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The Great Game Changer: Belt and Road Intiative (BRI; OBOR)

Why bother keep making threads about US sending messages to DPRK, China and Russia when America does not want to ignite another Korean War? It only makes the OP look stupid :rofl:

Declaring war on Iraq based on false pretense didn't stop Americans so why not even repeat it again against these Communist bloc? :lol:

The bald eagle doesn't suit America, i have a more suitable logo

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I don't know why you mention "China" and "Russia".
Both of these 2 countries want to get rid of crazy North Korea.
What China has done before is just a try to change North Korea into a nomal country,not to protect NK.
If Nk collapsed,China might suffer some problems in a short time,but US would lost a foothold on east asia.
Because SK wouldn't need USA if NK were dead.
Then,do you know what will happen to SK?
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The ties between China and Russia is ever growing stronger each day.
These two look very happy meeting each other.

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Chinese president meets Russian federation council speaker on ties
(Xinhua) 20:22, September 09, 2016

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Chinese President Xi Jinping (R) meets with Russian Federation Council Speaker Valentina Matviyenko in Beijing, capital of China, Sept. 9, 2016. (Xinhua/Li Xueren)

Chinese President Xi Jinping met with Russian Federation Council Speaker Valentina Matviyenko on Friday, pledging to improve bilateral relations.

Xi said China and Russia enjoy a high-level of mutual political trust and engage in mutually beneficial cooperation.

The comprehensive strategic partnership of collaboration between the two countries has helped shape a new type of international relations with win-win cooperation as its core, he said.

This year marks the 15th anniversary of the signing of the China-Russia Good-Neighborly Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation, as well as the 20th anniversary of the establishment of a strategic partnership of collaboration between the two countries.

Xi met with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin on Sunday in Hangzhou on the sidelines of the G20 summit, the third meeting between the two leaders this year.

Stressing that he and Putin reached new consensus on ties during the meeting, Xi called on both countries to work together to convert the political advantages into more substantial results, which would benefit the two countries and their people.

Regarding parliamentary relations, Xi spoke highly of the close exchanges between China's National People's Congress (NPC) and the Federal Assembly of Russian Federation in recent years.

He encouraged both sides to continue to share governance, legislation and oversight experience as this would help to consolidate political and strategic mutual trust and support bilateral relations.

Matviyenko spoke highly of the G20 summit in Hangzhou. She said Russia is willing to work with China to implement the consensus reached by two presidents, adding that the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation hopes to improve relations with China's NPC.

Matviyenko is on a three-day visit to China, from Wednesday, at the invitation of Zhang Dejiang, chairman of the NPC Standing Committee.

Later on Friday, Zhang and Matviyenko held talks on exchanges between the two countries' legislatures.

Zhang called on both sides to enhance cooperation in various fields, including under multilateral frameworks, to fully implement the important consensus reached by the two heads of state.

Following the talks, Zhang was presented the medal "Order of Friendship" by Matviyenko, on behalf of President Putin, in recognition of his contribution to China-Russia ties.
 
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Rosneft, ChemChina Sign Pact on Far Eastern Petrochemical Company

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Sputnik News. 19:43 04.09.2016 (updated 19:45 04.09.2016)

Russia’s oil company Rosneft and China’s chemical giant ChemChina inked a deal on Sunday that outlines steps to create the Far Eastern Petrochemical Company (FEPCO).

HANGZHOU (Sputnik) — The document was signed by Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin and ChemChina’s Ren Jianxin on the sidelines of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s meeting with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping in Hangzhou, China.

"The FEPCO project will become a new milestone in the partnership between our countries and will further strengthen Russian-Chinese economic ties. The creation of a joint venture will help us shape the development structure of the world’s one of the most advanced petrochemical projects that will have direct access to the Asia-Pacific market," Sechin told reporters in Hangzhou.​

Under the agreement, Rosneft will hold a 60-percent share in the joint venture, while ChemChina will hold 40 percent.

Read more: https://sputniknews.com/business/20160904/1044957673/rosneft-chemchina-far-east.html
 
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More pictures of the train from Qinghai to Belgium.

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China Railway Express takes Tibetan products to Europe
(CRIENGLISH.com) Updated: 2016-09-10 09:27

b083fe955b6c193da5e32d.jpg

A freight train has left Qinghai bounding for Belgium on Sept 8, 2016. The train carries 44 containers packed with products like Tibetan tapestries and goji berries. The 12-day journey will take the train through Kazakhstan and Eastern European countries including Russia and Poland. It is the first train from the Tibet Plateau going to Europe. So far, 16 Chinese cities such as Chongqing, Wuhan and Xi'an have sent freight trains to European cities. [Photo / Chinanews.com]

b083fe955b6c193da5e32c.jpg

A freight train has left Qinghai bounding for Belgium on Thursday. The train carries 44 containers packed with products like Tibetan tapestries and goji berries. The 12-day journey will take the train through Kazakhstan and Eastern European countries including Russia and Poland. It is the first train from the Tibet Plateau going to Europe. So far, 16 Chinese cities such as Chongqing, Wuhan and Xi'an have sent freight trains to European cities. [Photo / Chinanews.com]

b083fe955b6c193da5e32b.jpg

A freight train has left Qinghai bounding for Belgium on Thursday. The train carries 44 containers packed with products like Tibetan tapestries and goji berries. The 12-day journey will take the train through Kazakhstan and Eastern European countries including Russia and Poland. It is the first train from the Tibet Plateau going to Europe. So far, 16 Chinese cities such as Chongqing, Wuhan and Xi'an have sent freight trains to European cities. [Photo / Chinanews.com]

b083fe955b6c193da5e32a.jpg

A freight train has left Qinghai bounding for Belgium on Thursday. The train carries 44 containers packed with products like Tibetan tapestries and goji berries. The 12-day journey will take the train through Kazakhstan and Eastern European countries including Russia and Poland. It is the first train from the Tibet Plateau going to Europe. So far, 16 Chinese cities such as Chongqing, Wuhan and Xi'an have sent freight trains to European cities. [Photo / Chinanews.com]
 
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http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/...68-11e6-8064-c1ddc8a724bb-20160911-story.html

China lays new brick in Silk Road with first Afghan rail freight

Eltaf Najafizada, (c) 2016, Bloomberg(c) 2016, Bloomberg


For centuries, Chinese products have wended their way thousands of kilometers across mountains and deserts to the heart of central Asia, Afghanistan. Now, for the first time, the trade is carried by rail.

With the first train last week pulling in to Hairatan, northern Afghanistan, China marked another advance in President Xi Jinping's Silk Road project to deepen his nation's influence along old trade routes. For Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, the new link also marks a small step toward a dream of turning his landlocked country into a transit hub of Asia.

Already the top investor in the war-torn country to its west, China is aiming to boost its commercial standing, as the no. 5 trading partner currently. Deepening those ties would help Afghanistan pare back the influence of Pakistan, the southern neighbor with which ties have sometimes been strained over outbreaks of violence and closures in border crossings.

"It's an unprecedented, vital project for the Afghan economy," said Azarakhsh Hafizi, the head of the international relations committee at Afghanistan Chamber of Commerce & Industries in the capital, Kabul. "That will greatly reduce Chinese imported commodities' prices and unprecedentedly improve our trade with China, now standing at tens of millions of dollars."

The train, carrying $4 million worth of commercial goods such as fabric, clothes and construction material, took just two weeks to arrive from the east coast of China, a fraction of the three-to-six months the road transit takes via Pakistan to the eastern border crossing into Afghanistan. It's a new link in Xi's "one belt, one road" project deepening the lattice of transport links across Eurasia, an initiative that's coming together in fits and starts, with advances in places like Bangladesh, and setbacks in locations including Thailand.

"Without Afghan connectivity, there is no way to connect China with rest of world," said Yao Jing, Chinese ambassador in Afghanistan, in a speech marking the first freight train's arrival on Sept. 7. "As a neighbor, China attaches greater importance to the development and peace process in Afghanistan."

China has for years had grand investment plans for Afghanistan's resource riches, which the Afghanistan Geological Survey estimates are as much as $3 trillion. While the Metallurgical Corp. of China Ltd. received a license in 2007 to mine the biggest Afghan copper deposit, and China National Petroleum Corp. won a contract in 2011 to drill for oil, development of the resources is still some ways off, thanks in part to the nation's patchy infrastructure.

"The direct railway can be the best route for them to transfer copper to China," Hafizi said.

Further economic development is being stymied by increasing terrorist attacks by the Taliban, Islamic State and other insurgents against Kabul's central government, which has often exercised little control over much of the country. Abduction is another impediment as at least 35 traders and businessmen were kidnapped in July, according to the Afghanistan Chamber of Commerce.

"China still confronts two major problems," said Dhruva Jaishankar, foreign policy fellow with Brookings Institution India Center. "First is that connectivity is still subject to a stabilization of the security situation in Afghanistan. The second is that many projects, including this one, will face questions of commercial viability."

The new transport corridor to China may help avoid these ongoing security threats, officials say. "Pakistan won't any longer be our only option for transit to have our goods imported from China," said Javid Faisal, a Afghanistan government spokesman.

A spokesman at the Pakistan Embassy in Kabul, Akhtar Muneer, declined to comment on the opening of the China-Afghanistan rail corridor or its affect on trade with his nation, currently the Afghans' top trading partner.

Afghanistan's $600 million export industry -- including shipments of saffron, marble, lapis lazuli and high-quality Kurk wool -- will see "a considerable" increase following the opening of the rail route, said Khan Jan Alokozay, a deputy chairman of the Afghanistan Chamber of Commerce.

Reducing import costs could help hold down inflation as Afghanistan takes from abroad some 90 percent of its commercial products such as food, fabric, electronics, construction materials, oil and gas.

Mohammad Rafi Amiri, the general director of Harirod Logistical Co. in Afghanistan, the company that imported the goods from China to Afghanistan, said transporting directly from China could "reduce prices by 30 percent".

The freight trains are expected to carry 45 containers of goods twice a month from the Chinese city of Haimen to Hairatan, according to Musafer Quqandi, a spokesman for the Ministry of Commerce and Industries. Once inside Afghanistan the goods will be transported to Mazar-e-Sharif city, the country's second biggest commercial center, through an extended 75 km railway built in 2010 with Asian Development Bank funding.

"The investments boost China's position as Afghanistan's biggest foreign investor," said Sayed Masood, an economics professor at Kabul University, in a phone interview. "The country now seeks to be Afghanistan's biggest trading partner."
 
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