| Connected Entity | Relationship Type |
Strength
(mentions)
|
Documents | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
person
Huawei
|
Unknown |
5
|
1 | |
|
person
Washington
|
Adversarial |
5
|
1 |
| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2014-01-01 | N/A | Establishment of Overseas Chinese Service Center in Auckland. | Auckland | View |
This document appears to be Page 60 of a report titled 'BREAKING DOWN DEMOCRACY,' likely produced by a pro-democracy NGO or think tank. It outlines specific recommendations for the academic community, business community, European Union, private foundations, and political candidates to combat rising authoritarianism. While it bears a House Oversight Bates stamp, the text itself makes no mention of Jeffrey Epstein; instead, it focuses on geopolitical authoritarianism, criticizing figures like Vladimir Putin and urging Western leaders (including Donald Trump) to cease praising dictators.
This document appears to be a page from a longer geopolitical analysis or email written in late 2016, following the US election but prior to Trump's inauguration. The writer analyzes the shift toward bilateral trade deals, the death of the TPP, China's economic position, and the implications of 'America First' policies. It concludes with personal reflections on the political polarization in the US, referencing the recent Medal of Freedom ceremony.
This document appears to be a page from a macroeconomic report or financial strategy memo, likely produced during the House Oversight investigation (indicated by the footer). The text analyzes the strength of the US Dollar ('Dollar Smile' theory) following the election of Donald Trump in late 2016. The author argues that despite protectionist policies ('America First'), the dollar's dominance will remain, citing weaknesses in the Euro (EUR), Yen (JPY), and China's capital flight issues (USD 207 billion outflows in Q3 2016).
This document is page 170 of a House Oversight Committee report (Appendix 2) detailing People's Republic of China (PRC) influence operations in New Zealand. It discusses the United Front Work Department's control over diaspora organizations, specifically the 'Peaceful Reunification of China Association,' and their involvement in local politics and fundraising. The page also highlights the controversy surrounding Yang Jian, a New Zealand Member of Parliament exposed in 2017 for concealing his 15-year history with Chinese military intelligence colleges and former CCP membership.
This document appears to be a page (125) from a House Oversight Committee report discussing the risks of technology transfer and intellectual property theft by China. It highlights a specific partnership between the University of Tennessee, Oak Ridge National Lab, and the Chinese Academy of Sciences as a potential vehicle for 'technical transfer.' It also discusses cyberespionage, quoting NSA Director Keith Alexander, and various methods of counterfeiting and regulatory exploitation used to acquire trade secrets.
This document appears to be a page (123) from a House Oversight report detailing Chinese state espionage and technology transfer strategies. It focuses on the 'Thousand Talents Plan' (TTP) initiated in 2008, describing how the Chinese government recruits both ethnic and non-ethnic Chinese experts ('nontraditional collectors') from US government and corporate sectors to acquire intellectual property. It also outlines China's 'open-source' acquisition infrastructure used to gather technical standards and research.
This page analyzes China's shift from a strategy of hiding strength to confident international activism under Xi Jinping, driven by perceptions of American decline and China's economic indispensability. It details specific manifestations of this shift, including military expansion in the South China Sea, the Belt and Road Initiative, the creation of the AIIB, and increased diplomatic and military engagements globally.
This document is a page from the January 23, 2018 edition of China Daily, bearing a House Oversight Committee stamp. It features coverage of the 'Vision China' event, focusing on discussions about China's 'New Era' under Xi Jinping, with articles profiling Robert Lawrence Kuhn, Andrew Moody, and Liu Xin. The content focuses on Chinese media narratives, international relations, and the Belt and Road Initiative, with no direct textual mention of Jeffrey Epstein or Ghislaine Maxwell.
This document is a printed page (Page 15 of 21) from the TED2017 conference program, printed on April 20, 2017. It details the speakers for 'Session 8: Bugs and Bodies', scheduled for April 27, 2017, including David Miliband (previous session), Robert Sapolsky, Jun Wang, Anne Madden, and David Brenner. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_014965' stamp, indicating it was part of a document production for a US House Oversight Committee investigation.
This document appears to be a page from a strategic policy report analyzing the shifting balance of power in the Gulf region. It details China's increasing, though modest, military presence and diplomatic ties with Arab states and Iran to secure oil routes. The text argues that US Centcom planners must adapt their strategies for troop surges, as traditional slow buildups are becoming vulnerable to preemptive strikes.
This text outlines a grand strategy for US foreign policy regarding China, advocating for a "gatekept order" rather than direct containment. It argues for creating a strong network based on US values that other nations can join conditionally, while urging cooperation on global issues to avoid fatal conflict. The passage also introduces the concept of "Seventh Sense" logic, comparing geopolitical shifts to complex adaptive systems in nature.
The text explores the geopolitical tension between the United States and China, comparing their relationship to historical rivalries like Germany and Great Britain to illustrate the dangers of the "security dilemma." It discusses how each nation's pursuit of security often leads to mutual insecurity and highlights their fundamentally different perceptions of the current global order—America viewing it as sustainable and beneficial, while China sees it as broken and in need of reconstruction ("Da po, Da li").
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