08-14-2021, 05:17 PM
** 13-Aug-2021 World View: Invasions of America
Reading through Jeff Nyquist's blog, it seems clear that Nyquist
believes that Russia is as much a threat to America as China is. As
both of you know, I don't believe that there's any possibility of that
for any number of reasons, including the reason that you gave that the
land-starved Chinese military want Russia's land, and the sex-starved
Chinese men want Russia's women.
Both Russia and Iran are now sucking up to China because China
supports them in the UN security council, and because China goes
around US sanctions. Russia's economy is particularly desperate, so
Putin is begging Xi to buy Russian oil and weapons, and is probably
making promises to help Xi's invasion of Japan or America in exchange
for getting Alaska and northern Canada -- which they may or may not
intend to fulfill.
Why did Stalin sign the Molotov-Ribbentrop agreement with Hitler? Was
Russia's economy as desperate at that time as it is today? I don't
know.
Nyquist has also mentioned another comparison -- an unfulfilled
agreement by Germany and Mexico in 1917 where Mexico would support a
German invasion of America in return for getting back its lost
territories of Texas, New Mexico and Arizona. (However, California
would be reserved for Japan.)
https://cosec.bit.uni-bonn.de/fileadmin/...gat07a.pdf
JRNyquist Wrote:> I know from my discussions with a Russian defector, that Russia
> and China agreed to split North America between them as follows:
> Russia would get Alaska and parts of Canada, while China would get
> the lower 48 states (which contains the best land). The agreement
> on this was affirmed by the Russian General Staff in early
> 1992. This joint agreement on a future war against America is the
> basis for the Sino-Russian alliance.
DaKardii Wrote:> If Russia was planning to ally with China for a war against the
> US, it would've done so by now. So far, no formal alliance exists.
> Meanwhile, I find it highly implausible that Russia would sign
> onto any agreement that would allow China to get the lower 48
> states, much less in 1992, when Russia was being governed by the
> then-pro-West Boris Yeltsin.
spottybrowncow Wrote:> I don't think we are really capable of establishing that.
> Having said that, I don't see Russia as having the same
> motivations as China, in terms of global domination. China NEEDS
> vast tracts of land because they have 10X as many people as
> Russia. Russia has more land than it knows what to do with. China
> wants Vladivostok. How many Chinese have illegally taken up
> residence in Siberia already? China is taking Russia's women (I'm
> not sure how concerned they are about that). I'm hoping that John
> is right and Russia will be on our side. They surely know that if
> they help China topple the U.S., China will next move to "the
> issue of Russia."
DaKardii Wrote:> The closest China and Russia are to an alliance is the alleged
> modern-day equivalent to the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact that is
> targeting Japan. I also wouldn't be surprised if similar pacts
> existed regarding other the countries which share a border with
> both China and Russia (Kazakhstan, the two Koreas, and Mongolia).
> But remember what happened to the original Molotov-Ribbentrop
> pact.
Reading through Jeff Nyquist's blog, it seems clear that Nyquist
believes that Russia is as much a threat to America as China is. As
both of you know, I don't believe that there's any possibility of that
for any number of reasons, including the reason that you gave that the
land-starved Chinese military want Russia's land, and the sex-starved
Chinese men want Russia's women.
Both Russia and Iran are now sucking up to China because China
supports them in the UN security council, and because China goes
around US sanctions. Russia's economy is particularly desperate, so
Putin is begging Xi to buy Russian oil and weapons, and is probably
making promises to help Xi's invasion of Japan or America in exchange
for getting Alaska and northern Canada -- which they may or may not
intend to fulfill.
Why did Stalin sign the Molotov-Ribbentrop agreement with Hitler? Was
Russia's economy as desperate at that time as it is today? I don't
know.
Nyquist has also mentioned another comparison -- an unfulfilled
agreement by Germany and Mexico in 1917 where Mexico would support a
German invasion of America in return for getting back its lost
territories of Texas, New Mexico and Arizona. (However, California
would be reserved for Japan.)
https://cosec.bit.uni-bonn.de/fileadmin/...gat07a.pdf