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Biden risks Chinese invasion of Taiwan by not delivering promised weapons: Rep. McCaul
NY Post ^

Posted on 04/16/2023 11:25:34 AM PDT by BenLurkin

The lawmaker warned a blockade would be damaging for the US. and world economy, noting some of America’s largest tech firms rely on Taiwan for 90% of their semiconductor chips — and that China would control the supply.

“We would be in a world of hurt and China would be the most dominant economic and military force on the planet,” he said.

US relations with Beijing went into a big chill after China flew spy balloons in American airspace.

Classified documents allegedly leaked by Massachusetts Air National Guardsman Jack Teixeira further reveal US intelligence officials were aware of as many as four other Chinese spy balloons apart from the one that floated across the US earlier this year.

McCaul said under current conditions, Taiwan is at the mercy of China — and fretted a blockade and invasion could occur as early as next year if the communist giant doesn’t succeed in getting a puppet elected as president of the pro-West island.

McCaul said nearly two dozen weapons have been approved for Taiwan over the past five years, and that surveillance technology is crucial for it to anticipate China’s moves. He has also called for closer ties to the pro-US island.

(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News
KEYWORDS: biden; blockade; china; redchina; taiwan
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1 posted on 04/16/2023 11:25:34 AM PDT by BenLurkin
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To: BenLurkin

Tawain needs some white surveillance balloons to fly 65k feet over China.


2 posted on 04/16/2023 11:27:56 AM PDT by Redcitizen
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To: All

If there’s a way for Joe to muck it up, he will. So said Obama and he would know.


3 posted on 04/16/2023 11:28:59 AM PDT by BipolarBob (Not my fault, yer Honor. I went to the Alec Baldwin School of Firearms Handling. )
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To: BenLurkin

More see bs.

If Taiwan was serious about the ccp threat, they’d have acted sooner.

So tired of this garbage.


4 posted on 04/16/2023 11:31:08 AM PDT by logi_cal869 (-cynicus the "concern troll" a/o 10/03/2018 /!i!! &@$%&*(@ -)
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To: logi_cal869

Act sooner? How? By invading the mainland? 🙄


5 posted on 04/16/2023 11:33:46 AM PDT by Salohcin
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To: BenLurkin

Biden HELPS Chinese invasion ...

... the ChiComs paid US politicians good money in advance for what is coming.


6 posted on 04/16/2023 11:34:49 AM PDT by Rurudyne (Standup Philosopher)
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To: BenLurkin

Agreed. Slow Joe needs to delegate authority to some men who are most capable of getting things moving without regard to racial, sexual or social politics.


7 posted on 04/16/2023 11:38:43 AM PDT by familyop ("For they that sleep with dogs, shall rise with fleas" (John Webster, "The White Devil" 1612).)
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To: Salohcin

The question speaks volumes.

smh


8 posted on 04/16/2023 11:40:37 AM PDT by logi_cal869 (-cynicus the "concern troll" a/o 10/03/2018 /!i!! &@$%&*(@ -)
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To: Redcitizen

Tawain needs some white surveillance balloons to fly 65k feet over China.

They used to fly our U2’s over main land China:

Black Cat Squadron

ROCAF35mark.png
Black Cat Squadron official emblem
Active 1961–74
Branch Republic of China Air Force
Role Surveillance
Garrison/HQ Taoyuan Air Base
Nickname(s) Black Cat Squadron
Commanders
Current
commander Lu Xiliang
Aircraft flown
Reconnaissance Lockheed U-2
The Black Cat Squadron (Chinese: 黑貓中隊; pinyin: Hēimāo Zhōngduì), formally the 35th Squadron, was a squadron of the Republic of China Air Force that flew the U-2 surveillance plane out of Taoyuan Air Base in northern Taiwan, from 1961 to 1974. 26 ROCAF pilots successfully completed U-2 training in the US and flew 220 operational missions,[1] with about half over the People’s Republic of China.

When the squadron was formed in 1961, Colonel Lu Xiliang (盧錫良) became its first commander and would become its longest-serving squadron commander. Colonel Lu was born in Shanghai on December 27, 1923 and completed his training in the US.

During the squadron’s 14 years of existence, five U-2s were shot down by PRC air defenses (using SA-2 missiles[2]), with three pilots killed and two captured. Another pilot was killed while performing an operational mission off the Chinese coast, while seven U-2s were lost during training missions, killing six pilots.[3]

A total of 19 U-2s were assigned to the Black Cat Squadron, over fourteen years, although the squadron usually had only two U-2s assigned to it at any one time; sometimes there was just one aircraft.[4]

The intelligence gathered by the Black Cat Squadron, which included evidence of a military build-up on the Sino-Soviet border, may have contributed to the U.S. opening to China during the Nixon administration by revealing the escalating tensions between the two communist nations. Shortly after Nixon’s visit to Beijing, all reconnaissance flights over the People’s Republic ceased, and the Black Cat Squadron was officially disbanded in the spring of 1974.

Operational missions

During a reconnaissance mission in Yunnan province, Chuang Ren-Liang saw two incoming missile in his correction camera and evaded SA-2 missiles that day.

The only other U-2 operator than CIA, USAF and United Kingdom was the Republic of China (Taiwan), which flew missions mostly over the People’s Republic of China (PRC). Since the 1950s, the Republic of China Air Force had used the RB-57A/D aircraft for reconnaissance missions over the PRC, but suffered two losses when MiG-17s and SA-2 Surface-to-Air Missiles were able to intercept the aircraft.

In 1958, ROC and American authorities reached an agreement to create the 35th Squadron, nicknamed the Black Cat Squadron, composed of two U-2Cs in Taoyuan Air Base in northern Taiwan, at an isolated part of the airbase. To create the typical misdirections at the time, the unit was created under the cover of high altitude weather research missions for ROCAF. To the US government, the 35th Squadron and any US CIA/USAF personnel assigned to the unit were known as Detachment H on all documents. But instead of being under normal USAF control, the project was known as Project RAZOR,[5][6] and was run directly by CIA with USAF assistance.

Each of the 35th Squadron’s operational missions had to be approved by both the US and the Taiwan/ROC presidents beforehand. To add another layer of security and secrecy to the project, all US military and CIA/government personnel stationed in Taoyuan assigned to Detachment H were issued official documents and ID with false names and cover titles as Lockheed employees/representatives in civilian clothes. The ROCAF pilots and ground support crew would never know their US counterpart’s real name and rank/title, or which US government agencies they were dealing with.

A total of 26 out of 28 ROC pilots sent to the US completed training between 1959 and 1973, at Laughlin Air Force Base, Texas.[7] On the night of 3 August 1959, a U-2 on a training mission, out of Laughlin AFB, Texas, piloted by Maj. Mike Hua of ROC Air Force, made a successful unassisted nighttime emergency landing at Cortez, Colorado, that was later known as the “Miracle at Cortez”. Major Hua was later awarded the US Air Force Distinguished Flying Cross for saving the top secret aircraft.[8][9][10][11]

In January 1961, the CIA provided the ROC with its first two U-2Cs, and in April the squadron flew its first mission over mainland China. Other countries were also covered from time to time by the 35th Squadron, such as North Korea,[12] North Vietnam and Laos, but the main objective of the ROC 35th Squadron was to conduct reconnaissance missions assessing the PRC’s nuclear capabilities. For this purpose the ROC pilots flew as far as Gansu and other remote regions in northwest China.

Some of the missions, due to mission requirements and range, plus to add some element of surprise, had the 35th Squadron’s U-2s flying from or recovered at other US air bases in Southeast Asia and Eastern Asia, such as K-8 (Kunsan) in South Korea, or Takhli in Thailand. All US airbases in the region were listed as emergency/ alternate recovery airfields and could be used besides the 35th Squadron’s home base at Taoyuan Air Base in Taiwan. Initially, all film taken by the Black Cat Squadron was flown to Okinawa or Guam for processing and development, and the US forces would not share any of the mission photos with Taiwan, but in late 1960s the USAF agreed to share complete sets of mission photos and help Taiwan set up a photo development and interpretation unit at Taoyuan.

On 9 September 1962, the first loss occurred when the PRC downed a U-2 near Nanchang; the pilot Chen Huai died in a PRC hospital.[13] The U.S. denied PRC accusations of involvement in the ROC flights, noting that the previous Eisenhower administration had sold the U-2s to ROC. This was a cover story, however as the CIA maintained Detachment H’s U-2s and replaced them as necessary, and CIA pilots from Detachment G began using Detachment H’s unmarked U-2 for flights over North Vietnam in February 1962.[14]

The demand for intelligence on the Chinese nuclear program grew but so did the number of PRC SAM sites and use of the Fan Song radar, and ROC overflights became more dangerous. Two more ROC U-2s were shot down, one on 1 November 1963 over Jiangxi and one on 7 July 1964 over Fujian,[13] and ROC demanded improved electronic countermeasures (ECM) equipment. Detachment H’s U-2s had the System XII radar detector but not the sophisticated System XIII radar jammer, because the United States Department of Defense feared its loss to the PRC. The need for intelligence on the Chinese nuclear program was so great that the Defense Department agreed to install improved ECM equipment, but insisted that pilots not turn System XIII on until System XII detected FAN SONG. After another ROC U-2 was lost in circumstances that remain classified as of July 2013, ROC refused to conduct further overflights unless its pilots could use System XIII whenever over the PRC.

After the People’s Republic of China conducted its third nuclear test on 9 May 1966, the US was eager to obtain information on the Chinese capabilities. To this end, the CIA initiated a program, code named Tabasco, to develop a sensor pod that could be dropped into the Taklamakan Desert, near the Chinese nuclear test site. The pod was intended to deploy an antenna after landing and radio back data to the US SIGINT station at Shulinkou Taiwan. After a year of testing in the US, the pod was ready. Two pilots of the 35th squadron were trained in the dropping of the pod. On 7 May 1967, a ROCAF U-2 (article 383) flown by Spike Chuang took off from Takhli Royal Thai Air Force Base with a sensor pod under each wing.[15] The aircraft successfully released the pods at the target, near the Lop Nur Nuclear Weapons Test Base, but no data were received from the pods.

This was unfortunate, as the People’s Republic of China conducted a test of its first thermonuclear device in Test No. 6 on 17 June 1967. A second U-2 mission was flown to the area by a Black Cat squadron U-2 flown by Bill Chang on 31 August 1967. This U-2 carried a recorder and an interrogator in an attempt to contact the pods. This mission was unsuccessful, as nothing was heard from the pods. This set the stage for Operation Heavy Tea, conducted by the Black Bat Squadron.[16]

In 1968, the ROC U-2C/F/G fleet was replaced with the newer U-2R. However, with the overwhelming threats from SA-2 missiles and MiG-21 interceptors, along with the rapprochement between the US and the PRC, the ROC U-2 squadron stopped entering Chinese airspace, and instead only conducted electronic surveillance plus photo reconnaissance missions with new Long-Range Oblique Reconnaissance (LOROP) cameras on the U-2R while flying over international waters. The last U-2 aircraft mission over mainland China took place on 16 March 1968. After that, all missions had the U-2 aircraft fly outside a buffer zone at least 20 nautical miles (37 km) around China.

During his visit to China in 1972, US President Richard Nixon promised the Chinese authorities to cease all reconnaissance missions near and over China, though this was also made practical because US photo satellites by 1972 were able to provide better overhead images without risking losing aircraft and pilots, or provoking international incidents. The last 35th Squadron mission was flown by Sungchou “Mike” Chiu on 24 May 1974.[17]

By the end of ROC’s U-2 operations, a total of 19 U-2C/F/G/R aircraft had been operated by the 35th Squadron from 1959 to 1974.[18] The squadron flew a total of about 220 missions,[19] with about half over mainland China, resulting in five aircraft shot down, with three fatalities and two pilots captured; one aircraft lost while performing an operational mission off the Chinese coast, with the pilot killed; and another seven aircraft lost in training with six pilots killed.[18][20] On 29 July 1974, the two remaining U-2R aircraft in ROC possession were flown from Taoyuan Air Base in Taiwan to Edwards AFB, California, US, and turned over to the USAF.[21][22][23][24]

Members after retirement
After his retirement, Col. Lu Xiliang (盧錫良) and his family immigrated to Los Angeles in 1986, where he became an ardent activist for ROCAF POWs’ rights, particularly the right of POWs to return to Taiwan to reunite with their families after imprisonment in mainland China. Colonel Lu died on December 15, 2008.

In addition to Lu Xiliang, another six former-members of the squadron eventually settled in the US, including Zhuang Renliang (莊人亮), Wang Taiyou (王太佑) in Los Angeles, Yeh Changti in Texas, Hua Xijun (華錫鈞) in Maryland, and the deputy squadron commander Yang Shiju (楊世駒) in Las Vegas.

List of ROC U-2 aircraft lost

U-2C 56-6691 wreckage (shot down on 10 January 1965) on display at the Military Museum of the Chinese People’s Revolution, Beijing
Shot down over mainland China
September 9, 1962: U-2C N.378 - Major Chen Huai (killed)[25]
November 1, 1963: U-2C N.355 - Major Yeh Changti (captured, released in 1982), shot down by Yue Zhenghua and his Second Battalion[25]
July 7, 1964: U-2G N.362 - Lt. Colonel Lee Nanpin (killed), shot down over Fujian by Yue Zhenghua and his Second Battalion[25]
January 10, 1965: U-2C N.358 - Major Chang Liyi (captured, released in 1982), shot down over Baotou by Wang Lin and his First Battalion[25]
September 8, 1967: U-2C[26] N.373 - Captain Huang Jungpei (killed), shot down over Jiaxing by Xia Cunfeng and the 14th Battalion, first success by a Chinese-made surface-to-air missile[25]
Lost due to technical failure during operational missions
May 16, 1969: model and number unknown - Major Chang Hsieh (killed)[25]
Lost during training missions
March 19, 1961: U-2C N.351 - Major Chih Yaohua (killed)
March 23, 1964: U-2F N.356 - Captain Liang Tehpei (killed)
October 22, 1965: U-2A N.352 - Major Wang Chengwen (killed)
February 17, 1966: U-2F N.372 - Captain Wu Tsaishi (killed)
March 22, 1966: model and number unknown - Captain Fan Hungdi (survived)
June 21, 1966: U-2C N.384 - Major Yu Chingchang (killed)
November 24, 1970: U-2R N.057 - Major Huang Chihsien (killed)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Cat_Squadron#:~:text=The%20last%20U%2D2%20aircraft,(37%20km)%20around%20China.


9 posted on 04/16/2023 11:40:56 AM PDT by Grampa Dave (Trump!: “They’re not after me! They’re after you! I’m just in the way!)
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To: BenLurkin

“President Biden is inviting a China invasion of US ally Taiwan by failing to deliver promised weapons there to deter war, the head of the House Foreign Affairs Committee said Sunday.”

So says this leading Neoclown. His is a recipe for precipitating a blockade, not preventing it. And no, the USA will not be in a “world of hurt” regardless of what happens to Taiwan.


10 posted on 04/16/2023 11:41:54 AM PDT by Stingray51 ( )
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To: logi_cal869; Salohcin

“If Taiwan was serious about the ccp threat, they’d have acted sooner.”


Wow! This coming from a poster of the site that at one time actually intelligently exposed the lies of CBS Evening News resulting in the firing of Dan Rather.


11 posted on 04/16/2023 11:41:59 AM PDT by tsowellfan
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To: BenLurkin

I’ve been saying this since Biden was elected, and I still believe it...

China will take advantage of the time left in Biden’s term, to invade and take Taiwan.

China is not going to risk waiting after the Biden administration, where it’s quite possible that Trump would be re-elected and China’s opportunity to take Taiwan goes away.

For China, it’s now (before the election of 2024) or never. They ain’t going to give up that opportunity, especially when Biden won’t do squat to stop the Chinese, and besides, he’s got a lot of friends in China.


12 posted on 04/16/2023 11:45:33 AM PDT by adorno
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To: Rurudyne

+1


13 posted on 04/16/2023 11:45:37 AM PDT by OKSooner ("We're gonna put everybody over twelve out of business.")
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To: BenLurkin

Does anyone ever ask these people if they’re going to be grabbing an M4 and heading over there?

Also, why do they want war so much?


14 posted on 04/16/2023 11:45:55 AM PDT by qaz123
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To: tsowellfan

Not taking the bait; it was arguing over the utter ignorance espoused here which earned me the 2nd zot.

They do make special qtips for your problem. You know, that fecal matter in the ear thing...


15 posted on 04/16/2023 11:50:19 AM PDT by logi_cal869 (-cynicus the "concern troll" a/o 10/03/2018 /!i!! &@$%&*(@ -)
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To: BenLurkin

.


16 posted on 04/16/2023 11:52:58 AM PDT by sauropod (“If they don’t believe our lies, well, that’s just conspiracy theorist stuff, there.”)
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To: BenLurkin
.....Risks Sets up Chinese invasion...
17 posted on 04/16/2023 11:53:34 AM PDT by Manic_Episode (A government of the government, by the government, for the government)
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To: BenLurkin

Time is on China’s side in this matter, so if they actually bother with invasion it will be ultimately for more than just Taiwan.


18 posted on 04/16/2023 11:56:11 AM PDT by Right Wing Vegan (Pot legalization licenses every degenerate pothead piece of trash to force drug neighbors.)
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To: BenLurkin

10-20 years ago The CCP did a POC on the affects of a blockade by moving several warships near a main port as part of an ‘exercise’. Insurance companies refused to cover cargo ships if they moved to the port.


19 posted on 04/16/2023 12:03:22 PM PDT by AU72
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To: BenLurkin

The chicoms are getting their moneys worth from Biden.


20 posted on 04/16/2023 12:07:49 PM PDT by Daveinyork
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