How the British Invented Color Revolutions
So said former Trump aide Darren Beattie, speaking on the Tucker Carlson show, September 15, 2020.
Most people felt something was fishy about the upcoming election. But it was hard to say what.
Beattie gave a name to the problem. He called it “color revolution.”
He defined color revolution as “a regime change model favored by many in our national security apparatus.” It uses “an engineered, contested-elections scenario” to disrupt and override legitimate elections, Beattie explained.
America had been using this technique for decades to overthrow regimes overseas.
Now a similar operation was being planned against President Trump, Beattie charged.
Introducing nuclear weapons not ideal against North Korea s nukes
Posted : 2021-05-14 16:59
Updated : 2021-05-14 19:27
Moon Chung-in, chairman of the Sejong Institute and vice chairman of Asia Pacific Leadership Network for Nuclear Nonproliferation and Disarmament, delivers a keynote speech during a webinar titled Assessing Northeast Asia Nuclear Domino: North Korean Nuclear Threat and South Korean Responses. Friday (KST). Captured during the webinar
By Jung Da-min
Military buildup such as introducing U.S. tactical nuclear weapons or a NATO-style nuclear sharing system is not the right answer for South Korea to deal with growing nuclear threats from North Korea, according to diplomatic experts, Friday.
Reuters
Biden is stepping away from the Middle East and trying to get back on good terms with Iran.
At the same time, Saudi Arabia has reengaged with estranged foes like Iran, Turkey, and Qatar.
Experts say it shows Saudi Arabia feels it can t rely on the US anymore.
Saudi Arabia has started reaching out to its rivals in the Middle East, suggesting Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman knows US support for his country is no longer guaranteed.
In April, the Financial Times reported that Saudi Arabia and Iran, which cut diplomatic ties in 2016, were conducting secret talks. They came as Saudi Arabia also started reaching out to Syria, Iraq, and Oman, working to move past a decade-long rift with Turkey, and bettering relations with Qatar following an end to their four-year blockade.
Biden redraws battle lines in the tech war with China
President Joe Biden s administration has put his predecessor s assault on Chinese tech on ice
14 May 2021 • 12:00pm
As the elevator ascended the headquarters of the African Union in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, James Lewis’s guides offered word of advice. “You know, the Chinese built this building,” the former US diplomat remembers them saying, “so when you speak, speak clearly into the wall”.
It was December 2019, about two years after the explosive allegation that Chinese spies had snooped on the Union’s business through its Huawei-made communications network. But in June, the body had approved Huawei for an expanded contract, and now everyone in the lift was laughing about it.