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Show notes:
On today's Andrew and Bill begin with the heaviest rainfall in at least 140 years in Beijing this week. Topics include: Best wishes to all those affected by the floods, the astounding scale of these storms and resulting damage, citizens angry after local officials allegedly divert floods to protect Xiong’an, and the CPC playbook that will likely restrict information and hide the full extent of the tragedy. From there: Changes atop the PLA Rocket Force raise questions about espionage, the PLA nuclear program, and a years-long anti-corruption campaign under Xi Jinping that may not be over. From there: Follow-up to last week's Intel discussion, officials concerned about Chinese malware in America's military and civilian infrastructure, and a question about the American media and strategic alternatives to dialogue. At the end: The potential security pact between South Korea and Japan, the history and contemporary reality of the Beidaihe Meetings, and a reminder that the podcast will be off until the week of August 21st.
We would love to hear feedback and suggestions/questions for future episodes in the Sinocism Chat, which is always open.
Related readings:
Beijing records heaviest rainfall in at least 140 years, causing severe flooding and 21 deaths -- AP
China floods: Dramatic rescue in Hebei, Beijing neighborhoods submerged -- YouTube
Collage: Floods in Beijing and Hebei -- Sixth Tone
China Official’s Call to Save Xi’s City Angers Flood Victims -- Bloomberg
China ousts top generals from nuclear Rocket Force -- Financial Times
The Week of LK-99 Intrigue, China and Trailing Edges Chips, Intel Goes to Washington -- Sharp Tech
U.S. Hunts Chinese Malware That Could Disrupt American Military Operations -- N.Y. Times
China Doesn’t Want to Compete. It Wants to Win. -- The Atlantic
US seeks to deepen Tokyo-Seoul security links to boost Pacific deterrence -- Financial Times
China hints leaders started annual seaside vacation in flood-hit province -- Reuters
At Mao’s Beach, China’s Leaders Still Make History as Lifeguards Hide From the Sun -- N.Y. Times
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