View attachment 102405
All those meme lords:
Etc, they will all be back. Mr Yang on Guancha already checking status of his account too.
- Donbassdevushka / Cheburekivibes
- ASBmilitary
- Spriter

@olalavn is waiting.

View attachment 102405
All those meme lords:
Etc, they will all be back. Mr Yang on Guancha already checking status of his account too.
- Donbassdevushka / Cheburekivibes
- ASBmilitary
- Spriter


扬升’s account is still shadow bannedView attachment 102405
All those meme lords:
Etc, they will all be back. Mr Yang on Guancha already checking status of his account too.
- Donbassdevushka / Cheburekivibes
- ASBmilitary
- Spriter
Despite Chip Ban, U.S. Trails China in Published Research Papers
Expert on what makes China-Cuba cooperation so important
Its funny. But aljazeera themselves have fact checked it. It's fake.
Can the DPRK stop or delay PRC intervention with conventional or limited nuclear strikes?
Countervalue Targets:
The two countervalue targets were the Shenyang Heavy Industrial Plant in Shenyang and the Dalian Hi -Tech Zone in Dalian. These places were chosen based on their economic value and role in military production. According to Chinese sources, the Shenyang Heavy Industrial Plant is valued at approximately $1.6 billion while the Dalian Hi-Tech Zone has an estimated value of $16.09 billion.
Kim could try to deter China from attempting a decapitation operation by threatening an attack on Shanghai or other PRC cities.
Kim would hope that the prospects of significant damage to a major city would constitute an “unacceptable loss” and deter an attack. Even a DPRK nuclear weapons would only do partial damage to any PRC city, but the interconnectivity of the PRC economy would cause substantial PRC economic losses beyond the immediate damage to Shanghai. And a nuclear attack of Beijing with a 230 Kt DPRK nuclear weapon could cause such damage to the PRC bureaucracy that the PRC leadership may have difficulty ruling the PRC for an extended period.
Therefore, in order for the DPRK to even have a chance at managing escalation against the PRC, it would need second-strike capabilities, to allow it to escalate further if Beijing conducted retaliatory nuclear strikes.
Thus, the DPRK’s nuclear weapons could be credibly used to try to deter PRC intervention in the context of a DPRK-ROK conventional conflict.
Furthermore, as the DPRK the development of second-strike capabilities could create an opportunity for Pyongyang to not only deter Chinese intervention and influence Beijing’s policies towards the DPRK.
This looks like something straight outta fantasy-packed copium-pumped wetdream novel.I saw it previously on r/geopolitics and thought it was pretty ridiculous, but after just taking the piss with this I thought I better check this shit out. Conclusion is this is highly entertaining piece of... something from RAND. I'll highlight some passages for a feel:
So basically "see it's not that I'm worried about myself or my dog, I'm actually worried about you! He's nukes could be aimed at you!"
In a hypothetical China-North Korea war, China would roll over the entire North Korea in weeks without having to use her own nuclear weapons at all.
Thus, the DPRK’s nuclear weapons could be credibly used to try to deter PRC intervention in the context of a DPRK-ROK conventional conflict
Really, RAND and especially Diana the author? Did you forgot that you are working with RAND and not Scholastic Corportaion?