China Reform Monitor: No. 779
China signs blockbuster gas deal with Australia;
Beijing warns lawyers not to handle Xinjiang cases
China signs blockbuster gas deal with Australia;
Beijing warns lawyers not to handle Xinjiang cases
Vietnam, China spar over fishing in disputed waters;
PLA worried about "
poisoned arrows"
YouTube and Twitter
A Carrot for Tehran;
Tredpidation in Tashkent;
Pipelines and Nukes in Turkey;
An Iranian hand in Yemen's unrest?
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said recently in Thailand that if Iran acquires a nuclear weapon, the U.S. will offer allies in the Middle East a "defense umbrella" to prevent Iranian intimidation. That's a fine sentiment, but it raises the question: Are we capable of doing so?
The answer is more complicated than most people think. The proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and associated delivery systems since the collapse of the Soviet Union means that any "defense umbrella" will require the deployment of missile defense technologies capable of neutralizing a potential salvo of nuclear-tipped missiles—whether from Iran or another rogue such as North Korea.
Yet America's missile-defense efforts are being scaled back. Congress is contemplating a $1.4 billion reduction to the Pentagon's budget for antimissile capabilities.
Beijing to institute rural pension system;
Chinese pharma industry surging