A Taiwanese company agreed to a request from a firm in China to procure sensitive components with nuclear uses, then shipped them to Iran, the firm's head said Friday. Such transactions violate U.N. sanctions imposed on the Middle Eastern nation.The Chinese selling nuke tech to Iran through Taiwan? Isn't this an argument for making Taiwan a formal member of international organizations?
The admission by Steven Lin of Hsinchu-based Heli-Ocean Technology Co. Ltd. comes amid an international effort led by the United States to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons. While Lin said he didn't know whether the parts -- a vital component in the production of weapons-grade uranium -- were eventually used by Iran militarily, he did acknowledge that they have nuclear applications.
Could US Middle Eastern
Analysts in Beijing must laugh themselves to sleep every night at how cataclysmically, world-historically stupid American Middle Eastern policy is.
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Daily Links
- Mutant Frog finds tale of colonial Taiwanese urged by Japanese government to sell gold for war effort.
- Dan Bloom says watch out for Y2k/YCI computer glitch in Taiwan
- WSJ gives a US perspective on the beef issue.
- Hong Kong leader threatens to use PRC troops on demonstrators. DPP should use that in their campaign stuff.
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1 comment:
Well the Middle East controls a large part of the world's oil, so for the time being this will always be a vital US interest. The US could only afford to disengage here if they'd reduce their dependency on oil imports.
Iraq will move more towards the religious fundamentalists, if it does indeed stabilize in the long term. However that's an inherited disaster - other than slowly disengaging and hoping things won't implode I don't see what Obama could do. Same with Afghanistan - if it's not supposed to revert back to the Taliban and generate terrorism, what choice does the US have but to prop up the government there? (More pressure for the Afghan government to become legitimate is needed, though.)
Iran will be interesting - I hope (and believe) that the current regime has had it. I think not asserting too much pressure from the outside and waiting a bit might turn the situation into the US' favor.
China ... well maybe they'd be happy if the US starts a war on Iran, but on the other hand: there involvement in this transaction might wake up some people in the US and alert them to the kind of regime they are dealing with.
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