On Sep 11, 12:04ย am, เบเบญเบเบเบต gmail.com> wrote:
> On Sep 10, 3:34ย am, เบเบนเปเบเปเบฒเบงเบฅเบฒเบง gmail.com> wrote:
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>> The Hanoi government has complained to Beijing about postings on Chinese
>> websites that detail plans for an invasion of Vietnam. Chinese officials
>> have dismissed the posts as the ramblings of a hypernationalist
>> minority. But the diplomatic flare-up is seen as an indication of rising
>> tensions between the two nations over the potentially oil-rich South
>> China Sea. There, China has been pressuring Western oil firms to cancel
>> joint exploration projects with Vietnam in waters that Beijing also claims.
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>> The South China Morning Post (SCMP) reported that the invasion plans
>> have been posted on the popular Chinese web portal
Sina.com and at least
>> three other websites. Analysts interviewed by the SCMP characterized the
>> posted "invasion plans" as the work of kooks, with little military value.
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>> ย ย The supposed plans detail a 31-day invasion, starting with five days
>> of missile strikes from land, sea and air and climaxing in an invasion
>> involving 310,000 troops sweeping into Vietnam from Yunnan, Guangxi and
>> the South China Sea. The electronic jamming of Vietnamese command and
>> communications centers is mentioned, along with the blocking of sea
>> lanes in the South China Sea....
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>> ย ย "Vietnam is the strategic hub of the whole of Southeast Asia.
>> Vietnam has to be conquered first if Southeast Asia is to be under
>> [China's] control again," the plans say. "From all perspectives Vietnam
>> is a piece of bone hard to be swallowed."
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>> The SCMP added that Vietnamese officials were baffled that the postings
>> remained online after they registered their complaints, since Beijing
>> can easily block any Web content that has been brought to its attention.
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>> The Straits Times, a Singapore daily, reported that Chinese officials
>> have assured Vietnam that the postings do not reflect Beijing's official
>> position.
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>> The web postings come as China and Vietnam are squaring off over
>> exploration projects in the South China Sea in areas that both claim. In
>> July, Beijing had warned the American oil giant ExxonMobil to scrap an
>> exploration deal with Vietnam, reported the World Tribune. The report
>> suggested that Vietnam had a better case for its claim to potentially
>> oil-rich fields off its coast. But China is flexing its growing
>> political muscle by asserting its claim to nearly the entire South China
>> Sea.
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>> ย ย A Hong Kong newspaper says Beijing's diplomats have threatened
>> retaliation if ExxonMobil goes ahead with a preliminary agreement with
>> the Vietnamese state oil firm PetroVietnam. The deal covers exploitation
>> in the South China Sea off Vietnam's south and central coasts, according
>> to the Sunday Morning Post....
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>> ย ย The Hong Kong newspaper quoted unidentified sources saying Exxon
>> Mobil was confident of Vietnam's sovereign rights to the blocks it was
>> now seeking to explore. But it is clear that ExxonMobil could not
>> dismiss China's warnings out of hand given the rapidly increasing
>> Chinese market for crude oil and oil products....
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>> ย ย Last year, Chinese media targeted an agreement between Vietnam and
>> BP near the Spratlys maintaining that those islands had been an
>> "indisputable part of Chinese territory since ancient times." The
>> Spratlys, like other island groups in the region, are uninhabited rocky
>> outcroppings and coral but are in an area that may contain large oil and
>> gas deposits.
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>> Reuters reported that China and Vietnam are actually cooperating in oil
>> and gas exploration in the Gulf of Tonkin off Vietnam's north coast. But
>> in waters further south, the two sides are at odds. The territorial
>> dispute in southern waters led British oil giant BP to scotch its plans
>> for exploration there.
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>> Once united by their communist ideology, relations between Vietnam and
>> China cooled in the 1970s, particularly when Vietnam invaded Cambodia in
>> late 1978 to oust the Beijing-backed Khmer Rouge regime. Partly in
>> retaliation, China invaded Vietnam a few months later, as detailed by
>> Global Security. The two sides fought a nasty one-month border war that
>> left tens of thousands dead before Beijing retreated. Border clashes
>> continued throughout the 1980s.
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>> That history helps explain Vietnam's sensitivity to public "invasion
>> plans" on Chinese websites, no matter how bogus they might be.
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>> In the past two decades, relations have warmed as both countries moved
>> ahead with pragmatic market reforms, despite several ongoing territorial
>> disputes. In addition to the Spratly and Paracel islands in the South
>> China Sea, the countries are also battling for influence over
>> neighboring, resource-rich Laos. A commentary in the Asia Times argued
>> that Laos is likely to increasingly tilt toward China, despite the
>> landlocked country's historically close ties to Vietnam.
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>> ย ย Laos is of increasing strategic importance to both China and
>> Vietnam, two of Asia's fastest growing countries. Vietnam's interests
>> lie primarily in securing its long land border with Laos and developing
>> greater access to markets in Thailand. For China, Laos provides a
>> growing avenue to export products to wider Southeast Asia, particularly
>> from its remote and less-developed, landlocked southwestern regions....
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>> ย ย Some analysts here predict that the balance of influence inside the
>> ruling Lao People's Revolutionary Party (LPRP) could soon shift in
>> Beijing's favor, as senior Lao leaders fade from the political scene and
>> younger, more market-savvy cadre lacking experience in the communist
>> revolutionary period assume positions of power.
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> เบฎเปเบฒ.......
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> เบญเปเบฒเบเปเบซเปเบเปเบญเบตเบเบเบงเบเบเบตเปเบกเบฑเบเบซเบปเบงเปเบชเบเป,เบชเปเปเบฒเบเบฒเปเบเบชเบงเบเบเบตเบเบฅเบนเบเบเบปเบงเปเบญเบเบเปเบฅเบฐ
> เบเบตเปเปเบฅเปเบงเบกเบฑเบเบเบถเบเบงเบฒเบกเบเบนเปเปเบเบปเปเบฒเปเบเบตเปเบเปเบงเบปเปเบฒเบงเปเบฒเบเบฒเปเบซเปเบเปเบฅเปเบชเบงเบเบเบฒเบเปเบญเบ, เบชเปเบงเบ
> เบเบฒเบเปเบญเบเบเปเปเบกเบตเบเปเบญเบเบชเบงเบเบซเบฒเปเบฅเปเบเบตเบเบเบตเบเบเบตเบเบซเปเบเบฒ 555
> เบเปเบเบตเปเบซเบทเบกเบญเบเบเบฑเบเบเบงเบเบกเบฑเบเบเบฒเบเบฑเบเบฅเบญเบเบซเปเบเบฒเบเบฒเบเบญเบญเบเปเบฅเปเบงเบเบดเปเบเปเบซเบฑเบ
> เบซเปเบเบฒเปเบชเบถเบญ...เปเบงเบเบเบฑเบกเบเปเบซเบเบตเปเบเปเปเบฅเปเบงเบกเบฒเบเปเปเปเบชเบถเบญ.
>
> เบฎเบฑเบเปเบเบเบเบญเบ,- Hide quoted text -
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> - Show quoted text -
Buk Hookee #4. Don't worry, PBL have them under survailance 24/7.
With one phone call he can have bombed again.
Hehehehe 55555555
Your friend,
เปเบฅเบฃเบตเป