CIA Director William Burns said on Tuesday that #China appears to have been unsettled by the difficulties Russia has faced since its invasion of Ukraine, but Chinese leader Xi Jinping's determination with regard to #Taiwan should not be underestimated. news.yahoo.com/china-unsettle…
He was asked whether he thought there might be room for a more "productive" U.S. conversation with #China over #Taiwan, given the economic damage Russia had suffered after invading Ukraine. He said he did not.
"I would just say analytically, I would not underestimate President Xi and the Chinese leadership's determination with regard to Taiwan," he said.
"I do think ... that they have been surprised and unsettled to some extent by what they've seen in Ukraine over the last 12 days, everything from the strength of the Western reaction to the way in which Ukrainians have fiercely resisted," he added.
Burns said he believed there had been "an impact on the Chinese calculus with regard to Taiwan and which we obviously are going to continue to pay careful attention to," but did not elaborate.
The Russian invasion of Ukraine has caused particular alarm in self-governed Taiwan, which China claims as its own and has vowed to reclaim, by force if necessary.
The island, which Washington is obliged by law to provide with the means to defend itself, has stepped up its alert level, wary of China taking advantage of a distracted West to move against it.
Burns said he believed China did not anticipate the difficulties the Russians were going to run into and was also unsettled by the "reputational damage" that could come from Beijing's close association with Russian President Vladimir Putin...
... and the economic consequences of the Ukraine invasion.
Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines told the hearing that China and Russia were drawing closer together on economic, political and security issues, but there was a limit to the alignment between the two countries.
She said it was still not clear how the war in Ukraine would affect their ties.
"It does seem as if they [China] are potentially paying a price for not criticizing Russia, and that may have an impact on how this trajectory moves forward," Haines said.
Scott Berrier, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, said Taiwan and Ukraine were "two different things completely," when asked if China might be emboldened by Russia's actions to try to take back Taiwan.
"I also believe that our deterrence posture in the Pacific puts a very different perspective on all of this. We do know that (China) (is) watching very, very carefully what happens and how this plays out," he said.
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"#Ukraine's state-run nuclear company said Russian Forces had cut a power line supplying electricity to the Chernobyl nuclear power plant.
Chernobyl no longer generates electricity, but it needs the power to help cool spent nuclear fuel." dw.com/en/eu-to-tough…
Energoatom said it was impossible to fix the power line because of ongoing fighting in the area.
Ukraine's energy minister, Herman Halushchenko, said authorities did not know the radiation levels at the site since the Russians took control of it.
"The Director-General ... indicated that remote data transmission from safeguards monitoring systems installed at the Chornobyl NPP had been lost," the International Atomic Energy Agency said in a statement.
"Ukrainian forces have held off Russian forces from taking control of new cities in recent days. But the Russians continue to make smaller advances on multiple fronts, and they appear to be aiming for a target in central #Ukraine: the city of Dnipro." nytimes.com/interactive/20…
"Dnipro occupies an important position. If Russian troops can advance on it both from the north, near Kharkiv, and from the south, up from Crimea, they could isolate Ukrainian forces fighting in the Donbas region in the east, or force them to retreat."
"If the Ukrainian forces in the east are not already withdrawing, they could be potentially encircled and destroyed soon, according to an analysis by Konrad Muzyka, a defense analyst for Rochan Consulting."
"#Taiwan's military strategists have been studying Russia's invasion of #Ukraine, and the country's resistance, for the island's own battle strategy in the event its giant neighbour #China ever makes good on its threat to take them by force." news.yahoo.com/analysis-taiwa…
Ma Cheng-Kun, director of the Graduate Institute of China Military Affairs Studies at Taiwan's National Defence University, said Ukraine had used the same concept with mobile weapons to stymie Russian forces.
"Ukraine's military has been making full use of asymmetric warfare, very effectively, and so far successfully holding off Russia's advance," added Ma, a government advisor on China policy.
From @BonnieGlaser and Jude Blanchette: "#Beijing should be drawing some important lessons from Russia’s aggression against #Ukraine. Though there are big differences between Ukraine and #Taiwan, there are important similarities." wsj.com/articles/ukrai…
"As Mr. Putin saw Ukraine’s growing democratic resilience and ties with the West as a threat to his regime, so does Beijing fear a robust and democratic Taiwan roughly 100 miles off its shoreline that is bolstering relations with the U.S. and its allies."
"First and most important, a foreign army should never underestimate the will of the local people to defend their territory. The U.S. learned that painfully in Vietnam and Iraq, and the Russian army is coming to understand it in the streets of Ukraine."
"By the outbreak of the war, the Russian political space had been wiped clean to the extent that is possible. In the depths of their souls, officials and legilsators may disagree with the decisions of their leaders — but only in the depths of their souls." faridaily.substack.com/p/theyre-caref…
"In reality, the attitude toward the war within the corridors of power is ambiguous. I came to this conclusion after speaking with several members of parliament and officials at various levels."
"Many of them are discouraged, frightened, and are making apocalyptic forecasts. Andrei Kostin, [head of the largely state-owned VTB Bank], is "in mourning." Some Duma members are thinking of giving up their seats."
Before Twitter was blocked in #Russia, the site saw frequent discussions about how people might be able to persuade their parents not to believe Kremlin propaganda — and, above all, not to support the war in #Ukraine. dw.com/en/young-russi…
According to a survey by the state-led opinion research institute VCIOM, 68% of Russians support the war, which within the country can only officially be referred to as a "special military operation."
There are hardly any critical or independent press outlets left, and older people in particular get most of their news from state television.