
XI JINPING: a BIOGRAPHY
Chapter 09 Xi and Jin Sing – A Double Act of Nuclear Fraud Against the U.S. Empire (1)
Xi Jinping came to power in 2013 and decided his grand international strategy to replace the United States as his enemy and dominate the world. North Korea, next to home, was a pawn that must be used and controlled. But North Korea has had its own independence for three generations of dynasties since Kim Il Sung, Kim Jong Il to Kim Jong Un and has not so easily been controlled by the Chinese Communist Party. Seeing the value of the CCP’s use of them, the Kim dynasty has always blackmailed the CCP for free assistance and money. The CCP had to give things if it wanted to pull him in.
North Korea is determined to be strong in order to blackmail the U.S. and the Chinese Communist Party and there is nothing stronger than a nuclear power. Since 2003, the six-party talks involving China, the U.S., the Soviet Union, Japan, North Korea and South Korea had been held in Beijing every year for six rounds until 2007, nothing had been achieved because North Korea had no intention of abandoning nuclear weapons but only wanted to blackmail the Chinese. In 2006, North Korea announced a successful nuclear test and conducted the first nuclear explosion and in 2009, North Korea announced that it was withdrawing from the six-party meeting, followed by five nuclear explosions in 2009, 2012, 2015, 2016 and 2017, which caused a sensation in the world.
Further in 2016, North Korea announced a “perfect test explosion” of a hydrogen bomb, more powerful than the atomic bombs of the past. The U.S. and Russia have agreed to destroy all the hydrogen bombs they had in 2013 which were expensive to maintain and had a short storage life and Britain and France had stopped producing them long ago but only the Chinese Communist Party still has 30 hydrogen bombs. Now little brother Kim is coming up to play rogue blackmail and extortion with hydrogen. But Xi’s attitude is ambiguous. Brother Xi is happy that little brother Kim will use the hydrogen bomb to frighten the United States. Kim will help him to increase the negotiation power against the U.S. Empire but at the same time Xi also is worried that little brother Kim will be out of control.
The September 2017 red-headed document sent by the General Office of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) to the Liaison Office states that “North Korea is not only an important military buffer zone against hostile Western forces, but also an important political and strategic position for the socialist countries, which is irreplaceable, and the regime should be safeguarded at all costs.”
The Chinese Communist Party wants North Korea to let down the U.S. and add to its troubles. The CCP has been happy to see North Korea conducting frequent missile test launches and nuclear weapons tests. The “support for denuclearization of the North Korean region” is just diplomatic rhetoric. Xi Jinping wants Kim Jong-un to be a strategic pawn, constantly making disruptive moves to create problems for the United State so that Kim will keep America distracted and busy. But also to avoid losing control, he wants to be able to hold on to Kim to compel him to obey.
North Korea has always wanted to deal directly with the United States without being controlled by the CCP and be able to blackmail the U.S. Empire directly. When President Trump took office, Kim Jong Un sent a message of invitation to the U.S. through talks with South Korea and on March 8, 2018, Trump announced to South Korean officials at the White House that he had accepted Kim Jong Un’s invitation to talks.
The government’s decision to take a direct approach to the issue was a matter of concern to Xi Jinping. He was worried that he would be marginalized and that the CCP would no longer be at the center causing the CCP to lose its voice. Xi rushed to extend an invitation to Kim Jong-un to Beijing. The two sides discussed how to deal with the U.S. and at the end of March, Kim Jong-un made a successful trip to Beijing, his first visit to China in many years, with the goal of dealing with the U.S. together.
