Xi Jinping intends to attend the BRIC summit in Kazan,
where the paperwork in Russia, where the basic outlines of this plan are going to be put together.
So that's what's going to happen.
And I think the Chinese feel both incredibly angry because, again, they feel that they were deceived by the administration back in November of the San Francisco summit.
But I think they also feel confident that over time they can win through.
What about the $8 billion to Taiwan?
Is the Biden White House, is that their way of putting pressure or exerting leverage over China as blinking goes to China for meetings?
I think this is part of an overall plan to create a militarily strong Taiwan, which the Biden administration believes can resist China.
I think it is as ambitious as that. I don't think this is just a mechanism.
for pressure. I think the long-term plan is to have Taiwan declare independence from China,
secede from China. It's going to be protected by the US fleet. It's going to have powerful armed
forces. And the hope, again, the anticipation is that Taiwan will be so strong that it can resist
the Chinese military and that will create a political crisis in China, leading eventually,
to regime change there. And by the way, there's been an article in, I think it was foreign affairs
by a man called Pottinger, who was a former deputy, a national security advisor. I think in George W. Bush's
time, I may be wrong about that. And he's actually said that, you know, the policy should not
be managing the relationship with China. It is achieving victory over China, in effect, regime
change. So that's what the agenda is. I mean, it's the, the agenda is. I mean, it's the,
same gender that we've seen with Russia. It's failed spectacularly with Russia, but it is being
attempted this time with John. Yeah, sounds very familiar to the whole Project Ukraine. It's exactly
like Project Ukraine. They just don't learn, do they? Before we wrap up the video, can you address
the – I don't know if you saw the article. I forgot where it was. I think it was a defense
a military or defense publication.
Yeah, I know the one where they talk.
Okay, so you know the one that I'm referring to.
I just don't remember the publication.
No, I didn't remember it.
But, yeah, it went viral, though.
I mean, a lot of people started to talk about it because it essentially said that from a military
point of view, that if there was to be a conflict between the U.S. and China, basically
the U.S. would win because China doesn't have any military experience.
It doesn't have the experience of fighting wars, of which the U.S.
has a lot of experience fighting wars. What are your thoughts on that article and the release,
the release of that article and it's really drummed up a lot of discussion and debate that article.
What are your thoughts?
The first thing to say is, I mean, the very fact that a potential war with China is being discussed in that way,
is incredibly alarming.
I mean, it tells you that some people in the United States
actually won't war with China.
I mean, that's the only way I can explain it
because this is this, you know, saying, you know,
we shouldn't be afraid of China
because we can fight them and we can beat them.
Our military is so much better than their military
that, you know, let's plan and think and talk about war with China
and we shouldn't be scared of them.
On the contrary, they should be scared of us.
And then, of course, we have the next paradox, because we hear all the time about how aggressive and militaristic the Chinese supposedly are.
But the reason we are so much stronger than the Chinese is not because we've got better weapons than they do.
Though we do actually think that our weapons are at least some of them are indeed better than their weapons.
But the Chinese do have a lot of capability.
We accept that.
But nonetheless, we mustn't worry about that, because though the Chinese are aggressive,
You know, they're aggressive, but they've never fought wars.
We are not aggressive.
We're defensive, but we fought lots and lots and lots of wars.
I mean, already you see the contradiction there, perhaps.
But we are enormously experienced and strong, and we know how to fight wars and the Chinese don't.
Now, all I will say is, yes, we have fought a lot of wars.
The United States has fought lots of wars recently.
They haven't gone so well.
and they haven't been against an adversary like China.
And the nearest approximation to a war that the United States,
it hasn't exactly fought it, but it's fought it through a proxy against a peer adversary,
is the war against Russia and Ukraine,
very different type of war, I suspect, from the one that would be fought in the Pacific.
But that war hasn't gone well.
the Americans micromanaged and planned Ukraine's offensive, for example, last year.
And we saw that turn out disastrously.
The United States provided all that expensive kit to the Ukrainians, and it didn't do so well against the Russians.
So, you know, again, we have all this talk about how strong we are, how weak they are, how competent we are,
how incompetent they are.
They're presumably corrupt.
Just wait before long, we'll get that too.
We call all of that.
They're demoralized.
They're weak.
They're ineffectual.
They're badly led.
We're none of those things.
And then, of course, it turns out when we are in a war, that none of that is true.
But by then it's too late.
All right.
We will end the video there.
The duran.
Dot locals.com.
We are on Rumble Odyssey, bitch, shoot, telegram,
Rockfin, and Twitter.
and go to the Duran shop, pick up some new meme shirts celebrating Europe Day.
Fun, fun shirts to pick up.
Anyway, you'll find a link for those in the description box.
Down below, take care.
