RH 11.27.25 | China: Taiwan’s $40B Shield, Japan’s Defiance, Xi’s Threats, Trump’s Tightrope Podcast Por  arte de portada

RH 11.27.25 | China: Taiwan’s $40B Shield, Japan’s Defiance, Xi’s Threats, Trump’s Tightrope

RH 11.27.25 | China: Taiwan’s $40B Shield, Japan’s Defiance, Xi’s Threats, Trump’s Tightrope

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This episode of The Restricted Handling Podcast dives headfirst into one of the most volatile 24 hours in East Asia. From Beijing’s war of words to Taipei’s record-breaking defense budget, “RH 11.27.25 | China: Taiwan’s $40B Shield, Japan’s Defiance, Xi’s Threats, Trump’s Tightrope” breaks down the power plays, the posturing, and the pulse of a region on edge.

Taiwan’s President Lai Ching-te just unveiled a $40 billion defense megaproject—a once-in-a-generation move to fortify the island against Chinese aggression. We unpack what this means for the balance of power in the Pacific, why Washington’s cheering it on, and how the opposition back home is reacting to the island’s biggest military gamble in history. Expect radar networks, AI-driven targeting, and a massive weapons pipeline from the U.S. to Taipei—all part of Lai’s push to make Taiwan “too expensive to conquer.”

Meanwhile, Beijing’s not amused. China’s Defense Ministry is warning Japan it will “pay a painful price” for its growing involvement near Taiwan, after Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi doubled down on her vow to defend the island if China invades. Tokyo’s not backing down, deploying new missile systems on Yonaguni Island—just 110 kilometers from Taiwan—and shrugging off the threats like a samurai facing down a paper tiger.

We also dig into Trump’s delicate diplomacy—the former president juggling soybean deals with Xi Jinping while telling Tokyo to cool its jets. It’s a classic Trump maneuver: keeping trade alive while trying not to light the fuse on World War III. But Beijing’s already testing boundaries, conducting new amphibious drills and expanding its “shadow fleet” of dual-use civilian ships that could double as invasion transports.

If that weren’t enough, China’s out in the Indian Ocean, “researching” suspiciously close to U.S. and Indian military zones, and doubling down on spy paranoia—claiming Western video games are being used to recruit spies and distort Chinese maps. Add in Washington’s new plan to label Alibaba, Baidu, and BYD as Chinese military-linked companies, and the growing AI arms race between Beijing and Silicon Valley, and it’s a tech and security clash with global stakes.

All that, plus a dash of space drama—China’s emergency Shenzhou-22 mission, simulated Starlink jamming attacks, and new missile tracking satellites that tighten its orbital grip.

Tune in for sharp analysis, sharp humor, and sharper geopolitics. Because in the Pacific chessboard of 2025, every move counts—and China just made several.

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