From Hudson in 5 <[email protected]>
Subject Hudson in 5: The Chinese Communist Party Does Not Represent the Chinese People
Date September 21, 2022 11:00 AM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
No images? Click here [link removed]

The Chinese Communist Party Does Not Represent the Chinese People

(Screenshot via Hudson Institute/YouTube)

Hudson Distinguished Fellow and 70th Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo [[link removed]] speaks [[link removed]] directly to the Chinese people about the CCP and US-China relations. He explains that despite its rhetoric the CCP is a totalitarian, one-party government that neither represents the Chinese people nor governs in their interests.

WATCH HERE [[link removed]]

More Political Interference Will Hurt, Not Help, the US Military

Soldiers assigned to the 82nd Airborne provide security during an evacuation at Hamid Karzai International Airport, Kabul, Afghanistan, on August 21, 2021. (Marine Corps photo by Sgt. Isaiah Campbell)

Hudson Senior Fellow and former National Security Council advisor Nadia Schadlow [[link removed]] explains in National Review [[link removed]] why the US should not follow the Soviet Union's example by imposing politically motivated "commissars" into the military chain of command.

READ HERE [[link removed]]

The Shanghai Cooperation Organization’s Clumsy Push to Disrupt the World Order

Vladimir Putin and Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev during the Russian-Uzbek signing ceremony at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization Summit on September 15, 2022, in Samarkand, Uzbekistan. (Contributor/Getty Images)

Russia, China, and Iran all seek to disrupt the international system. Yet they have no positive agenda to propose. In the Wall Street Journal [[link removed]], Hudson Distinguished Fellow Walter Russell Mead [[link removed]] writes about the problems these countries face as they participate in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit in Uzbekistan.

READ HERE [[link removed]] Chinese Information and Influence Warfare in Asia and the Pacific

Singapore's Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong attends a meeting with China's President Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on September 20, 2017. (Lintao Zhanf/AFP via Getty Images)

In this policy memo, Hudson Senior Fellow John Lee [[link removed]] describes [[link removed]] the key objectives, strategies, and tactics of Chinese information and influence warfare that the Chinese Communist Party developed and refined for use in the Asia-Pacific region.

READ HERE [[link removed]]

Conflict in South Caucasus Is an International Problem

Azeri service members carry a giant flag during a procession marking the anniversary of the end of the 2020 military conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh breakaway region on November 8, 2021, in Baku, Azerbaijan. (Aziz Karimov/Getty Images)

In Arab News [[link removed]], Hudson Senior Fellow Luke Coffey [[link removed]] explains why the US can no longer afford to ignore the geostrategic significance of the ongoing Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict.

READ HERE [[link removed]]

BEFORE YOU GO...

Watch Hudson Senior Fellow Nury Turkel [[link removed]] discuss his recently released memoir, No Escape: The True Story of China’s Genocide of the Uyghurs. His conversation with Susan Crabtree [[link removed]] of RealClearPolitics evaluates the national security concerns over China’s rapidly evolving, technologically enabled surveillance state, which he experienced first hand as a Uyghur born in a Chinese "re-education camp."

DONATE TO HUDSON [[link removed]] Share [link removed] Tweet [link removed] Forward [link removed] Preferences [link removed] | Unsubscribe [link removed]
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis