Australia’s Defence 2: Just How Nasty Are the Chicoms?

Australia’s Defence 2: Just How Nasty Are the Chicoms?

by David Archibald

25 April 2024

 

Coastguard

Figure 1: China Coast Guard Vessel 5901

 

In a normal country with a normal moral compass and ethics, a coast guard is for protecting lives at peril on the sea. In China that is inverted. They built this 12,000 tonne coast guard vessel to ram and sink the coast guard vessels of other countries. They say it can sink vessels up to 5,000 tonnes without being damaged itself. By comparison, an Arleigh Burke Flight III destroyer of the US Navy is 9,700 tonnes.

 

Attacks on Australian defence personnel

Figure 2: PLA Navy DDG-139 Ningbo

 

On 18th November 2023, HMAS Toowoomba was in Japan’s exclusive economic zone near the Senkaku Islands and stopped to have its divers clear fishing nets snagged on its propellers. Toowoomba broadcast that it was stopped with divers in the water and warned vessels not to approach it. So, a Chinese destroyer (DDG-139) sailed towards the Toowoomba and blasted the divers with its sonar.

 

Figure 3: Australian Prime Minister Albanese with Xi at the APEC meeting in San Francisco

 

Three days after the sonar incident, there was the vomit-inducing spectacle of Prime Minister Albanese putting his hand on Xi’s shoulder. Xi would have thought,“Who is this creep? Three days ago I blast his divers in the water and now he wants to get handsy with me!”

On 17th February 2022, a Chinese destroyer in the Arafura Sea fired a military-grade laser at an RAAF P8 Poseidon aircraft 65 km north of the Australian coast in an attempt to blind the pilots. Chinese troops in Djibouti have fired lasers at the pilots of US aircraft coming in to land at the airport. It appears that all Chinese army and naval units, and the maritime militia, have been issued with lasers with the intent of blinding opposing forces. Everyone fighting the Chicoms should wear laser-proof sunglasses as much as physically possible.

 

Covid

The technology for covid was developed by Ralph Baric at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Wuhan was chosen for putting it together because it was outside of US jurisdiction and Chinese labs can be relied upon to leak.

After the outbreak, the Chicoms locked down Wuhan from travel within China but allowed flights out to Milan to continue. This was to infect the rest of the world while China remained virus-free. China planned on walking into countries depopulated by a virus, just as Europeans did in North America back in the 17th century.

But China kept having outbreaks and the lockdowns were bankrupting the provincial governments. Consequently, Xi flipped to ‘let her rip’ and three million elderly promptly died. China is now having bacterial outbreaks of things such as mycoplasma, indicative of suppressed immune systems. Covid has backfired on the Chicoms. The combination of viral shedding in wastewater, vitamin D levels of 13 ng/ml in summer and 9 ng/ml in winter, along with apartment living, means that China has set itself up for perpetual reinfection and a chronic disease burden.

 

Johnson South Reef

On 14th March, 1988, 76 unarmed Vietnamese soldiers standing on Johnson South Reef in the Spratly Islands were machine-gunned by a couple of PLAN ships, killing them all.

 

Figure 4: Grainy video still of the massacre proudly released by the Chicoms

 

Figure 5: Chinese base at Johnson South Reef under construction

 

The left-hand image shows the channel dug through lagoon sediments to create a small harbour. The island is 4.3 km long and the base is 400 metres across. The right-hand image shows the base under construction in 2015. Note that flak towers make a return after 70 years. There are no entrances to the fort at ground level. Access is by a ramp on the north side of the building which leads to a guardhouse.

 

Figure 6: Chicom base at Gaven Reef

 

This fort has four flak towers standing out from the corners. The access ramp is on the south side of the building, which is 100 metres wide.

 

Figure 7: Airfield at Mischief Reef

 

Three of the Chinese bases in the Spratly Islands — Mischief Reef, Subi Reef and Fiery Cross Reef — have 10,000 feet airfields with shelters for fighter aircraft.

 

Figure 8: Chicom base on Cauteron Reef

 

What is interesting about this image of Cauteron Reef is the close-in weapon system (CIWS) on the corner of the island. A CIWS is a rapid-fire weapon controlled by a radar. At the top of the image, another CIWS can be seen on the opposite corner of the island.

 

Organ Harvesting

Wait times for obtaining vital organs in China are among the shortest in the world, often just weeks for organs such as kidneys, livers, and hearts. Cardiac transplants can only come from deceased donors, so how can the hospital match a patient with a potential “deceased” donor weeks in advance? China has made an industry out of killing prisoners to feed its international transplant tourism. The sequence is to give a prisoner a suspended death sentence and then when enough of his organs have been presold to transplant tourists, carry out the death sentence. Once China started prosecuting the Falung Gong, kidney transplants shot up, more than doubling.

A medical procedure called extra-corporeal membrane oxygenation allows the Chicoms to harvest up to four organs from one individual.

 

Figure 9: Yang Hengjun – an Australian citizen given a suspended death sentence in China

 

Unfortunately for Mr Yang, he is a healthy-looking specimen. The Chicoms should be able to get a lung, heart, liver and both kidneys out of him. His organs will live on. If you are flying into China and you are asked what your blood group is at customs, things will only go downhill from there.

Anybody buying anything made in China is supporting this barbaric practice. The blood of innocents is on their hands. That blood stains their soul.

 

Bhutan

Figure 10: Chicom village built 30 km inside the territory of Bhutan

 

Bhutan tries to be the happiest kingdom on the planet but that is hard when the Chicoms keep stealing parts of the kingdom. The satellite image above is of a village  China recently built 30 km inside Bhutan. It appears that the Chicoms have a pathological need to continually cheat and steal, cheat and steal, even though what they are stealing is of no value to them.

 

India Border

Up in the northwest corner of India, where it meets Pakistan and China, is the Galwan Valley. By convention, Indian and Chinese troops along their border are unarmed. On 15th June, 2020, a Chicom force ambushed an Indian force 20 percent of their size in the Galwan Valley with clubs made from star pickets with bits of metal rod welded to them. The Indian troops proved to be tougher than the Chicoms expected. They grabbed clubs from the Chicoms and counter-attacked into the Chicom camp. The death toll was 20 Indians killed and possibly 100 Chicoms. The official number of Chicom dead is four. Clashes continue as China attempts more salami-slicing. In March India announced that it was moving another 10,000 troops up to the border.

 

Figure 11: Weapons for hand-to-hand combat at high altitude

 

The bundle of weapons on the left are clubs seized from the Chicoms. In response, India developed an electric trident inspired by Lord Shiva of Indian mythology.

 

The 14 Demands

On 18th November, 2020, the Chinese Embassy in Canberra handed a list of 14 demands on Australia to the lefty media outlets Nine News, The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age. Basically, the list complains that Australia is guilty of thinking for itself and not kowtowing to China. The list of demands follows:

The list indicates that China treats Australia with contempt. The historic analogy is Japan’s 21 demands made on China on 18th January, 1915. Japan invaded China 16 years later in 1931 after a false flag attack at Mudken Bridge in Manchuria.

 

David Archibald is the author of The Anticancer Garden in Australia.