Coming w*r on China, The (2016)

History/Civil Wars, Cold w*r, WWI, WWII, Rebellions, Revolutions and more! w*r movies collection.
w*r on Amazon   w*r Merch   Collectables

History/Civil Wars, Cold w*r, WWI, WWII, Rebellions, Revolutions and more! w*r movies collection.
Post Reply

Coming w*r on China, The (2016)

Post by bunniefuu »

Oh say, can you see

By the dawn's early light,

What so proudly we hailed

At the twilight's last gleaming

Whose broad stripes and bright stars,

Through the perilous fight

Over the ramparts we watched,

Were so gallantly streaming.

And the rockets red glare,

The bombs bursting in air,

Gave proof through the night

That our flag was still there.

Oh, say, does--

- I pity a country that

would come up against us.

The synergy with air, land, and sea forces

and our ability to

control the battle space

and seize the high ground is devastating.

All countries respect the

power of the United States

and they respect how dominant

we are in this region.

And we get better and better and better.

(drums pounding)

- Tonight to ten,

a rare glimpse of China's

ambitious expansion

in one of the world's

most contested regions.

We report from the South China Sea,

where the Chinese are warning off anyone

who comes too close to

their building program.

- We continue our look this morning

at what China does not want you to see.

The United States says the superpower

is reclaiming land in the South China Sea.

- The fact that we're dealing

with a situation right now

where we, the US, has to

be much more aggressive

in dealing with the Chinese government.

- CNN has learned that the US Navy

is about to send a destroyer there.

Let's go to our CNN chief--

- [Announcer] CNN got

exclusive access to classified

US surveillance flights over the islands.

- [John Narrating] The thr*at

of China is becoming big news.

The media is b*ating the drums of w*r

as the world is being

primed to regard China

as a new enemy.

- [Announcer] China's alarming creation of

entirely new territory

in the South China Sea

is one part of a broader m*llitary push

that some fear is to challenge

US dominance in the region.

- [John Narrating] China

is building airstrips

in the South China Sea on disputed islands

condemned by an international tribunal.

This is now a flashpoint for w*r

between China and America.

What is not news is that

China itself is under thr*at.

These American bases form a giant noose,

encircling China with

missiles, bombers, warships.

All the way from Australia

through the Pacific,

to Asia, and beyond.

- If you were in Beijing looking out,

you stood on the tallest

building in Beijing

and looked out at the Pacific Ocean,

you'd see American warships.

You'd see Guam is about to sink

because there's so many

missiles pointed at China.

You'd look up at Korea and see

American armaments pointing at China.

You'd see Japan, which is basically,

Japan's a glove over the American fist.

I think if I was Chinese, I'd

have a little to worry about

about American aggressiveness.

- And we have China surrounded

and we're doing more

all the time to try and

keep it surrounded and deepen

that containment of China.

But China presents a fascinating case

of a country that is independent,

doesn't have foreign

bases on its territory,

growing very rapidly,

not as rapidly now as it did for 30 years,

but still the second-ranking

economy in the world.

- We have an adversary

and that adversary is

China and that adversary,

unless there is dramatic

reform inside China,

will be our enemy someday.

- One myth I think really

needs to be dispelled

is that somehow China's

aiming to replace America

and gonna run the world. (laughs)

First of all, the Chinese

are not that stupid.

The West, with its Christian roots,

are about converting other

people into their beliefs.

The Chinese are not about that.

Again, I'm not degrading

the Western culture.

I'm just pointing out the inherent nature,

the DNA's of two different cultures.

The Chinese 2000 years

ago built the Great Wall

to keep the barbarians

out, not to inv*de them.

- [John Narrating] As the

world's economic power

moves rapidly to Asia, the

response of the Untied States

is to deploy the majority

of its naval forces to Asia

and the Pacific.

This massive m*llitary buildup

is known in Washington as

the "Pivot to Asia."

The target is China.

The great power game in the 21st century

is called perpetual w*r.

For America's unchallenged arms industry,

the annual prize is huge profits

from almost 600 billion

dollars of m*llitary spending.

- [Announcer] Once an

imaginary w*apon on Star Wars,

the electromagnetic g*n is now reality.

- You're sitting here thinking about these

next-generation and futuristic ideas

and we've got scientists

who have designed these

and it's coming to life.

- [John Narrating] And the

smartest weapons need enemies.

- As a Pacific nation, the United States

will play a larger and long-term role

in shaping this region and its future.

I have directed my national security team

to make our presence and

mission in the Asian-Pacific

a top priority.

- In one sense, is the US

already at w*r with China?

- Yes.

On the ground and in the air.

The winner of the Nobel Peace

Prize, President Barack Obama,

has committed to trillions

of dollars to our nuclear arsenal.

He's committing trillions

of future dollars

to w*r in space and we need

an enemy for all this money

and China's the perfect enemy.

- The aim of this film

is to break a silence.

The United States and China

may well be on a path to w*r

and nuclear w*r is no longer unthinkable.

In a few years, China

has become the world's

second biggest economic power.

The United States is the

world's biggest m*llitary power,

with bases and missiles and ships

covering every continent, every ocean.

China is a thr*at to this

dominance, says Washington,

but who is the thr*at?

This film is about shifting

power and great danger.

It's also a film about the human spirit

and the rise of an extraordinary

resistance among people

on the front line of a coming w*r

where the words "never

again" have an urgent meaning

for all of us.

(somber music)

- [John Narrating] This is Bikini,

the rim of an ancient underwater volcano

in the Marshall Islands.

With its necklace of 23 islands,

Bikini is a place of beauty

and silence and menace.

Look closely where the Emerald Lagoon

suddenly falls into a vast black hole.

This is the crater of one of

the greatest manmade explosions,

the hydrogen b*mb they call Bravo.

It vaporized an entire island

and poisoned almost

everything and everyone.

As our plane flew low, we seemed

to touch its deathly void.

The Marshall Islands lie

in the vast Pacific Ocean

between the United States and Asia.

Captured from the

Japanese in World w*r Two,

they've long been

America's strategic secret,

it's stepping stone to Asia and China.

(guitar music)

People here sustain themselves

for thousands of years

with abundant fish,

breadfruit, and coconuts.

They were skilled navigators

who sailed by the stars.

Westerners might call this paradise.

All that changed in 1946

when the United States took

over the Marshall Islands

as a Trust Territory with an obligation

to protect the health and

wellbeing of the people.

A nightmare began.

The islands were turned into a laboratory

for the testing of nuclear weapons

and the people into guinea pigs.

- Crossroads, scene 24, take two.

(clicks)

- [John Narrating] In

this propaganda film,

the Bikini islanders are being deceived.

Unknown to them, plans

were already underway

to destroy their paradise forever.

- Will you ask King Judah that

the United States government

now wants to attempt to turn this great,

destructive force into

something good for mankind

and that these experiments here at Bikini

are the first step in that direction.

(speaks foreign language)

Tell them that's fine,

everything being in God's

hands, it must be good.

(speaks foreign language)

- [Announcer] 87 ships

take position three miles

off Bikini to suffer the shattering impact

of the fifth atomic b*mb.

- [John Narrating] An armada of warships

was assembled in Bikini Lagoon

in order to blow them to bits.

(chain clanking)

- [Announcer] The decks

of the 73 test ships

anchored in Bikini Lagoon

are scenes of feverish activity

as scientists plot experimental programs

designed to furnish data on blast effects

of the mighty atom b*mb.

Animals of many kinds--

- [John Narrating] Animals

were strapped to the decks

like a perverse Noah's Ark.

The experiment was to see how they d*ed,

how they b*rned.

- [Announcer] Special

ointments are applied

to determine their protective quality.

Other parts of the exposed areas

are being left bare to the atom blasts.

- [Soldier] Three, two, one.

(eerie music)

- [John Narrating] Being on Bikini today

is disturbing ghosts.

I struggle through the

jungle to the bunker

where they pressed the

button at 6:45 on the morning

of the H-b*mb test.

Now claimed by the undergrowth,

it's like a subterranean

temple to modern times.

They drank Milk Maid Powdered Milk,

smoked Lucky Strike Cigarettes,

and later this sign was

erected that's beyond irony.

It says,

"Please leave this

property as you find it,

"thank you for your

kindness and understanding."

(water drips)

(jovial music)

- [Announcer] The Momselles

give their all for their art

and you can just bet

that audience is giving

with the wolf calls.

- [Male Announcer] The bikini, named after

the atomic expl*si*n in the Pacific.

The bikini was an expl*si*n everywhere.

- [John Narrating] In 1946, the

bikini swimsuit was launched

to celebrate the nuclear explosions

that had destroyed life on Bikini Island.

The inventor of the bikini, a Frenchman,

made his fortune.

Today a bikini body is

promoted in magazines

as an object of desire and good health.

The bodies of the people

of Bikini and other islands

are the most irradiated in the world.

All these women have had thyroid cancer.

Today, Bikini is unfit for human life.

Radiation poisons the food and water,

and issues registered

unsafe on a Geiger Counter.

The abandoned cemetery looks out to where

the sun rose one morning, then rose again

as apocalypse.

The equivalent of one Hiroshima b*mb

was exploded in these islands

everyday for 12 years.

A scarred beauty has

returned to the island

but the people haven't.

Exiled to barren islands,

many of them starved.

In 1968, President

Lyndon Johnson told them

it was safe to go home.

(Geiger Counter clicks)

But it wasn't safe.

And the US authorities

knew it wasn't safe.

- What happened as a

result of the Bravo test

was that a cover-up was launched

very shortly after March one.

There's such a history

of wrong information,

outright lies, deception.

There was no attempt to take

the most conservative approach

and make sure that everybody was okay.

- They knew the way the

fallout was going to go.

And they took that risk and went ahead

and detonated the b*mb, knowing full well

which way it was going to go.

They still had an opportunity to evacuate,

even on the day of the sh*t.

But these people were not evacuated,

we were not evacuated,

and the people in the

path were not evacuated.

So that only leaves one to believe that

number one, the United States

needed some guinea pigs

to study what the effects

of radiation would do.

And that's a pretty strong indication

that the United States knew that.

- It seems extraordinary, here we are,

this far into the 21st century,

talking to people still frightened

of all that nuclear

fallout, all those tests,

all those years ago.

The impression I get is that

there's so little trust among people.

- The US is trying to provide as much

information, as much good

information as we can.

And so I wouldn't accept

the characterization that

there've been lies and cover-ups.

- The word guinea pigs comes

up a lot from these survivors.

- I would refer you to our

embassy website on that.

- I've read it.

- And that question was looked at

during the Clinton administration

and that was not the

conclusion they came to.

- [John Narrating] The secret

of the Marshall Islands

is Project 4.1.

Declassified documents

reveal a scientific program

that began as a study of mice

and became a study of human

beings exposed to radiation.

- [Radio Announcer] Chicago

is where it all began.

And to the AEC Argonnne

Labs in Chicago last week

came seven men, natives

of the Marshall Islands.

Levin is from Omelek.

He and the rest were irradiated by our

March 19th '54 hydrogen b*mb test.

John is mayor of Rongelap,

which is 100 miles from Bikini.

John, as we said, is a savage,

but a happy, amenable savage.

His grandfather ran almost

naked on his small atoll.

The white man brought money and religion

and a market for his copa.

John Reeds knows about God

and is a pretty good mayor.

The iron room is a radiation

detector for human beings.

Inside John the mayor,

whose first visit to

the white man's country

meant San Francisco cable

cars and Chicago skyscrapers

and streamlined trains,

whose first visit to

the white man's country

meant the iron room.

A savage governs his life by ritual

and he understands this because

he thinks of it as a new ritual.

Sitting alone inside the room,

outside, a strange kind of

priest in a long, white coat.

When the ritual of the iron

room was over for John,

it began for the others.

As each finished, he was told it was over

and he was given apples and

other good things to eat.

Then he took off the ritual clothing

and the seven men put on

the suits and top coats

they had been lent in Hawaii

which they would return in

Hawaii on their way back

in the Marshall Islands in the

middle of the Pacific Ocean.

- The United States government documents

clearly demonstrate that its scientists

conducted human radiation experiments

with Marshallese citizens.

Some of our people were injected with

or coerced to drink fluids

laced with radiation.

Other experimentation

involved the impurposeful

and premature resettlement of people

on islands highly

contaminated by weapons tests

to study how human beings absorb radiation

from their foods and environment.

(guitar music)

- [John Narrating] These

people are guinea pigs.

They are part of the

experiment Project 4.1.

They're being returned to Rongelap,

an island 100 miles from

Bikini by the US Navy.

They were told repeatedly,

it was safe to go home.

This happy couple believed

they were going home to safety.

The man is John Anjain,

the mayor of Rongelap.

The "happy savage" from

the iron room in Chicago.

His wife is Madura, and this

is their baby son Lekage.

They had no idea of the

horror that lay ahead.

They are being returned to an island

described by a US atomic energy official

"as by far the most

contaminated place on earth."

He added, "it will be

interesting to get a measure

"of human uptake when people

"live in a contaminated environment."

The people of Rongelap

remained on their poison island

for 28 years as guinea pigs.

The objects of regular,

scientific examination.

(bell rings)

The islanders pleaded

with the US authorities

to move them to safety as evidence emerged

of the second generation,

the children were also poisoned.

Desperate to leave, the islanders

called on Greenpeace to rescue them.

This ship, the Rainbow Warrior,

moved the entire population

to an uncontaminated island.

They called it Operation Exodus.

(native music)

(eerie music)

This is Doctor Robert Conard,

a leading medical scientist

of Brookhaven National Laboratories.

Conard devoted his distinguished career

to examining the islanders.

He wrote, "the habitation of

these people on the island

"will afford the most valuable

ecological radiation data

"on human beings.

"The various radio isotopes present

"can be traced from the

soil to the food chain

"and into human beings."

Doctor Conard gained the

trust of whole communities

when he brought the islanders

to New York to be examined,

he showed them the sights

and had them over for a barbecue.

When John Anjain's son

Lekage d*ed aged 18,

Doctor Conard sent the

man they called a savage

a sympathy card.

From your friend, Bob.

In 1957, Madura Anjain was

the smiling young woman

seen here on her way back to Rongelap,

unaware of the danger

she and her family faced.

This is Madura 28 years later,

grieving the death of her son

Lekage from radiation poisoning.

Like her son and her husband,

Madura d*ed from a virulent cancer.

- I don't see any great

clinics that have been

established by, if not

the Department of Energy,

certainly not by the US government.

- There's a clinic downtown in Majuro.

There's also a Whole Body Counter.

You can have the plutonium in

your body measured as well.

Anyone can, for free.

- [John Narrating] This is

the plutonium measuring shop

where they'll tell you

how radioactive you are.

People waiting to be tested

are welcomed with a video

showing their islands being blown up.

And this reassuring commentary.

(speaks foreign language)

This is Rinok, a refugee from

the poisoned island of Rongelap,

whose family owned land and

lived a secure, prosperous life.

Now she lives in a shack

in the capital, Majuro,

with her children and grandchildren.

She has no water, no sanitation.

- [John] And power, she has electricity?

- [John Narrating] In

1986, the United States

granted limited independence

to the Marshall Islanders

on condition that they accepted a mere

150 million dollars compensation

for the damage caused by nuclear testing.

A claims tribunal was set up

and soon ran out of money

and appealed to the US Congress

more than a decade ago,

still awaits a reply.

Darlene Keju-Johnson was

a young health worker

who became the champion of her people

after she discovered the full

extent of their suffering

caused by nuclear testing that

many more islands were poisoned

than the Americans claimed.

(applause)

This remarkable speech in

1983 broke the silence.

- I bring greetings from

the Marshall Islands

and throughout Micronesia.

We have hundreds of women

who have miscarriages.

We have leukemia cancers.

We have thyroid cancers.

We have stillborn babies.

We have nowadays, I

just got back from home

and I've talked to many women

and men in the population,

is that we have babies

we call jellyfish babies.

A baby is born on a labor table

and it moves up and down like this.

It's a colorful, ugly thing

and it is not shaped like a human being.

It moves up and down like

this on a labor table

because that thing is breathing.

That is a baby.

- [John Narrating] In 1982,

Darlene married Giff Johnson,

the author of this tribute to his wife.

- Darlene was one of the liveliest,

most entertaining individuals that

I have ever had the pleasure of knowing.

She was a voice for the voiceless.

- [John Narrating] Like so

many Marshall Islanders,

Darlene d*ed of cancer, age 45.

This is the largest of

the islands, Kwajalein,

occupied by one of

America's most important

and secretive bases.

Known as the Ronald Reagan Test Site,

it's a m*ssile launch pad that commands

the Pacific Ocean all the

way to Asia and China.

(waves crash)

Here, the people of the Marshall Islands

are once again being

subjected to the testing

of weapons of mass destruction

designed for a coming w*r.

The base is part of a remarkable plan

known as Vision 2020.

Devised in the 1990's,

its aim is described

officially as full-spectrum dominance.

This means control of all land, sea, air,

cyberspace, and space.

- [Radio] Five, four, three, two, one,

ignition.

- [John Narrating] From

California, almost 5000 miles away,

the US Air Force tests it's

intercontinental missiles

by f*ring them at the Marshall Islands.

- Imagine a m*ssile coming

screaming out of the sky.

It's absolutely terrifying.

I think that there's really

nothing that I can imagine

that would be more terrifying than this.

And we're talking about devices that

any one of them could go off course.

- [John Narrating] None of

this disturbs life on the base,

where small town America

has been recreated,

a wonderland of the suburban good life.

- Thank you.

(upbeat music)

- Fabulous.

There's nothing better than

living on a tropical island.

- I pretty much have

beachfront property, you know?

It's great, I love it here.

- [John Narrating] Just across

the bay is Ebeye Island.

Known as the slum of the Pacific,

more than 12,000 people live here

on a strip of land less than a mile long.

Many of them refugees from

what is now the m*ssile base

and from islands poisoned

by nuclear testing.

Every day, people from Ebeye are

brought to work on the m*ssile base

to water the gardens and the golf course

then they are ferried

back to their poverty.

This is apartheid in the Pacific.

(flies buzz)

- Ebeye needs a lot of things.

Medicine, education, and jobs.

Vegetables and fruits.

- Vegetables and fruits.

- Yes.

- Here we are, it's a tropical island,

and you need vegetables and fruits.

- Yes.

- [John Narrating] Fish,

vegetables and fruit

were once abundant on Ebeye.

Today, fish is contaminated

by toxic pollutants

says the Environmental Protection Agency.

Now the only food most people can afford

is processed and imported.

They have the highest rate

of diabetes in the world.

- When someone gets really ill,

do they go to the

hospital over on the base

because they've got a pretty

modern clinic over there.

- They don't treat them with medicine.

They just go there for taking

the plug and then x-ray.

- So what happens when

somebody is seriously ill?

- They cannot do anything.

- The most consistent example given

is the example of the

Ronald Reagan m*ssile Site

and Ebeye next to it.

On the Ronald Reagan m*ssile Site

is a vivid example of the United States,

golf courses and swimming pools

and all kinds of amenities.

Right next to it is what is

called the slum of the Pacific.

- It's a challenge.

Ebeye is in great need right now.

We've talked about infrastructure.

One of the projects the US is working with

our Australian colleagues and

with the Asia Development Bank

is a sewer and water project

desperately needed for Ebeye.

Ebeye's overcrowded,

the schools need repair.

- Actually, the US m*llitary

did a survey back in the 70's

and found that the sewers didn't work

and the water didn't run and

the electricity wasn't there.

It only happened not all that long ago

they found almost exactly the same thing.

Why hasn't that been fixed?

- There's complete agreement

that Ebeye should be a priority

and not only because of

the current activities

of the Ronald Reagan Space

and m*ssile Defense Site,

but there's also now

an additional component

that is providing for global security

and that's the Space Fence

Project by the Air Force.

- [John Narrating] Every m*ssile fired

on the Marshall Islands by the US m*llitary

costs 100 million dollars each.

This derelict school bus

is the only one on Ebeye.

They can't afford to replace it.

- The base is not good for us,

the people of Marshall Islands,

we have no need for it.

- [John] It's been used to test missiles

to fire at countries like China.

- Yes, and anywhere else if they want to.

- [John] What would you

like to see happen there?

- I want our land back.

(violin music)

- [John Narrating] This is Shanghai,

the historic port on the Yangtze River,

China's greatest city.

I have arranged to meet

the American author

James Bradley, whose

latest best-selling book

The China Mirage, reveals an

extraordinary hidden history

of American power and modern China.

- It was almost illegal

for someone like me

to know of Chinese for almost

all of American history.

The Chinese came to America to mine gold

and build the railroads

and Americans decided

we didn't like the competition,

so in 1882 we had the

Chinese Exclusion Acts

which kept the Chinese

out of the United States

for about 100 years.

So you have the largest

population in the world

that can't come to the United States,

so at just the point we're putting up

the Statue of Liberty

saying, we welcome everybody,

we were erecting a wall saying,

we welcome everybody except those Chinese.

- [John Narrating] Fear

of a rising China today

is the latest chapter in

a history of propaganda

that presented the Chinese

as uncouth and infantile.

To western popular and political culture,

the Chinese became the Yellow Peril.

(piano music)

And racial stereotypes

bore the constant theme

of fear and thr*at.

- [Announcer] Boris Karloff

as the evil Fu Manchu.

His passion for power

twisting his brilliant mind

as he revels in the horrors of

human sacrifice and t*rture.

Behind the mask of Fu Manchu.

- [John Narrating] This

caricature of an entire people

concealed another agenda: opium.

For the American elite

in the 19th century,

China was a goal mine of dr*gs.

- Warren Delano,

the grandfather of

Franklin Delano Roosevelt,

was the American opium king of China.

He was the biggest American opium dealer

second to the British.

He welcomed the first

American ship into China

to help out with the opium wars.

Much of the east coast of America,

Columbia, Harvard, Yale, Princeton,

were born from opium money.

The American Industrial Revolution

was funded by huge pools of money.

Where did this come from?

It came from illegal dr*gs

in the biggest market in the world: China.

- Let me get this right.

The grandfather of arguably

the most liberal president,

Franklin Delano Roosevelt,

was a drug runner.

- Yes sir.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt never

made much money in his life.

He had public service jobs

that were very lowly paid,

but he had yachts, he had summer homes,

he had mansions in New York City.

The kids went to private schools.

He inherited a fortune from

Warren Delano, his father,

who was the American opium king of China.

If you scratch anyone with

the name Forbes in their name,

John Forbes Kerry, Secretary

of State John Forbes Kerry--

- That's the present Secretary of State.

- Yes sir.

You'll find opium money.

His great-grandfather was an opium dealer.

How big was opium money?

Opium money built the

first industrial city

in the United States,

Lowell, Massachusetts.

It built the first five

railroads in the United States.

Opium money all over the east coast,

but it wasn't talked about.

It was called the China Trade.

And if you go to various museums,

you can see teas and silks exhibited

and they keep quiet about

all that big opium money.

- [John Narrating] In the

scramble to get opium money,

China was invaded and colonized

by Britain and the other imperial powers.

Foreign armies grabbed

whole swaths of China.

This is the American

army in Tiananmen Square,

Peking, in 1900.

Great cities like Shanghai were taken over

and declared concessions

and foreigners lived a life

of privilege and luxury

amidst terrible poverty

imposed on the Chinese.

A resistance known as the Boxer Rebellion

was put down with a savagery.

This r*pe of China set the tone

for how China was perceived in the West

well into the 20th century.

This is the distinguished historian

Theodore H. White, an

advisor to the White House,

speaking in the 1960's.

- Perhaps China is too vast

to be governed by mercy.

Yet if Chinese mind craves order,

they must be brought to recognize

they are the biggest factor

in the world's disorder.

And we must untangle the

madness of their mind.

The most difficult task in the world

is to reach the minds of men who hate you.

- [John Narrating] What White

was really complaining about

was the loss of a China that

the imperial West could dominate

and the defeat of General Chiang Kai-Shek,

who with his famously

powerful Christian wife,

Mei-ling Soong, guarded

America's interests in China.

That is, until they

were thrown out in 1949

by a communist revolution

led by Mao Zedong.

- Mao had beaten Chiang

Kai-Shek three times

in huge battles involving

millions of combatants.

Mao was a winner in this contest from

the early 1930's on, but we

knew very little about it

and people don't

understand that even today.

- [Announcer] Shanghai

hears the message clearly

as foreign businessmen

board up their shops.

Go now, go quickly, for communism marches.

Take what you can, but flee.

In pell-mell haste, the Western powers

evacuate the city they have built,

for good and bad alike must leave.

The businessmen come for profit

as well as missionaries come to heal

must say goodbye as out the Yancy

steams the last of Western influence

and farewell to a century.

(shouting)

- [John Narrating] Even today,

it's difficult to understand

the paranoia ignited by Mao's revolution.

- As we look at China on the map,

we can see that China is the basic cause

of all of our troubles in Asia.

- I believe that for

the sake of our safety,

it is necessary to be

prepared for the possibility

of a Chinese m*ssile att*ck

on the United States.

- [John Narrating] One

of the myths about Mao

is that he was an implacable

enemy of the capitalist West.

(chorus singing)

Shanghai today is a

prosperous international city

still run by the communists,

at least in name.

- When I was last in China

more than a generation ago,

the loudest noise was the

tinkling of bicycle bells.

Mao had just d*ed, the streets were dark,

the universities were closed.

The chaos of the cultural revolution

had given way to a great silence.

"We're exhausted," was the

freest comment I heard.

Coming back, the change

is barely comprehensible.

Here in Shanghai, the

freedom bears no comparison.

Yes, there are issues with human rights,

especially the right to

speak against the state

and challenge its power.

Since I was last here, millions of people

have been lifted out of poverty,

many of them into an

entirely new middle class.

This epic is still barely

understood in the West,

or should that be willfully misunderstood?

The truth is that China

has matched America

at its own great game of capitalism

and that is unforgivable.

- [John Narrating] One measure

of China's new capitalism

is the Hurun Rich List.

This league table of China's mega-rich

is published by Rupert Hoogewerf,

an old Etonian whose

Chinese name is Hu Run.

He's received many awards,

including China's Man of the Year.

- This year, 2015, has probably been

the most extraordinary

year of wealth creation

in the history of China again.

I've been doing this

list for 15, 16 years.

I've never seen a year like 2015.

Normally for 200 million

pounds or 300 million dollars,

we find say about 800,000 people.

This year, 2015, it's doubled.

There'll be more dollar

billionaires known about in China

than in the US.

So the US, up until now,

has been the leader in terms of

the most successful business

tycoons in the world.

China 2015, will have overtaken the US.

So, amazing.

- [John Narrating] Modern China

is full of telling ironies,

not least this museum

that was once the house

where Mao and his

comrades secretly founded

the communist party of China in 1921.

Today it stands in the

heart of an exclusive,

very capitalist shopping district.

- When you leave this shrine

to China's great revolution,

you're confronted by a surreal spectacle.

For right outside where the

Chinese communist party was born,

are the very symbols of capitalism.

Starbucks, Apple, Cartier,

Dolce and Gabbana,

and down there perhaps the

free market's greatest triumph:

bottled water that insures you live young,

costing six pounds for a

small bottle in my hotel.

Would Mao spin in his tomb if he was here?

I'm not so sure.

Hidden history is always

the key to the truth.

Five years before his great

communist revolution in 1949,

Mao sent this secret

message to Washington.

"China must industrialize," wrote Mao,

"this can only be done by free enterprise.

"Chinese and American

interests fit together

"economically and politically.

"America need not fear that

we will not be cooperative.

"We cannot risk crossing America.

"We cannot risk any conflict."

Mao received no reply.

Nothing has changed.

- Mao Zedong was looking to be a friend

with the United States from the beginning.

Mao says, I will go meet

Franklin Roosevelt in the White House.

Mao reaches out in 1950 to Harry Truman.

He reaches out to Dwight Eisenhower.

His hand was tossed away.

- [John Narrating] This opportunity that

might have changed history,

prevented wars, saved countless lives,

was lost because the

truth of Mao's overtures

was denied in the

Washington of the 1950's.

State Department officials

who had carried Mao's messages

were condemned unjustly

as communist traitors.

- Everybody who knew Mao,

who spoke Chinese, was gone.

In the 1950's, the State Department

had no employees who spoke Chinese.

It's resulted in us not having relations

with the number one, most

populous country in the world.

- [John Narrating] In 1979, this man,

Deng Xaoping, became

China's paramount leader.

He said, "Socialism does

not mean shared poverty."

This was code for the most radical reform

since Mao's revolution, the

return of capitalism to China,

but this time controlled

by the communist party.

"To be rich is glorious,"

Deng was reported as saying.

America was now threatened

by the emergence

of a vast image of itself.

This is one of the many very exclusive

gated communities in Shanghai

where an apartment is one of the prizes

of the new communism.

I'd arranged to see

Professor Zhang Weiwei,

a close aide to the late Deng Xiaoping,

the man who changed China.

- Deng is really, extremely

long-term visionary leader

with an exceedingly

long-term at strategic vision

for his country and for his people.

China is still following that path.

Actually, this is really a tradition

from China's long history.

You look at even like Mao.

He said we should surpass UK,

by which we should

surpass the United States,

so these tradition continues to this day.

Even Xi Jinping to this day

is also doing this idea.

Actually, what many Chinese have problem

with the Western media is

the stereotypes about China.

If you contend with stereotypes,

you miss so many things.

If BBC broadcast something,

they are happy to always mention

the communist dictatorship,

this autocracy.

Actually, with this kind of label

you cannot understand this China as it is.

But if you watch BBC or

CNN or read Economist

and try to understand

China, it will be a failure.

It's impossible.

- Multiple parties fight

for political power

and everyone holding on to them

as the only path to salvation

to the long-suffering, developing world.

- [John Narrating] This is Eric Li,

a Shanghai entrepreneur

educated in America

and typical of a new, confident,

outspoken political class.

- In China, there are a lot of problems.

But at the moment, the

Chinese, the party state,

has proven an extraordinary

ability to change.

I make the joke:

in America you can

change political parties

but you can't change the policies.

In China you cannot change the party

but you can change policies.

In 65 or 66 years, China has

been run by one single party

yet the political changes

that have taken place

in China these past 66

years have been wider

and broader and greater than probably

any other major country in modern memory.

- So in that time, China

ceased to be communist.

Is that what you're saying?

- Well, China is a market economy.

It's a vibrant market economy

but it is not a capitalist country.

Here's why.

There's no way a group of billionaires

could control the party bureau

as billionaires control

American policy making.

So in China, you have a

vibrant market economy

but capital does not rise

above political authority.

Capital does not have enshrined rights.

In America, capital,

the interest of capital and capital itself

has risen above the American nation.

The political authority cannot

check the power of capital.

That's why America is a capitalist country

but China's not.

- [John Narrating] This

is the ironic title

of a best-selling book by Zhang Lijia,

a journalist and critic

who lives in Beijing.

- Many Americans imagine

that the Chinese people

live a miserable, repressed

life with no freedom whatsoever.

That's not quite true.

If you speak to many

ordinary Chinese people,

they will tell you they feel

their lives are quite free.

Some 500 million people

have been lifted off poverty

and some would say probably

600 million people.

That's a great achievement.

For many Americans, the Yellow

Peril has never left them.

I think there's a fear about China.

There's a fear of China's rapid rise,

but it also has a lot to do with China's

label as a communist state.

- China's objectives are modest

compared with their weight.

They're not trying to run the world.

They're not even trying

to run the Asian-Pacific.

I think they want to keep America

from dominating the Asian-Pacific.

So they have what they believe

is their rightful place

in the Asian-Pacific,

because of all civilizations

and all the history on their side,

so their objectives are really modest

compared with their capacity.

- The new wealth in China,

they often say this is the product of

self-made entrepreneurial skill but

is it not also the product of

the exploitation of people at the bottom,

what are known in China as migrants.

But they're not really

migrants, they're Chinese.

- (laughs) If you really go to

talk to these migrant workers,

you will find quite surprisingly,

over the past five to seven years,

they have experienced a

greater income increase

than any other social groups.

China is not a class society.

- [John Narrating] But

China is a class society.

These are the homes of migrant workers,

people who build and

service the new China.

Here it's not uncommon for three families

to share one tiny flat.

- You know, you associate a

socialist country with equality

but unfortunately it seems

the reform has started.

China has become one of the

most unequal societies in the world.

The income gap is widening.

Governments, I feel,

have retreated some of

the responsibilities, left

the markets to take over,

but the market does not

always treat women kindly.

Some private companies

that would just refuse

to hire child-bearing aged women.

And sometimes when women became pregnant,

they would sack them.

Because they don't want to

pay their maternity leave.

And in fact, the income

gap has grown much bigger

between men and women.

- Your old boss, Deng Xaoping,

presided over the bloodshed

in Tiananmen Square.

What would you say to the

survivors of Tiananmen Square,

because so many of those did fight

for what they saw as

democratic change in China?

- In 1989, there were

two political forces.

One of those were presented

by the Chinese students.

Their hero was Mikhail Gorbachev,

who happened to be in Beijing.

Their slogan was,

"Soviet Union's Today

is China's Tomorrow."

So the idea was political reform first,

other reform second.

Otherwise, China would be hopeless.

Deng's message was the opposite.

He thought Gorbachev was an idiot.

He thought China must have

economic reform first,

other reform second.

This priority must be set clear.

Unfortunately, at that

particular moment in 1989,

the two political forces

could not reach a compromise.

That's when the tragedy occurred.

- [John Narrating] It

was more than a tragedy.

It was a m*ssacre

of which the memory remains a

raw presence in modern China.

- Why does the Chinese

state still fear the few?

The few who speak out,

and I'm thinking of--

- Liu Xiaobo? (laughs)

- [John] Exactly.

This man won the Nobel Peace

Prize and he's in prison.

- He violated Chinese law by a big margin.

So actually the freedom of expression,

similar views are aired by many people

but he really going to the extreme.

- [John Narrating] Liu Xiaobo

challenged the government

to implement democratic reforms

and he spent a total

of 13 years in prison.

- Why can't a confident China

accept a criticism like that?

- Nobel peace committee

makes huge mistake.

They owe the Chinese an explanation.

If you cross a line, you

violate the constitution,

you violate so many laws,

you should be punished.

(somber music)

- [John Narrating] And yet in China today,

the spirit of protest and dissent

lives on in different forms.

In 2015, strikes and community protests

and activism reach record levels.

This resistance is seldom

reported in the West.

- So there are lots of protests in China.

Typical for example, land being grabbed by

officials for commercial development

and the farmers are not

being compensated properly.

But the farmers now know,

are more aware of their

rights so they protest.

Or young workers from the factory,

they demand a better wage and

a better working condition,

but many of the protests

they are economic driven,

not political driven.

They are regional, not nation-wide.

So this kind of thing is unlikely

to develop into real movement

or so-called, you call that revolution.

- [John] So the Mao's revolution

was the last revolution?

- (laughs) Well, never say never.

(helicopter whirs)

- [John Narrating] The

Japanese island of Okinawa

is occupied by 32 m*llitary installations.

From here, the United

States has att*cked Korea,

Vietnam, Cambodia, Afghanistan, Iraq.

The sky is full of planes and helicopters.

(helicopter whirs)

Wherever people go, they are fenced in

and told to keep out.

Okinawa is the front

line of a beckoning w*r

with China.

(people shouting)

Aged 87, Fumiko Shimabukuro

is one of the leaders of

a non-violent resistance

that's challenging

Washington's "Pivot to Asia."

(people shouting)

- [John Narrating] Fumiko is a survivor.

A quarter of the civilians on the island

were k*lled in the

American invasion in 1945

and a fear of w*r has been

passed through the generations.

(gentle music)

Today, those who witnessed these horrors

live in a place of extraordinary beauty

surrounded by coral reefs

and a unique marine life.

It was here in Henoko Bay

that the survivors of

World w*r Two sought refuge

and it's this they're

now fighting to save.

It's an epic struggle that

pits these island people

against the greatest

m*llitary power on Earth.

- This is the office of a

former governor of Okinawa,

Ota Masahide.

What is done is create

not so much a museum,

but an appeal to the outside world

to understand the resistance in Okinawa,

to understand the suffering,

to read its hidden history.

It begins in 1945 when

the Americans invaded.

Here's General MacArthur

arriving in Okinawa.

A second invasion happened 10 years later

in what became known as

the Bulldozer's and Bayonets campaign.

American forces seized

prime agricultural land,

b*rned farm houses, and k*lled livestock.

The dispossessed people of Okinawa

march the length of

Japan, appealing for help.

- This wall is devoted to

a resistance in Okinawa

that never ceases.

Everywhere people go on the island,

they are confronted by this sign.

It tells them they must not go past

this fence topped with barbed wire.

These fences run like great

ribbons across the island

and the bases themselves

cut swaths across Okinawa.

But all around them are people

with this continuing demonstration,

this continuing resistance.

And they have a message.

It's: "People of the World,

"Watch what Japan and the US are doing.

"Don't let them force

the bases on Okinawa."

- [John Narrating] All this will be lost

when much of the bay becomes

concrete runways for

bombers at Camp Schwab,

the huge US Marine base behind this fence.

(applause)

In 2014, Okinawa elected a new governor,

Takeshi Onaga, who won by

a landslide on one issue.

Stopping the new base at Henoko.

This was election night

outside the American base

at Camp Schwab.

(cheering)

We shall overcome

We shall overcome someday

Oh, deep in my heart

I do believe

We shall overcome someday

The New Year's celebration

of their victory

was bittersweet.

The government in Tokyo resented this

unprecedented challenge to its authority.

The issue is now in the Japanese courts.

Japan's prime minister, Shinzo Abe,

has also made clear that with the backing

of his powerful patron America,

he wants to reawaken Japanese nationalism

and reclaim it's m*llitary power.

(helicopter whirs)

(drum pounds)

(singing)

While we were filming this

ceremony outside the base,

on a day when people paid respect

to their departed loved ones,

giant American helicopters

circled above us,

intimidating as always.

The thr*at of these low-flying aircraft

is a constant presence in Okinawa.

Teachers often can't

teach because of the noise

and the fear.

(somber music)

This was the carnage

when an American fighter

crashed into a primary school

after the pilot had ejected to safety.

Haru Akira, aged seven,

was terribly b*rned.

Akira suffered throughout his youth

and d*ed from his injuries age 21.

Another tragedy waits

to happen on Okinawa.

US m*llitary aircraft have been involved

in 44 accidents on the island.

The latest thr*at is this

hybrid plane, the Osprey,

notorious for its safety issues.

(dance music)

Wherever the m*llitary is based in Asia,

there is a relationship with local people,

especially women, that

often breeds resentment.

In Okinawa, this resentment

ignited a riot in 1970.

Scores of American GI's

were pulled from their cars

which were set alight.

For Washington and it's

compliant ally in Tokyo,

it's this kind of

insurrection that they fear.

During the making of this film,

a young woman was r*ped and m*rder*d,

allegedly by an American

m*llitary contractor

from one of the bases.

(chanting)

It was the latest of

thousands of cases of v*olence

and it brought massive

crowds into the streets,

demanding an end to the

m*llitary occupation of their country.

(aircraft rumbles)

This is a Mace m*ssile,

designed to carry a nuclear warhead.

During the Cold w*r, the United States

secretly installed nuclear weapons

at this launch pad in Okinawa.

Most of them were aimed at China.

Today, the nuclear m*ssile site

is run by a Buddhist organization,

the Soka Gakkai, as a peace museum.

- In 1962, the atomic weapons,

that were on the m*ssile,

was almost launched.

- They were almost launched?

- Yeah, according to the

spokesman of this m*llitary base,

said they were ordered to prepare.

Then we received second order to stop it.

- [John Narrating] One of

the American servicemen

whose job was to fire the Mace missiles

has since revealed that

China was a nuclear target

during the Cuban m*ssile crisis in 1962.

- We were told that we had

to launch all the missiles.

But we only had one m*ssile

headed towards Russia

and we did not see why we

should have to involve

the other countries.

The captain suggested that

everybody cr*ck the doors open

so it would take less

time to launch the m*ssile

if the doors were cracked open.

(beeping)

- [John Narrating] One of the launch crews

was on the point of f*ring their missiles

when a duty officer suspected

the order was false.

- The officer that was on the B side

was told to send two

men over there with 45's

and to sh**t anybody that tried to launch

until the situation was resolved.

And it would only take like 15, 20 seconds

to run the distance between

the two command centers.

So those two men kept

that whole crew at bay

while we made a decision as what to do.

And it wasn't very long, maybe

two or three seconds later

where a very nervous major

came over the intercom

issuing the stand down order.

And then we just kind of

looked at each other, like

we could have exterminated

the whole planet.

The major who had given the launch order

was quietly court-martialed

and dismissed from the Air Force.

- That morning is just as familiar to me

and as clear as yesterday morning is.

And this is 53 years later

and how clear blue the sky was

and there was just some very light clouds

and there was a perfect breeze blowing

at the perfect temperature.

I did not know what the temperature was,

but it just felt perfect.

And we were all just kind of taking it in

and taking in the smell of the air

and the sea and the land mixture together

and everything smelled so beautiful.

- This is very interesting

because it shows

the cities in China where these

Mace missiles were aimed at.

Which ones do we have here?

- This Okinawa Island.

So within 2000 kilometers

you find Peking, or Beijing,

Xi'an, Jiuzhaigou, Hong Kong, Shanghai,

Taiwan and Taipei, and

Pyongyang, North Korea.

Within the range of m*ssile.

(aircraft rumbles)

(somber music)

- [John Narrating] This is the work of

the Okinawan sculptor, Kinjo Minoru.

It's a tribute to the

suffering and resistance

of the people of this island.

More than 1000 miles away on

the Korean island of Jeju,

these symbols of struggle

are hauntingly similar.

The work of Korean sculptor Koh Gil-chun,

represents another fight of

island people for freedom.

(gentle music)

A semi-tropical sanctuary

of unusual beauty,

Jeju Island is a world heritage site.

The government of South Korea declared it

an island of world peace.

But on this island of peace has been built

one of the most provocative

m*llitary bases in the world,

less than 400 miles from Shanghai.

Like Okinawa and the Marshall Islands,

this is America's

frontline in it's so-called

"Pivot to Asia."

Here in once unspoiled Gangjeong Village,

the South Korean Navy has built a base

for American aircraft carriers,

nuclear submarines, and destroyers

equipped with the Aegis ballistic m*ssile

aimed at China's defenses.

China's lifelines to the world

in oil, trade, resources,

depend on shipping that comes through

chokepoints like this.

- The US pivot into the Asian-Pacific

is really intended to create the ability

to put a loaded g*n to the head of China

and say, you will do as we say

otherwise we will be able to restrict.

We'll be able to shut down, choke off

your importation of oil

and other resources.

(chanting)

- [John Narrating] For

nine years, every day,

often twice a day, these Catholic priests

have staged a mass that blocked the gates

of the new m*llitary base on Jeju Island.

(singing)

In a country where

political demonstrations

can be easily banned,

unlike powerful religions,

the tactic has produced this

spectacle of resistance.

(man speaking on loudspeaker)

(speaks foreign language)

Father Mun Jeong-hyeon has led the fight

to stop the base being built

and several times

suffered serious injuries.

(singing)

- I sing four songs everyday.

Before the Mass, during the

Mass, at the end of the Mass

and the end of the rosary.

The content of song is very beautiful.

The writer and composer is the musician

from this island.

I love him very much and

he gave me their song

which I practiced and I became a master

to sing that song because I

practice everyday. (laughs)

- [John] You sing it with such passion.

(singing)

- Sometimes we just wait.

Typhoon, typhoon strike!

- [John] Do you sing then?

Do you have a Mass when

the typhoons strike?

- Oh yes.

No exceptions.

- [John] What will happen

if this base becomes operational?

- They have destroyed the environment,

they destroy the life of all of us.

We should be witness of their

oppression and v*olence.

- [John] Why do they do it?

- They'd like to rule the

Pacific area, the whole area.

They'd like to make China

isolated in this globe.

The US government want to

be in power of this world.

(laughs)

- [John Narrating] Meanwhile,

a Quaker called Mr. Oh

joins them with his own ritual of protest,

accompanied by an artist

called Wild Flower.

- [John Narrating] This

is the center of an empire

that never speaks its name,

whose power is represented in

this extraordinary world map

of American m*llitary bases.

4000 bases in the United States,

almost 1000 bases spread

across every continent.

- The archipelago of empire,

the bases that we have around the world

hidden in plain sight are the

real territory of our empire

but at the same time we

maintain independent governments

in Japan or South Korea or Germany.

They don't have autonomy when

it comes to foreign policy.

So it's a very sophisticated

and effective system

whereby we pat ourselves on the back for

helping to midwife democracy in Japan

and Germany and South Korea

and various other places

while keeping the lid

on in that we don't know

what these countries would do if they were

fully independent.

And the beauty of this system is that

most people pay no attention to it at all.

They think it's just a natural occurrence

to have 50,000 American troops in Japan.

- There's no country that has

better anti-imperial credit--

(laughs) cred, then the United States.

And we are not trying to recreate

the glories of the British Empire.

We're arguing that the world is round.

We have a global policy

and all nations have global rights.

- No ocean has ever been dominated

the way the US dominates the

Pacific, Navy and Air Force.

They claim that in the

Pearl Harbor headquarters

of the Pacific Command,

they claim to be responsible

for 52 percent of the Earth's surface.

And when you look at their logo,

it shows an eagle over

the Aleutian Islands

with one tail coming down

somewhere near Seattle

and the other coming

down right over Beijing.

So Beijing looks at a network of bases,

a real archipelago of empire

that's been built up since the Korean w*r.

- You have had and still have

an arc of bases that start in Australia

and go through the Pacific--

- No.

We have no bases in Australia.

- You have Pine Gap, you have Darwin--

- No.

- And you have a new facility

in Western Australia.

- No, to speak precisely,

we have no m*llitary bases in Australia.

What we do is is operate

with and in Australian bases.

But we're not in the

basing business nowadays.

- There's a growing collection

of what are referred to as

"lilypad bases."

These are bases that have

typically two, 300 troops,

no family members, very few amenities,

and they are often quite secretive.

They are bases that are

frequently constructed

within a foreign country's

base to disguise it

and generally are not

referred to as bases.

- [John Narrating] Many of

these bases have been set up

to combat China's worldwide

economic influence.

From these bases, the United

States operates a secret army

in 147 countries.

- If you're gonna be a free country

rather than give in to every

gangster regime in the world,

you're gonna have to take a risk.

'Cause the gangsters,

they want to eliminate

good people in the world so they can--

and in China, they want to

dominate all of the Far East,

they want to dominate.

Just like Japan wanted

to before World w*r Two.

Their goal was to dominate

that part of the world.

Today, because there's been no

political reform in Beijing,

these guys want to dominate

a huge chunk of the planet.

(mumbles)

- [John Narrating] Andrew

Krepinevich served on

America's National Defense Panel.

He's a m*llitary strategist

and w*r planner.

- You've written that

airstrikes and naval blockades

have a role to play in punishing China.

You've described the need for sea mines.

You've described the

need for special forces,

US Special Forces, and

missiles placed on islands.

This sounds like a preparation for w*r.

- Our first president, George Washington,

said that if you want

peace, prepare for w*r.

And essentially what the

United States is doing again

is responding to provocative

behavior on the part of China.

And just as we did in the Cold w*r,

the idea was to have a

position of m*llitary strength

such that your adversaries

were not tempted

to act in aggressive ways or

try and employ coercion to get their way.

- Just last week the US Navy

sent a guided m*ssile destroyer

into the Spratly Islands,

the South China Sea.

And what was different

about this, I think,

was that Chinese fighters scrambled.

That sounds like an escalator.

- Well again, from an

American prospective,

the escalation was that the Chinese

beginning to militarize these

islands in the first place,

moving its m*llitary capabilities

down into that region,

engaging in provocative behavior against

the commercial activities

and m*llitary forces of

other minor countries in the region

that have claim to those islands.

So it's a response to

Chinese intimidation rather--

- Excuse me, how is

commerce being intimidated

in the South China Sea?

- There have been no m*llitary forces,

no m*llitary bases there.

The Chinese--

- Except the United States m*llitary base.

- Not in the South China Sea.

Not even in the Philippines because

the United States withdrew

its forces in the Philippines.

- But the United States is

back in the Philippines.

- The Philippines and the

United States have announced

five different locations

scattered all throughout

the Philippines where US troops will

be stationed on a rotational basis.

- [John Narrating] This

thr*at to China from yet more

US bases on its doorstep was not an issue

when an arbitration tribunal

ruled against China's claims

to the strategic Spratly

Islands in the South China Sea.

In 2015, the US Navy rehearsed a blockade

that would cut China's lifelines of oil

and trade and raw materials.

The danger of confrontation

grows by the day.

- The US Navy is on the doorstep of China

regardless of disputed islands

and is there with low-draft ships,

planes, battle groups.

It's right on the doorsteps.

What of Chinese ships?

What if the equivalent was off California?

- Well John, we ask ourselves

that question regularly.

And it's important to put

yourself in the other guy's shoes.

So look.

We don't operate in the

Pacific in an effort

to scare China, to contain

China, to backfoot China.

Our operations and our presence,

first of all, is warmly

welcomed by the vast majority

of the coastal states, but secondly,

is fully accepted by the Chinese.

Time after time--

- Excuse me, is it fully accepted?

- Yes, by their words.

The Chinese leaders--

- [John] My impression

is that they're scared.

- [John Narrating] And this

is what they're scared of.

A noose of bases right around China.

Missiles, bombers, drones, warships.

A provocation of w*r.

- Today, I state clearly

and with conviction.

America's commitment to

seek the peace and security

of a world without nuclear weapons.

(cheering)

- [John Narrating] Under Obama,

nuclear warhead spending has risen higher

than under any president

since the end of the Cold w*r.

- It's all a magician's show because

at the same time that Obama

is talking about that,

not only is he spending a trillion dollars

to modernize US nuclear forces,

but he's deploying these

m*ssile defense systems

to encircle Russia and China,

which makes it impossible to

get rid of nuclear

weapons in that climate.

- Everybody wants to

look like they're tough.

See, I gotta be tough.

I'm not afraid of doing anything m*llitary.

I'm not afraid of threatening.

I'm a hairy-chested gorilla.

And you don't want to

look like you're weak,

so what you do is you talk

more and more aggressively

and if you don't want to do it yourself,

because you maybe think it

doesn't look very presidential,

you let somebody under you do the talking.

And the United States has

gotten into a situation

where there's a lot of

m*llitary saber-rattling

and it's really being

orchestrated from the top.

- Yeah, that seems incredibly

dangerous, all of this.

- That's an understatement,

I think, but I agree.

- When you routinely plan for mass m*rder,

you become conditioned to it.

That's what this is.

We accept it.

Oh yeah, we have nuclear weapons.

- The Defense Secretary has just announced

that there will be

warships and special forces

and planes sent to the Philippines

and the Wall Street Journal

has described this as

"the vanguard of a major US

presence in Southeast Asia."

That sounds like--

- Where does this end?

What's the purpose?

I mean, where are we

going to stop this process

before it starts a w*r?

And then if the w*r starts,

where does that end?

America, America

God shed his grace on me

And crown thy good with brotherhood

From sea to shining sea

(wind howls)

The scientific studies that

I teach by the scientists

that predict that the Earth can be made

essentially uninhabitable

from nuclear w*r,

the scientists have been begging

the Obama administration--

well, they wouldn't say begging.

But they have made multiple requests

to meet with them and

discuss these predictions

because they're peer-reviewed studies

and they've been turned

down over and over again.

They've been peripherally told that,

well we don't think the long-term

environmental consequences of nuclear w*r

are all that important

if the immediate effects

of nuclear w*r don't stop it.

That the long-term environmental

consequences of nuclear w*r

are liable to wipe out the human race.

- [John] In one exchange,

nuclear exchange between the US and China,

what could be the consequences?

- Well let me just give you an example

of what one Chinese four

or five megaton warhead

would do to a city in the

United States if it got through.

The detonation of that w*apon over a city

would instantly ignite about

six or 700 square miles on fire.

And within 20 to 30 minutes,

all of those fires would coalesce

into a single gigantic firestorm.

There would be no escape from it.

So all the people there would perish.

So the US, with say,

hundreds of nuclear

weapons on Chinese cities.

When you combine all the smoke

from these nuclear weapons detonating,

it actually creates

millions of tons of smoke.

Black carbon smoke that'll

rise above cloud level

into the stratosphere,

it's heated by the sun,

it acts like a solar collector.

And that smoke, because of that,

will stay there for 10 years or longer.

And what the smoke does is it blocks

warming sunlight from reaching

the surface of the earth

and it becomes so cold in a

matter of just a couple of weeks

that the temperature

will fall below freezing

every day for one to three years.

And it will become too

cold to grow food crops

for at least 10 years or longer.

(wind howls)

- I mean, there's a total disconnect

with the changing world.

You have a giant rising

power, in this case, China.

Why would you expect a giant rising power

to not want to have more

control over its destiny?

What we should be doing in my view

is trying to cultivate a sense

of friendship and cooperation

and we can have our differences with them.

If we think they're

doing something in trade

that we don't like, let's

have it out with them.

But this saber-rattling is

the worst thing we can possibly do.

(cheering)

- It is time to show the whole world

that America is back.

Bigger, and better, and

stronger than ever before.

We don't have victories anymore.

We used to have victories,

but we don't have 'em.

When was the last time

anybody saw us b*ating,

let's say China?

In a trade deal, they k*ll us.

We can't continue to allow China

to r*pe our country, and

that's what they're doing.

It's the greatest theft in

the history of the world.

(audience cheers)

- [John Narrating] The new

president, Donald Tr*mp,

has a problem with China.

The urgent question now is,

will Tr*mp continue with the provocations

revealed in this film and take

us all to the edge of w*r?

- There never have been two countries

more interdependent on each other

than China and the US in history.

And China is the largest trading nation

in the world and in history.

So China's economy and their

societies, their lives,

are linked to the entire world.

Including America and the West

and all the other countries.

So I think interdependence

between these two countries

and among all the nations of the world,

speak to peace.

(gentle music)

- [John Narrating] We don't

have to accept the word

of those who conjure up

threats and false enemies

to justify the business and profit of w*r

if we recognize there

is another superpower,

and that's us.

Ordinary people everywhere,

like the people of Okinawa,

Jeju Island, the Marshall Islands,

China, the United States.

By speaking out, they deliver

a warning to all of us.

Can we really afford to be silent?

We'll meet again

Don't know where, don't know when

But I know we'll meet again

Some sunny day

Keep smiling through

Just like you always do

'Til the blue skies

drive the dark clouds

Far away

So will you please say hello

To the folks that I know

Tell them I won't be long

They'll be happy to know

That as you saw me go

I was singing this song

We'll meet again

Don't know where

Don't know when

But I know we'll meet again

Some sunny day

We'll meet again

Don't know where

Don't know when

But I know we'll meet again

Some sunny day

Keep smiling through

Just like you always do

'Til the blue skies drive

the dark clouds far away

So will you please say hello

To the folks that I know

Tell them I won't be long

They'll be happy to know

That as you saw me go

I was singing this song

We'll meet again

Don't know where

Don't know when

But I know we'll meet again

Some sunny day
Post Reply