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Strap in — this episode of The Restricted Handling Podcast takes you deep into the latest round of China's geopolitical high drama, economic maneuvering, and cyber intrigue. It's 12.11.25, and the world's second-largest economy is playing hardball on every front — from trade wars and AI chips to Pacific island construction and espionage games straight out of a techno-thriller.
We kick off with the latest twist in the ongoing Japan–China showdown. After last week's radar lock incident over Okinawa, Beijing's trying to save face with some classic misdirection. State media dropped "proof" of supposed communication with Tokyo — a few scratchy radio snippets that Japan immediately dismissed as the diplomatic version of a spam call. The tension isn't cooling; it's evolving. Russia's bombers are now joining China's patrols in the skies over Japan, turning the East China Sea into a live demo of joint coercion. The U.S. and Japan are tightening their alliance, while Australia quietly joins in on real-time intel sharing for the first time ever.
Then we dive into Beijing's biggest domestic headline: China's Ministry of State Security unveiling its next five-year plan. Minister Chen Yixin is rebranding the MSS as a "high-tech fortress" with AI-driven surveillance, expanded espionage defenses, and a focus on Taiwan, tech sovereignty, and controlling the global narrative. It's a hybrid of cyberpunk ambition and old-school paranoia — a digital "Great Wall" built to secure China's power base at home and abroad.
Meanwhile, China's trade and tech fronts are getting squeezed. Mexico just rolled out up to 50% tariffs on Chinese imports, a preemptive olive branch to Washington ahead of the next USMCA review. Europe's following suit, with Macron pushing Brussels toward unified tariffs as Beijing's export machine floods the continent. On the tech side, Nvidia's ultra-powerful H200 chips are inching into China through a maze of approvals, while Beijing decides who gets to use them — a bureaucratic power play wrapped in a silicon shell.
Add to that China's "East Data, West Computing" mega-project — hundreds of AI data centers in Inner Mongolia, powered by the world's largest grid of cheap renewable energy. It's Beijing's counterpunch to America's chip advantage.
And just when you think the week couldn't get more cyberpunk, the Salt Typhoon hacker group resurfaces with a wild twist: two of its members were once trained at Cisco's global academy. Talk about learning the playbook before breaking into the locker room.
From Micronesia's new Chinese-built runway to corruption fallout in Nepal and Germany's new warning over Taiwan, this episode has it all — spycraft, trade wars, power grids, and plenty of global side-eye.
Listen now to RH 12.11.25 | China: Tariffs, Power Plays, and Spy Games — your front-row seat to the week's biggest moves in Beijing and beyond.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit restrictedhandling.substack.com/subscribe
By Restricted HandlingStrap in — this episode of The Restricted Handling Podcast takes you deep into the latest round of China's geopolitical high drama, economic maneuvering, and cyber intrigue. It's 12.11.25, and the world's second-largest economy is playing hardball on every front — from trade wars and AI chips to Pacific island construction and espionage games straight out of a techno-thriller.
We kick off with the latest twist in the ongoing Japan–China showdown. After last week's radar lock incident over Okinawa, Beijing's trying to save face with some classic misdirection. State media dropped "proof" of supposed communication with Tokyo — a few scratchy radio snippets that Japan immediately dismissed as the diplomatic version of a spam call. The tension isn't cooling; it's evolving. Russia's bombers are now joining China's patrols in the skies over Japan, turning the East China Sea into a live demo of joint coercion. The U.S. and Japan are tightening their alliance, while Australia quietly joins in on real-time intel sharing for the first time ever.
Then we dive into Beijing's biggest domestic headline: China's Ministry of State Security unveiling its next five-year plan. Minister Chen Yixin is rebranding the MSS as a "high-tech fortress" with AI-driven surveillance, expanded espionage defenses, and a focus on Taiwan, tech sovereignty, and controlling the global narrative. It's a hybrid of cyberpunk ambition and old-school paranoia — a digital "Great Wall" built to secure China's power base at home and abroad.
Meanwhile, China's trade and tech fronts are getting squeezed. Mexico just rolled out up to 50% tariffs on Chinese imports, a preemptive olive branch to Washington ahead of the next USMCA review. Europe's following suit, with Macron pushing Brussels toward unified tariffs as Beijing's export machine floods the continent. On the tech side, Nvidia's ultra-powerful H200 chips are inching into China through a maze of approvals, while Beijing decides who gets to use them — a bureaucratic power play wrapped in a silicon shell.
Add to that China's "East Data, West Computing" mega-project — hundreds of AI data centers in Inner Mongolia, powered by the world's largest grid of cheap renewable energy. It's Beijing's counterpunch to America's chip advantage.
And just when you think the week couldn't get more cyberpunk, the Salt Typhoon hacker group resurfaces with a wild twist: two of its members were once trained at Cisco's global academy. Talk about learning the playbook before breaking into the locker room.
From Micronesia's new Chinese-built runway to corruption fallout in Nepal and Germany's new warning over Taiwan, this episode has it all — spycraft, trade wars, power grids, and plenty of global side-eye.
Listen now to RH 12.11.25 | China: Tariffs, Power Plays, and Spy Games — your front-row seat to the week's biggest moves in Beijing and beyond.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit restrictedhandling.substack.com/subscribe