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Intro
Don is a very valuable resource to know what is going on in Ukraine. He has been here before,
Even if I’m terribly busy, I always take the time to check out his Substack reports, where like me, you can subscribe,
Enjoy another great conversation!
Quick Recap
The interview between Jeff J. Brown and Don Hank focuses on the geopolitical situation in Ukraine, Russia’s military advances, and the implications of Western involvement in the conflict. They discuss recent territorial gains by Russia in Ukraine, particularly near Kharkiv and Kursk, and analyze whether these moves signal a broader Russian strategy to expand beyond Donetsk and Luhansk. The conversation also touches on Trump’s policies regarding arms sales and intelligence sharing with Ukraine, the role of NATO, and the potential for negotiations. Both speakers express skepticism about the effectiveness of Western intervention and highlight the disconnect between official narratives and on-the-ground realities. Additionally, they explore the possibility of Russia connecting its territory to Transnistria via a land bridge and speculate on future developments in the region.
10-Point Summary
- Russia’s Territorial Advances:
– Russia has reportedly captured significant territory in northern Ukraine, particularly near Kharkiv and Kursk, extending beyond the historical boundaries of Donetsk and Luhansk.
– These advances suggest a strategic push to consolidate control over key regions and potentially expand further.
- Trump’s Policies on Ukraine:
– Despite claims that Trump halted arms sales and intelligence support to Ukraine, evidence suggests that such measures may not have been fully implemented.
– Russia continues to accuse the U.S. and its allies of covertly aiding Ukraine through weapons like HIMARS and long-range missiles.
- Western Hypocrisy in Warfare:
– Western-backed forces, including Ukraine, are accused of targeting civilian infrastructure rather than military objectives, reflecting a broader pattern of rogue-state behavior.
– This approach undermines the legitimacy of Western powers and their allies in the conflict.
- Potential Land Bridge to Transnistria:
– If Russia secures Odessa and connects its territory to Transnistria, it could create a strategic land corridor linking Russian-controlled areas with the breakaway Moldovan region.
– Such a move would strengthen Russia’s geopolitical position and isolate Ukraine from the Black Sea.
- Negotiation Speculation:
– Both speakers doubt the feasibility of negotiations involving NATO peacekeepers in Ukraine, citing past failed agreements (e.g., Minsk and Istanbul).
– Putin is unlikely to trust Western promises, given the history of broken deals and NATO expansion.
- Kharkiv and Kursk Battles:
– Recent clashes in Kursk highlight the ongoing volatility of the front lines, with Ukrainian forces suffering significant losses.
– Russia appears to be regaining momentum in Kharkiv after earlier setbacks, indicating shifting dynamics in the conflict.
- Geopolitical Implications for Europe:
– Allowing even a small portion of Ukraine to remain independent risks perpetuating proxy wars against Russia.
– To stabilize the region, Russia might need to extend its influence up to Ukraine’s western borders, effectively eliminating Ukrainian sovereignty as a buffer zone.
- Transnistria’s Role:
– Transnistria, a Russian enclave in Moldova, could become a focal point for Russian ambitions if connected to mainland Russia via Odessa.
– Residents of Transnistria are believed to favor integration with Russia, making it a likely candidate for annexation.
- Criticism of Western Media Narratives:
– Western media often distorts facts about the conflict, portraying Russia as weaker than it actually is while exaggerating Ukrainian successes.
– Analysts like Alexander Mercouris provide more nuanced perspectives based on detailed reporting from Russian sources.
- Future Outlook:
– The next few months will be critical as Russia intensifies its military campaigns ahead of potential negotiations.
– Key objectives include securing Kharkiv, Sumy, Kherson, and Odessa, which could reshape the geopolitical landscape of Eastern Europe significantly.
Transcript
Jeff J. Brown: How are you doing?
Don Hank: Hey, how are you, buddy?
Jeff: How is Panama?
Don: About the same.
Jeff: Yeah.
Don: Same weather all the time.
Jeff: What’s happened with all of Trump’s bullying the Panamanian government, getting the Chinese kicked out? What do the people think about that?
Don: The Panamanians tend to be rather oblivious to everything.
Jeff: Okay.
Don: That’s good. That’s good. They don’t fight me. They just go, “Oh, oh, okay.”
Jeff: Okay. So they don’t really care whether the U.S. takes over the Panama Canal or not?
Don: Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Yeah, they do. And that’s why President Mulino keeps saying, “Panama is sovereign.”
Jeff: Okay.
Don: And people believe that. We know that. I think everything Trump says can be taken with a grain of salt.
Jeff: Yeah, yeah. Well, they did get the Chinese out from helping manage the canal. Is that true?
Don: No, no, they’ve never managed the canal. What they managed was two ports inside the canal.
Jeff: Inside the canal. Okay.
Don: It has nothing to do with the canal. They could not control anything in the canal with those ports.
Don: Now BlackRock has the ports, the good guys. They have the ports.
Jeff: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Don: And thanks to a phone call from Trump.
Jeff: Well, anyway, yeah, yeah. So you’re in the hands of the trillionaires, The City of London and Wall Street. So that’s kind of sounds too bad.
Don: Well, the UK is getting some of what it asked for. Last night, I guess you may have read this, the Russians completely obliterated a ship from the UK that was in Odessa.
Jeff: Oh, really?
Don: Yeah, supposedly unloading arms. Nobody knows. They’re all blown up.
Jeff: That’s funny. Well, that was, Go ahead. Go ahead.
Don: Well, by the way, what time is it there?
Jeff: It is 10:14 in the evening on Tuesday, and so it’s 9:14 in the morning on Monday your time.
Don: You’re absolutely right. I checked out all kinds of resources and found that supposedly we’re 12 hours.
Jeff: No, no, 13. Well, now New York is 12 hours because they sprang forward with daylight savings time, but you didn’t change in Panama.
Don: Yeah, yeah. I just checked up on that. Yeah, neither Taiwan nor Panama has daylight saving time.
Jeff: Yeah, yeah. Well, we’re too tropical, you know, we don’t need daylight saving time.
Don: That’s true.
Jeff: Well, tell us about what’s going on? I originally asked you some questions, like, about Trump supposedly stopping arms sales to Ukraine and then supposedly stopping intelligence going to Ukraine. And then, of course, I wanted to talk to you about a significant chunk of land that I just noticed on southfront.org. I never noticed it before, but Russia has taken probably several hundred square kilometers of land to the west of northwestern Donetsk. And so, anyway, tell us about the, apparently it turned out to just be basically a lie. I don’t know. Do you think that they really ever stopped sending arms, and do you think that they really ever stopped Intelligence from the CIA?
Don: Okay, of course, we have no way of knowing, but yesterday the Russians mauled the Ukrainians in Kursk.
Jeff: Yeah.
Don: It’s the worst mauling they’ve ever had since the beginning, Alexander Mercouris pointed that out. He said, in fact, I got it written down right here. He says, “There has never, in my opinion, been a collapse as sudden, complete, and as catastrophic as this for the Ukraine, of any part of the battlefront, at any point since the start of the conflict in February 2022.”
Jeff: Yeah, for the fans out there who are not sure what Kursk is, it’s on the northern border of Ukraine and on the southern border of Belgorod. Is it the Belgorod Oblast?
Don: I think.
Jeff: Yeah, Belgorod, if I’m pronouncing it right. But anyway, the Ukrainians pushed through and took over, I don’t know how many square kilometers. And so now, and I think Zelensky thought it would be a bargaining chip, an eventual negotiation, but apparently, the Russians, as you just said, apparently the Ukrainian army has collapsed there, and they’ll be taking Kursk back in probably a matter of weeks. But what do you think about the intelligence? I mean, do you think, I mean, yesterday Trump came out and said, “Well, we never really stopped, you know.” But you have no idea.
Don: I never heard him say that.
Jeff: Oh, yeah, yeah. He said that. He said, “Well, the intelligence is,” something along the lines of, “The intelligence is practically all back online now.”
Don: Okay, well, I was going to say something about that. Okay. Now we know.
Jeff: And Lavrov came out last week and said that Ukraine cannot use HIMARS and all of the European long-range missiles without the CIA’s and, you know, the U.S. military’s coordinates and even to operate the darn things on the ground in Ukraine.
Don: Yeah. So the Russians are actually fighting the West.
Jeff: Of course, absolutely.
Don: And the US allies, which is pretty typical. And they’re fighting. Now, last night, there was a record number of drones from Ukraine to Moscow.
Jeff: Yeah, yeah, something, a hundred and something, or it was just an amazing number.
Don: Oh, it was something like 300-something. They shut down something like 300. But a few go through. And of course, this indicates to us that only civilian targets were hit, as far as we know. Now, this shows you that any ally, any military that is allied with the United States is going to go after civilians and not military targets normally. That’s where we have it all, we have that in Julani in Syria, killing civilians. I mean, in Israel, civilians. Ukraine, same story. When a country gets to the point of a great power get to the point that they’re targeting mostly civilians, you don’t have a great power anymore. You have a rogue state.
Don: Yeah.
Don: Too much money and too many arms. That’s all.
Jeff: Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, tell us about this territory up in the north-central part of Ukraine that butts up against Donetsk. I think I’m pronouncing it right or.
Don: What you’re talking about is it in Donetsk or is it beyond that?
Jeff: I know it’s beyond that. It’s beyond the boundary, and it’s pretty. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Don: Well, is this in the Sumy oblast?
Jeff: No, I think it’s more towards Kharkov. Is Kharkiv the one that’s.
Don: Kharkov.
Jeff: Yeah, Kharkov, yeah. It’s by Kharkov. What I’ll do is I’ll see if I can find the photo of the map on South. So, what other news do you have from Ukraine? For those of you out there who don’t know, Don is fluent in Russian, and so he scours the Russian news, the Russophone media to find all kinds of information that we normally don’t get in the West.
So his Substack is really, really worth subscribing to. Oh, wait, did South Front change their, I think there are South Front News. Anyway, I never really noticed this map. And I was just like, “Wow, that’s a ton of territory.” And no one’s ever talked about it. And I just wonder, you know, does that portend bigger chances of the Russians trying to take more land outside of the, here it is right here. Yeah, there it is right there. Yeah, it’s over by Kupyansk.
Don: Yeah, yeah. Which is in the Kharkov region, I think.
Jeff: Oh, yeah. Well, they have, how do I, in, this is something I’ve never done. And, let me see, how do I do the AI companion apps, how do I more share screen.
Don: It’s okay. I can look it up if it’s in South Front.
Jeff: Yeah, yeah. Southfront.press.
Don: You know, I used to read South Front almost every day, and now I’m just reading Russian news.
Jeff: Yeah, yeah. Well, for people like us who can’t read Russian, it’s not bad.
Don: It’s good, actually. South Front’s pretty good.
Jeff: I don’t know how to save. I’m sorry. I don’t know how to, hang on up here. Let me see apps with real-time view, gallery speaker, change. Anyway, on that map, it must be several hundred kilometers. So what does that tell you if Russia is already going beyond, it’s the borders of legislated, historical Donetsk, Lugansk, and the other two, Oblast. What does that tell you?
Don: Yeah. Well, it suggests that possibly or probably even, Trump is not sending arms. They’re running out of farms. And they’re weak. Much weaker than before. So I think Russia has just plowed through the front lines and is moving Kharkov. They almost had given up on Kharkov. They had captured that at one time, and then they ran out of manpower, and the commander decided to just pull out and let him have it.
Jeff: Okay, okay.
Don: The same thing is true of Kherson.
Jeff: That Kherson is down by Odessa, right? Down in the southern.
Don: Well, it’s getting close to Odessa along that river.
Jeff: Yeah, yeah. So how do you assess, I mean, are they moving along the entire front or are they extended into, oh, there it is. There’s a share screen right there. Hang on, let’s see what happens. I just click share screen. Let’s see what happens. Anyway, are they advancing across the entire front or are they having better luck North or South, or what do you see?
Don: Okay, well, I always recommend that people check with Alexander Mercouris. He’s really good and very detailed. And I try to keep up with them. But I don’t know if it’s the entire front or not. I think they’re interested in Kharkov. But they’re also interested in Sumy because Sumy is the bridgehead that was used to attack Kursk.
Jeff: Kursk, yeah, yeah.
Don: So they might be focused on that. If they start to focus on Odessa, then they will move that way, and they’ll take Kherson back. And there’s no question that they will take these places back, of course.
Jeff: It would be a travesty if Ukraine is allowed to have any of the Black Sea. I mean, they have got to cut Ukraine off, from the Black Sea.
Don: I never make predictions, but I’m going to predict that they will take Odessa. And they will, Nikolaev is in there too. They will need to take that along the Black Sea. We need to take all that territory. And I had this theory that, and maybe I shouldn’t even say this because it’s early to say it, but I have a theory that Russia may just completely control all of Ukraine at some point. I don’t think they’ll occupy…
Jeff: Yeah. I don’t see any other solution because if there’s one square meter of land called Ukraine, Europe is going to use it to continue fighting against Russia. And the only way that Russia can stop Europe from continuing to bankrupt itself. And since I’m a French citizen, it really upsets me. And so they’ve got to go to Poland. They’ve got to go to Slovakia. They’ve got to go to…
Don: Well, did you think that Russia would go to Poland in Slovakia?
Don: Well, no, but I’m just saying to the border, to that western border of Ukraine. So that it’s Russia v Europe with no Ukrainian soil in between, because as long as there’s Ukrainian soil, they’re going to continue to use it to fight a proxy war against the Russians.
Don: Yeah, it’ll fill up with NATO forces. I was just going to say that there’s all this speculation that Trump’s plan to send in the negotiation process, he will ask for troops, NATO troops in Ukraine as peacekeepers. That’s a pipe dream. That ain’t going to happen. No way.
Jeff: Another thing that I was thinking of, go ahead, you keep going. I want to hear what you have to say. No, go ahead.
Don: I wrote an article based on that, the very first day that Trump presented his, or somebody presented his plan for the negotiations. And I said, “They’re not going to allow one single soldier from NATO.” That’s not going to, they won’t agree to that. I don’t know why anyone would think that they would.
Jeff: Yeah, absolutely.
Don: They’ve been stung, they’ve been burned in the Minsk agreements and then in the Istanbul agreement, which were just fake, even Merkel and Hollande and Petro Poroshenko.
Jeff: Well, Poroshenko, yeah, the former president of Ukraine.
Don: Yeah, they all admitted that that was a hoax, that these negotiations even after he signed, we weren’t going to keep, we weren’t going to go this. We weren’t going to implement this agreement. We wanted to build up troops and arms in Ukraine. That’s the whole point of it. So why would they allow so-called peacekeepers in, no. It ain’t going to happen.
Jeff: Yeah. Yeah, yeah. That’s for sure. The other thing I was thinking is, if they get to Odessa, then I don’t know where, I don’t know if. What is that little sliver of territory in eastern Moldova, Transnistria or something like that?
Don: Transnistria. Yeah.
Jeff: Transnistria, that is basically a Russian enclave. And I just wonder if the Russians got down to, and were able to take, and if they don’t get Odessa then I’m very disappointed in Putin. They’ve got to take Odessa, but I was just wondering if maybe then they could have a land bridge to Trinistria, am I pronouncing it right? Transnistria.
Don: Transnistria, yeah.
Jeff: Yeah, Transnistria. And then if Russian territory could connect to Transnistria, then Transnistria could become a part of Russia.
Don: Yeah.
Jeff: By the way, I gave you control. Apparently, I can’t do. I don’t see. But I’ve clicked that you can share your screen. So if you get on Southfront.press and look at the latest Ukraine map, we can see that. And I’ll have to look at how to share my screen.
Don: You did, you know, you sent me a map from South Front.
Jeff: Okay, that’s the one that shows all that territory that’s been extended.
Don: Yeah, I had a lot of trouble reading the names of the towns and things in there. So it wasn’t a very good copy.
Jeff: Okay. On the website, you can double-click on the map and it really, it blows it up on the screen.
Don: Okay, finishing with it. So I got to get back to South Front.
Jeff: Yeah, Southfront.press, I think, is what is their latest, they were Southfront.org and got banned by the west. I think it’s Southfront.press now. And I just saw it when I got on. It showed the map right there up at the top. Oh, no, that land is still inside Donetsk. I was just seeing if there was any other land that they’ve gone beyond the border, but I think those are the only ones.
And then, of course, there’s a little bit of land right up in Belgorod, north of Kharkiv, they’ve gone over the boundary there too, when you get the map open you’ll see up to the north at about 1 o’clock, 2 o’clock, you’ll see land that they have gone beyond the Russian border into Ukraine proper. But the big chunk of land is up by Kupyansk.
They’ve really extended the border and it just seems to me they’ve got to get Sumy and Kharkiv, and they’ve got to get Kherson, and they’ve got to get Odessa down in the south. And I’m going to check my map and see about Transnistria, and to see if the border of Transnistria… Mystria. Yeah, there you go. Landlock breakaway state.
And then I need maps. And that way, if they could create a land bridge to Transnistria, then they could, how far down does it? Yeah, if they got Odessa, they could go up to Transnistria. And then have Transnistria as a part of Russia too, which would be quite a strategic coup if they were able to do that. I’m just looking at the map.
Don: Well, they’ve got to be careful politically because they’re being accused of wanting to take all of Europe, of course.
Jeff: Of course, yeah.
Don: So I think that’s political.
Jeff: But the Transnistrians, I think they want to be a part of Russia, don’t they?
Don: I’m pretty sure they do. Don’t have confirmation, but pretty sure.
Jeff: I know that there are several thousand Russian troops there to keep Moldova from overrunning it. So what do you think is going to happen with the negotiations? You know, Trump is so volatile and so unpredictable. And I think he’s deluded into thinking that Russia is on its back, and it’s not Russia that’s on its back. It’s NATO that’s on its back.
Don: Yeah. I wonder, how could he be so stupid? Oh, I shouldn’t say that. We’re talking about Trump. But I mean, I think we have to realize that Russia too is going to be playing games with this negotiating, that they always say, “Oh, yeah, we’re willing to negotiate that.” And I think they know that they’re not going to implement anything in any negotiations, even if they sign, I’m not sure they’ll implement it because Putin just doesn’t trust the West.
Jeff: Yeah, well, neither does Lavrov or anybody else. Do you know who is, I mean, the negotiators for the Russians, or are they more Atlantist, pro-Western, or are they more like Medvedev, and are they more nationalistic? Do you have any feeling about who the Russian negotiators are?
Don: I don’t think the Kremlin would put anybody in there who’s pro-Atlantist. I’m pretty sure they wouldn’t.
Jeff: Okay. All right. Okay. Well, it’s going to be an exciting next two or three months. Right now, Russia is just bombing the heck out of Ukraine every day. It’s just unreal.
Don: Yeah. Well, that was to be expected because these negotiations are coming up. He wants to have cards to play. Bargaining chip. And he’s going to have all the chips. Because this Zelensky guy is dope and a drug addict.
Jeff: Yeah, a dope addict, yeah, a drug addict. Well, I’m just looking at this map here. Well, as you said, I mean, I guess the Dnieper River runs through Kiev, right? Is that the river that runs through Kiev?
Don: I believe it does, yeah.
Jeff: Yeah, looking at this map here.
Don: It divides the city sort of in half.
Jeff: In half, yeah. It sure seems to me like they’ve got to go all the way to Kiev.
Don: Yeah, they’ve got to get Kiev. They do have to get here. That’s almost goes without saying. Well, Kiev is almost all Russian speaking.
Jeff: Yeah, yeah.
Don: When I was there back in the early ’70s, I found everyone able to speak Russian. I didn’t know. I was very naive back then. I did not know I was in Ukraine.
Jeff: You thought you were in Russia?
Don: Yeah. I thought that was all part of the Soviet Union.
Jeff: Yeah. Well, there was at one time.
Don: Yeah, yeah.
Jeff: Well, listen, Don, thank you. I really encourage everybody to get out and subscribe to Don’s Substack. He writes prolifically. And he has his ear on the ground in Russia and Ukraine and, as far as news going on there that you find nowhere else. I will definitely include his Substack. And I think if you just type in Don Hank, does that work to find your Substack or not?
Don: That’s right, Don.
Jeff: I will include the link on Substack. And his work is outstanding, and he really, really knows what’s going on over there. And I get it every day, and even when I’m busy, I manage to at least scan through it and see what he has to say because it’s really important. Listen, Don, thank you so much.
Don: Thank you for the invite. Always nice to see you.
Jeff: Yeah, come visit us. Come back to Taiwan. Don studied Chinese for three years in Taiwan.
Don: Best three years of my life. I love Taiwan. Sometimes let us know your experiences there.
Jeff: Well, you have not seen my Lady Biengonggong series.
Don: Oh, dear. It’s not…
Jeff: Okay, well, what I will do then is, I’ll send you the link. I’ve done 20, I’ve now done 20 installments. And I have a whole library now in Taiwan. So I’ll send you that information.
Don: Oh, that’s good. I hope you’re getting along. Oh, that’s great.
Jeff: And they’re a lot of fun. Oh, we love it here. We love it. We just love it. We’re up at. We’re in Puli in the central part of the country at 530 meters above sea level, so it’s a little bit cooler and drier, and it’s really, really nice. And we’re just an hour and a half to two hours away from the highest drivable pass in Taiwan at 3,275 meters. That’s only an hour and a half away from where we live.
Don: I was with a crazy driver, a friend of mine who drove across Taiwan, roughly at the middle. And there were places I thought I was going to die. There’s nothing holding, there are no guardrails or anything. You can just go right over.
Jeff: Oh, no. Well, the roads are very good here, the infrastructure is just, it is first class, so. You and your wife are welcome to come back and visit. We’ve got a guest wing, sort of with your own private bath. We have our own separate bath, so you don’t have to worry about sharing a bathroom, so you and your wife ought to come over and come back and see Taiwan again. You’re always welcome, Don.
Don: We’d love that. Yeah, I would love that. And the same goes for Panama if you ever get down here.
Jeff: Well, I would love to go there, and especially with a guy like you who knows the ropes, and I know so little of us, that’s my weakest point in traveling is Latin America. I’ve been to 80-something countries. But I’ve only been to Brazil, Chile. And I spent like one day in Peru and one day in Ecuador, which officially counts, but not really, only officially. And I’ve been to, on paper, and I went to Mexico when I was in seventh grade or whatever for a school trip. But that’s my extent of Latin America. That’s my weakest travel zones. So we’d love to come visit you.
Don: Well, check us out. Check us out. Well, I own a Coffee shop.
Jeff: And I bet Panamanian coffee is really good.
Don: It is really good.
Jeff: All right, amigo, I will get this out, and maybe you can share it on Substack. You can cross-post on Substack. So when it comes out with the three little dots up there at the top, and you click on that, and it says cross-post. And you click on that, and it puts my link for our interview onto your Substack, and then you have a little window that you can make a comment before you click publish.
Don: Oh, yeah. One more thing. If you could send me a link to your interview, with Kevin.
Jeff: It’s coming out tomorrow. It’s coming out tomorrow. He just emailed me.
Don: Oh, okay. That would be great.
Jeff: Yeah, with Kevin Barrett and Kat McGuire. It was a good one. We had a nice 45-minute discussion. So as soon as he sends me the link tomorrow, I’ll let you know.
Don: Okay, Appreciate it.
Jeff: And I’ll send you the links to find all the stuff I’ve written about Taiwan. All right?
Don: Oh, that’d be great. All right. Thank you.
Jeff: A Buddhist bow to my good friend Don Hank in Panama.
Don: Okay, that’s a Pepe Escobar bow.
Jeff: Yeah, this is a Buddhist bow. And hopefully, a few people will sign up as a result of this interview because you definitely deserve it.
Don: That’d be great. That’d be great. Appreciate it.
Jeff: All right. Talk to you soon, Don. We always stay in touch.
Don: Okay, Jeff.
Jeff: Bye, bye.
###
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https://play.google.com/store/audiobooks/details?id=AQAAAECCfHo86M
Amazon print and ebooks (Kindle):
44 Days Backpacking in China: The Middle Kingdom in the 21st Century, with the United States, Europe and the Fate of the World in Its Looking Glass
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1484939999/
China Rising: Capitalist Roads, Socialist Destinations
https://www.amazon.com/China-Rising-Capitalist-Socialist-Destinations/dp/0996487042
BIG Red Book on China: Chinese History, Culture and Revolution
https://www.amazon.com/BIG-Red-Book-China/dp/1673322719/
Author page:
https://www.amazon.com/Mr.-Jeff-J.-Brown/e/B00TX0TDDI
Praise for The China Trilogy:
Why and How China works: With a Mirror to Our Own History
JEFF J. BROWN, Editor, China Rising, and Senior Editor & China Correspondent, Dispatch from Beijing, The Greanville Post
Jeff J. Brown is a geopolitical analyst, journalist, lecturer and the author of The China Trilogy. It consists of 44 Days Backpacking in China – The Middle Kingdom in the 21st Century, with the United States, Europe and the Fate of the World in Its Looking Glass (2013); Punto Press released China Rising – Capitalist Roads, Socialist Destinations (2016); and BIG Red Book on China (2020). As well, he published a textbook, Doctor WriteRead’s Treasure Trove to Great English (2015). Jeff is a Senior Editor & China Correspondent for The Greanville Post, where he keeps a column, Dispatch from Beijing and is a Global Opinion Leader at 21st Century. He also writes a column for The Saker, called the Moscow-Beijing Express. Jeff writes, interviews and podcasts on his own program, China Rising Radio Sinoland, which is also available on YouTube, Stitcher Radio, iTunes, Ivoox and RUvid. Guests have included Ramsey Clark, James Bradley, Moti Nissani, Godfree Roberts, Hiroyuki Hamada, The Saker and many others. [/su_spoiler]
Jeff can be reached at China Rising, je**@br***********.com, Facebook, Twitter, Wechat (+86-19806711824/Mr_Professor_Brown, and Line/Telegram/Whatsapp: +33-612458821.
Read it in your language • Lealo en su idioma • Lisez-le dans votre langue • Lies es in deniner Sprache • Прочитайте это на вашем языке • 用你的语言阅读
[google-translator]
Wechat group: search the phone number +8619806711824 or my ID, Mr_Professor_Brown, friend request and ask Jeff to join the China Rising Radio Sinoland Wechat group. He will add you as a member, so you can join in the ongoing discussion.
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