Colleen - Your comments are priceless!
Where are you?
Nicky
-----Original Message-----
From: Colleen Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
[EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Saturday, 30 October 1999 9:52
Subject: Re: SNET: [piml] China's calls U.S. 'rogue' state
I agree, Yankee
Doodle Dandy is
a Rogue State;
Suddenly China is mad; they were not mad when their Embassy was blown
out of this world in the Balkans were they....
I think I know why they are mad.....now Jimmy Carter told the world
about the neutron bomb, way back when he and Larry Flynt were soul
mates.....
Now as of late, we find Clinton gave Neutron Bomb secrets to
China....and what they did not give away, the Chinese stole.....always
wondered how a government oh so secret, could be so lax in security.
So yesterday it came out on web that the USA if China looses those Nukes
on us, we have the capability and power, to turn hem around, and Nuke
the hell out of
China.
Well Gore is stupid, maybe Clinton is not as stupid as I was beginning
to think he was He sure saw them coming down the pike on that one.
For I wondered why they left the barn door open.
Is kind of funny at that..........can you see these neutron bombs
heading to USA and suddenly, they turn around and return to
China........well it took the man with all the secrets to pull that one
off.
And further, consider this......we are always 100 years or so ahead of
others....when the government is ready to share their secrets with us,
they become as toys for the kids....even little 5 years old children
operating the internet.
So China, what a bunch of .......can you see all those bombs turning
around and heading back home like a homing pigeon, and that is what they
were....the pigeon of our own Yankee Doodle Dandy Rogue State.....I had
relatives like that.
Colleen
You know it was the Chinese who invented the rocket; it took Yankee
Rogues to really fly that thing.
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http://www.nando.net/noframes/story/0,2107,500050648-500082983-500264020-0,00.html
Chinese official looks upon U.S. as 'rogue' state
Copyright © 1999 Nando Media
Copyright © 1999 Christian Science Monitor Service
A look back at Nando's in-depth coverage of The Confrontation Over
Kosovo.
>From Time to Time: Nando's in-depth look at the 20th century
By KEVIN PLATT
(October 28, 1999 12:56 p.m. EDT
http://www.nandotimes.com)
- Like the United States, China says it is witnessing the
potential emergence of a "rogue" state that could throw the
world out of balance early in the next century.
Washington warns that unpredictable regimes in nations such as North
Korea and Iraq could one day develop
long-range missiles and a handful of atomic bombs to engage in nuclear
blackmail or worse.
But China's top arms control negotiator, Sha Zukang, says a bigger threat
to global stability is already armed to
the teeth with hydrogen bombs and sophisticated rockets that can send a
nuclear payload to any point on the
planet.
That country, Sha says, is the United States.
"Because the U.S. believes it's the only superpower in the world, it
can act at will, without regard for international
law and international norms," he says.
Washington seems to be developing a stubbornness against abiding by
weapons' control pacts and a greater
penchant to use armed force against its real or perceived enemies, Sha
complains.
The end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union has not
ushered in an era of global peace, he
says.
Rather, it is creating a United States that is drunk with its own power
and technological prowess, adds Sha,
whose official title is director-general of the Arms Control and
Disarmament Department of the Chinese foreign
ministry.
Sha is not one of the Communist Party hardliners here who regularly
lashes out at the United States. Rather, he
is affable, cosmopolitan, and open, and seems more disillusioned than
angry with the United States.
Sha cites as one example of aggressiveness the U.S. bombing of a medical
plant in Sudan that American
intelligence initially accused of producing chemical weapons.
The 1998 missile attack was not approved by any global organization, and
the United States has never offered
the world community solid proof that the plant made anything but
medicine.
"The U.S. bombing of Sudan was an act of state terrorism," Sha
says.
There is a growing list, he adds, of similar acts of aggression against
sovereign states in violation of the U.N.
Charter or other global laws.
Not only did the United States and NATO launch a massive attack on
Yugoslavia without obtaining the U.N.'s
approval, but the coalition delivered, with pinpoint precision, five
missiles into Beijing's embassy in Belgrade.
That bombing "was an obvious violation of the Vienna
Convention," he says. While Beijing appreciates
Washington's apologies and compensation for victims of the attack, the
United States government "still has to
identify the culprits (behind the bombing) and bring them to
justice."
A U.S. official formerly based in Beijing agrees. "So far the (U.S.)
government has said institutional mistakes
led to the bombing of the Chinese Embassy," says the official, who
spoke on condition of anonymity. "But
specific individuals were responsible for mistakenly targeting the
embassy, and heads should roll as a result of
those fatal mistakes."
Sha suggests the growing disregard of the United States for international
weapons conventions and rules of
war is, in turn, making China more circumspect about joining arms control
regimes.
"We might have already ratified the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty if
not for the bombing of our embassy in
Yugoslavia," he says.
That treaty, which aims to ban all nuclear weapons testing, was rejected
by the U.S. Senate even though "the
United States was the first country to promote and to sign the
treaty," Sha says.
Sha says he is puzzled by the vote not only because Washington was one of
the pact's top proponents, but also
because it would have allowed the United States to lock in its nuclear
superiority and prevent any wannabes
from crashing into the nuclear club.
"The U.S. has the biggest and most sophisticated nuclear arsenal in
the world," and could have frozen that
advantage perpetually by signing the treaty, he says.
Instead, the Senate's vote against ratification is alienating the United
States from the rest of the world, Sha
says. "Not a single country in the world has given its support for
the U.S. Senate's rejection of the treaty."
China's defense ministry is now reviewing the test ban pact, and hints
that Beijing could ratify it early next year,
during a spring meeting of the national legislature.
"I negotiated (the treaty) - it's my baby," says Sha, who adds
that he wants to see it ratified as soon as possible.
Washington's abandonment of the nuclear treaty it pushed so hard to help
produce "was wrong politically and
morally, but at least it did not violate any international
agreements," Sha says.
More alarming, he says, is a U.S. plan to build a national anti-missile
shield that would violate the 1972
Anti-ballistic Missile Treaty.
Russia, which also signed the ABM pact, and China last week introduced a
resolution in the United Nations
warning the United States not to break the treaty.
Defense experts in Russia, the United States, and China agree that if the
Pentagon starts building the missile
defense system, a "Star Wars"-like project designed to shoot
down incoming rockets, countries that fear a
nuclear first strike from the United States could speed up their own
missile production as a countermeasure.
Sha says "the ABM is a cornerstone of maintaining global strategic
stability," and warns that if Washington
violates the pact after refusing to approve the nuclear test ban, the
twin actions "could trigger a worldwide chain
reaction."
"This has the possibility to destroy all the progress we have made
in nuclear nonproliferation ... in the post-Cold
War era," Sha says.
He says that the U.S. moves "may touch off an arms race in all
fields, including the nuclear and missile fields."
Sha adds that setting up a missile defense in violation of the ABM treaty
could also, for the first time in human
history, "set off an arms race in outer space."
(c) Copyright 1999. The Christian Science Publishing Society
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