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What Zhang Hongbao wrote about China's strategy before his 'car accident'


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By Lev Navrozov
SPECIAL TO WORLD TRIBUNE.COM

Lev Navrozov emigrated from the Soviet Union in 1972 He settled in New York City where he quickly learned that there was no market for his eloquent and powerful English language attacks on the Soviet Union. To this day, he writes without fear or favor or the conventions of polite society. He chaired the "Alternative to the New York Times Committee" in 1980, challenged the editors of the New York Times to a debate (which they declined) and became a columnist for the New York City Tribune. His columns are today read in both English and Russian.
Lev Navrozov

Monday, January 22, 2007

His name is Zhang Hongbao, and the Chinese dictatorship declared him to be a criminal, but he managed to escape from China to the United States, where he was recently “killed in a car accident.” In 2005, “World Chinese Net” posted his essay: “The Chinese Communist Party’s Post-Nuclear Super Weapons and Its Strategic Goal.”

Now, the CIA and other Western intelligence/espionage organizations are assumed to have been penetrating the dictatorship of China and studying this subject, along with Western professors of Sinology. And here I draw attention to a native Chinese. Yes, a native Chinese, without any degree or post, may know what the Western intelligence/espionage and academic Sinology do not.

When I, a native Russian, emigrated with my family to the United States in the early 1970s, I told the New York Times and the CIA that the Soviet dictatorship had been developing post-nuclear super weapons, which neither the New York Times nor the CIA would believe to be true for the next 20 years until Yeltsin, who needed peace for his reforms, did not exhibit in 1992 for international inspection the pre-1992 Soviet development of such super weapons.

How could I know what the CIA and the New York Times refused to know for another twenty years?

I was a native Russian, not a foreigner (such as a Western spy) in Russia to be kept off anything connected with Soviet military secrets. My wife was also a native Russian, and she became without any difficulty the editor of the Soviet edition of the international magazine “Nuclear Physics,” under the auspices of the most important Soviet nuclear research institute, headed by Skobeltsin, the founder of Soviet nuclear physics, and staffed by internationally known Soviet nuclear physicists. As my wife told me, Skobeltsin had announced at a general meeting of his subordinates that his Institute was to discontinue its nuclear research and to launch, instead, laser research, for example.

It was obvious to me what was unknown to the CIA and the New York Times until 1992: the Soviet nuclear research had been succeeded by the development of post-nuclear super weapons.

There is no need for a native to penetrate his or her country. He or she is part of it. Zhang Hongbao begins his essay with five major military technologies, and ironically, first comes laser technology, which the founder of Soviet nuclear physics mentioned as a field of research to succeed the nuclear weapons research in Soviet Russia.

Zhang’s next question (p. 3) is to be expected: “Who is really in control of China today?”

Not a single leader or an emperor, but a “leaders group,” a highly complex combination of power-holders. They threaten each other’s power, but the cumulative power of them all is threatened by what Zhang calls a “full scale crisis.” Politically, China “has a nascent human rights movement”; the influence of the democratic West and hence democratic demands “are stronger and more forceful than ever”; “religious forces are responding to the overseas religions of influence”; “unemployment is high”; “there is a large and impoverished peasant class”; “official greed and corruption are rampant”; “Taiwan, Xinjiang and Tibet are pushing for independence and they activate the underground forces.”

Every issue is like a sizzling blasting fuse on top of a mount of dry wood.

The English translation of the old Chinese name of China, translated into English as “the Middle Kingdom,” is more adequately translated by Zhang as “the Centre of the World.” The only way out: back to the Center of the World! “This process is the process of conquering the United States and taking over the world.”

The job must be done by post-nuclear super weapons that have the following features:

1. One hit destroys the enemy beyond any possibility of enemy resistance.

2. Maximum scale and speed of destruction.

3. Destruction is traceless. Before the enemy learns about it, the enemy is dead.

4. The goal is to wipe out the 2.6 billion inhabitants of the United States and 53 friendly and allied countries.

Is the above scenario realistic? Yes! As big as the elephant is it can be destroyed by a rat. For example, “if the power supply for the United States and its friendly and allied countries is suspended for one or two months (a power outage), the basic population of the United States and those countries (2.6 billion people) will be eliminated.

The 21-page essay in 8-point type is signed:

Zhang Hongbao
Leisurely wrote in Los Angeles
February 16th, 2005

Then follows a list of ranks of foreign top government the officials to whom Zhang Hongbao essay was to be delivered, and a list of the countries to which it was to be delivered.

Still, Zhang Hongbao’s essay of 2005 has been so far ignored.

Finally, the telephone, fax, and e-mail of the sender: Department of National Military Strategic Research, China Shadow Government.

Lev Navrozov's (navlev@cloud9.net] new book is available on-line at www.levnavrozov.com. To request an outline of the book, send an e-mail to webmaster@levnavrozov.com.

Monday, January 22, 2007

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