
China Escalates Global Threats, Saying It Will “Nuke Japan” If The Nation Interferes With Taiwan; Gets Flooding In Return
By Aaron Kesel
China has been very active lately against other nations but it may have recently crossed the line, and in doing so was gifted with flooding in a modern 21st-century Operation Popeye.
Last month, Chinese President Xi Jinping threatened that any nation in China’s way of its goals seeking to bully the Communist country would have its “skulls crushed or bashed.”
More specifically, Xi said the following during the celebration of the 100th birthday of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP.)
“Anyone who dares try to do that will have their heads bashed bloody against the Great Wall of steel forged by over 1.4 billion Chinese people,” Xi said.
The other thing to point out is where Xi made the speech, at the infamous Tiananmen Square — make no mistake, that’s no coincidence to celebrate the 100th birthday of the CCP. Xi pledged to build up China’s military, and also committed to the “reunification” of Taiwan as well as the social stability of Hong Kong while simultaneously protecting China’s own security and sovereignty.
Japan has made multiple calls to protect Taiwan, with the latest met with a threat by China in response. But before we get to China’s response literally threatening to drop a nuclear weapon on Japan if it interferes with China’s plan to invade Taiwan, there’s one more key event that took place prior to China’s dams breaking and flooding happening. China sailed a ship into the contested South China Sea waters around the Philippines, which resulted in the Chinese ship being chased off by Philippines Coast Guard ships.
This was after the U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken reaffirmed the U.S. commitment to defend the Philippines’ armed forces from attack in the South China Sea, CNN reported.
Two weeks ago, Japanese Deputy Prime Minister Taro Aso said that Japan must “defend Taiwan,” along with the U.S, The Japan Times reported.
“If a major incident happened (over Taiwan), it’s safe to say it would be related to a situation threatening the survival (of Japan). If that is the case, Japan and the U.S. must defend Taiwan together,” Aso said.
China’s response to Japan trying to interfere in Taiwan has been a literal threat to continuously nuke Japan until they surrender.
“We will use nuclear bombs first,” the video said. “We will use nuclear bombs continuously. We will do this until Japan declares unconditional surrender for the second time.”
In the video, the CCP threatened to “liberate Taiwan,” and it warned against Japan deploying “one soldier, one plane or one ship.”
The video was deleted from Chinese platform Xigua after gaining 2 million views; however, copies were re-uploaded to YouTube and Twitter, Taiwan News reported.
In 2020, China produced and released multiple propaganda videos seeming to threaten the U.S., Hong Kong, Taiwan, and others. However, its latest propaganda video may have crossed the proverbial line; in retaliation, the U.S., Japan, or another nation may have responded with the gift of weather warfare resulting in flooding in the region. As of this report, details of the heavy rains – which analysts have pointed out are 30x worse than usual – have caused dams to break, further flooding Chinese cities.
The Chinese province of Henan has been hit by record-breaking rainfall and widespread flooding, primarily the provincial capital of Zhengzhou, which has seen torrential storms since last Monday. At least 25 people have died, according to official reports at the time of this writing. “The Guojiaju dam near the city collapsed at 1:30 am local time,” CGTN wrote in a now-deleted tweet.
The rainfall was the highest recorded since record keeping began sixty years ago, with the city receiving an average year’s worth of rain in just three days, according to weather officials, Insider Paper reported.
Daily precipitation in Zhengzhou, China:
2000 – 2020 average: 20mm (0.8 inches) between July 17 and 20
2021: 617mm (24 inches) in the same three days
How do we design our cities so that they’re resilient to 30x shocks? pic.twitter.com/B8Osj0FoJq
— Yiqin Fu (@yiqinfu) July 20, 2021