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Xi Jinping’s poker face waned.
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He’s not happy, though the reasons elude most Western readers.
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Though not democratic, Xi is a politician.
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He must balance wisdom with pleasing the veiled powers that overshadow the goings on of China.
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Those powers won’t hesitate to give the ax to any leader who fails to deliver on their
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expansionist ambitions.
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Xi has fought corruption and sought infrastructure.
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Xi was gaining momentum.
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Now, the US and Russia are rumbling in both of China’s back yards weeks after Xi announced
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that, where military tech is concerned, China needs to play “catch-up” or become “ketchup”.
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This can’t be good for Xi’s inside politics with Chinese elections approaching.
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Trump certainly isn’t pulling any punches.
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Striking Syria while dining with China’s Chairman wasn’t unintentional.
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Remember, Trump has dealt with the Chinese on many occasion.
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Xi is difficult to read, except to say his rehearsed Asian smile is waning.
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A micron might as well be a mile in an Asian smile.
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In the weeks ahead, remember that Xi is half himself and half the hidden hand that controls
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all that goes on in China.
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That’s true of every Chinese president.
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In all this, Xi met with Trump and all went well.
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No matter when or how Xi’s career closes, no matter what his true ambitions were, China
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will go on and history will remember Chinese President Xi as the builder of bridges, inroads,
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aircraft carriers, and islands.
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Xi wanted to remind the US of its Capitalist values: Don’t blame others for your problems.
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Yet, China clearly doesn’t share those values.
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Neither does North Korea, the stray dog that has adopted the doorstep at China’s northern
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back yard.
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From China’s vantage point, North Korea is a nuisance and an excuse for an unwelcome
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US presence.
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Kim Dynasty narcissism has over-played and pushed the envelope with Beijing.
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Watch for Chinese heads of State to bark, then look the other way, much how the US does
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when Israel responds to Palestine.
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So, why is the media announcing and discussing the possibilities of dealing with North Korea?
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True military tactics never make it on television—unless the reporter finds himself accused of a frivolous-like
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sexual crime and holes-up in an Ecuadoran Embassy to avoid extradition for espionage.
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It’s discussion on US military options like we saw over North Korea this week that makes
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it difficult for a US prosecution of WikiLeaks founder Julian “Espionage” Assange to
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seem believable from any angle.
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“Assassination, nuke-up, or surgical strike” are only media talking points to make the
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greater point: Knock it off or else.
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Assassinations are illegal for the US according to the US’ own law, viz Executive Order
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12333.
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It is doubtful, even in Trump’s stock-up on signing pens, that he plans to wipe out
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that order for North Korea alone—if he does, Assad is his next target and Kim was just
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an excuse.
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The US hopes to finish this situation in Korea before a nuclear buildup has time to grow
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moss.
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So does China.
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A “nuke-up” wouldn’t be grand strategy.
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An internal strike inside North Korea would illicit an avalanche.
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Anti-Iraq II Donald J. Trump won’t want to create another “vacuum”.
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A surgical strike would be an assist to something else.
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What’s really going on?
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Don’t think for one second that the media does know or that CIA doesn’t.
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There’s joker in the North Korean deck and it is stacked to favor the West.
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We’ll just have to keep watching.