China Launches Anti-Satellite Weapon. What Happens Next?

Brandon J. Weichert to John Batchelor and Gordon G. Chang when asked if China could defeat the US Navy in a conflict over Taiwan by taking down US military satellites in the first 3 hours of any fight, asserted that, “Yes, China can do this right now” and “without the coordinating capability that satellites provide the US military, it would likely be a strategic defeat for the US military.” These are the stakes if we continue to refuse to take space seriously, America.

As Virginia Goes, So Goes America…

November 2, 2021 could determine the future of the country: a Virginia gubernatorial election could either give the Republican Party the energy it needs to win in 2022 or it could solidify the Democratic Party’s victory in 2020. The GOP wants the election to hinge on education while the DNC, having no serious policy victory for itself since Joe Biden became president, must try to make the GOP candidate a Trump clone…the problem with that strategy is that it won’t work since Donald Trump has been out of the spotlight for months and people in Virginia (and elsewhere) are rightly worried about their kids’ education).

China’s ‘Satellite Crusher’: ‘Space Pearl Harbor’ is Coming – Gatestone Institute

Brandon J. Weichert lent his expertise to Gordon G. Chang for the newest featured article at the Gatestone Institute site. Beijing, in Weichert’s words, is planning a “Space Pearl Harbor.”

China’s Orbital Missile Launch “Stuns” US Intelligence (Audio)

In October 2021, US intelligence officials told Western media that the Chinese military “stunned” them by a surprise test of an advanced hypersonic weapon in Earth orbit. The US presently does not have a version of the weapon that China now possesses nor does Washington possess the ability to defend against such weapons, geopolitical analyst and bestselling author, Brandon J. Weichert explains to Gordon G. Chang and John Batchelor.

For Biden, Failure is an Option

President Joe Biden ran as a revolutionary president who would get big things done efficiently and competently. He was the new FDR. In fact, he is appearing much more like the ineffectual John Quincy Adams to Donald Trump’s Andrew Jackson, so argues Brandon J. Weichert in his recent Asia Times op-ed.