The Chinese had a long history with the Burmese military before changing over to the Soros sponsored Aung San Suu Kyi regime. They are simply reacting to new realities. The military is now in charge, they aren't going anywhere, and so China is rekindling those ties. They have millions invested in those deep sea ports in Myanmar, and they need those to keep their supply lines open. Should the Soros sponsored rebels succeed in retaking control of the government, they will switch their allegiance back. But that is very unlikely to happen.
The best you can hope for out of Myanmar is what has already been achieved. A brief disruption in the supply of drugs and human trafficking. Within a year you can assume it will all be restored.
Yeah. What China is really afraid of is someone blocking the straights of Malacca. That is where most of the Chinese oil/gas comes from (the middle east). The US navy has the full ability to blockade it and basically decimate the Chinese economy. So they invest in a lot of pipelines in places like Pakistan, Burma, and Siberia. Makes sense to me.
The Chinese had a long history with the Burmese military before changing over to the Soros sponsored Aung San Suu Kyi regime. They are simply reacting to new realities. The military is now in charge, they aren't going anywhere, and so China is rekindling those ties. They have millions invested in those deep sea ports in Myanmar, and they need those to keep their supply lines open. Should the Soros sponsored rebels succeed in retaking control of the government, they will switch their allegiance back. But that is very unlikely to happen.
The best you can hope for out of Myanmar is what has already been achieved. A brief disruption in the supply of drugs and human trafficking. Within a year you can assume it will all be restored.
Yeah. What China is really afraid of is someone blocking the straights of Malacca. That is where most of the Chinese oil/gas comes from (the middle east). The US navy has the full ability to blockade it and basically decimate the Chinese economy. So they invest in a lot of pipelines in places like Pakistan, Burma, and Siberia. Makes sense to me.