The Real War

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Will the Biden Administration Policy of Providing Virtually Unlimited U.S. Military Assistance to Ukraine Provoke Russia to Employ Tactical Nuclear Weapons to Win the War?

Will the Biden Administration Policy of Providing Virtually Unlimited U.S. Military Assistance to Ukraine Provoke Russia to Employ Tactical Nuclear Weapons to Win the War?

Following the U.S. military aided counteroffensive in which Ukraine succeeded in pushing Russian forces out of the Kharkiv region, Presidents Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping meet to plot their next move

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David T. Pyne
Sep 17, 2022
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The Real War
The Real War
Will the Biden Administration Policy of Providing Virtually Unlimited U.S. Military Assistance to Ukraine Provoke Russia to Employ Tactical Nuclear Weapons to Win the War?
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Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping Meeting in February 2022 when they announced their “no limits’ partnership

September 27th Update: A former advisor to Russian President Vladimir Putin strongly believes that it was President Xi Jinping that told Putin to engage in a major escalation of the war so Russia could defeat Ukraine within the next few months if they continued to refuse to accept Russia’s peace terms. I believe President Xi’s motivation for wanting Russia to end the war this year is because he wants to make sure that Russia will be ready to join China in an offensive war against the U.S. and its Pacific Allies early next spring in the event that President Joe Biden makes good on his threat to defend Taiwan militarily. The liberal mainstream media falsely reports that President Xi is unhappy with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine but, in fact, he is only unhappy that Putin is taking so long to defeat them.

On September 15th, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping convened a joint strategy meeting in Samarkand, Uzbekistan at the annual summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization military alliance which they formed back in July 2001 to counter continued U.S. military incursions into their respective spheres of influence. The Islamic Republic of Iran was accepted at this meeting as a full member of the alliance, which already includes India, Pakistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, while Belarus may soon follow. The alliance boasts over forty-two percent of the world’s population (as compared to only twelve percent for NATO), thirty percent of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by Purchase Power Parity (PPP) and eighty percent of the world’s operational nuclear weapons.  Putin previously stated the meeting would have special significance because they will be meeting to discuss how Russia and China can better support each other with regards to Russia’s continuing war in Ukraine and China’s plan to reunify with Taiwan by force, if necessary, within the next year or two. They may also have discussed their joint offensive contingency plans against the U.S. if President Joe Biden follows through on his pledge to defend Taiwan militarily or if his administration continues to escalate its undeclared proxy war against Russia in Ukraine. It is conceivable they may have also discussed a possible Russian nuclear escalation to win its illegal war of aggression against Ukraine.

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