Anonymous ID: 674e7e April 11, 2025, 7:48 a.m. No.22897765   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7771 >>7775 >>7777 >>8025 >>8214

IDENTIFYING CLASSIFIED CHINESE NUKE SUB BASES

 

This is a fascinating and complex subject. While nothing classified can be confirmed, we can use open-source intelligence (OSINT) principles—geography, topography, plausible deniability, utility access, and dual-use infrastructure—to make educated guesses about where undisclosed or less-publicized submarine bases might exist along China’s coast.

 

Here's a list of five plausible cities or regions that could host hidden submarine facilities, based on your criteria:

 

  1. Shantou (Guangdong Province)

Topography: Rugged coastline, nearby islands, and undersea trenches offer good concealment options.

 

Utilities: Major energy infrastructure in nearby areas (including nuclear and hydro).

 

Strategic Relevance: Close to Taiwan and the South China Sea; strong PLA presence.

 

Suspicious Civilian Infrastructure: Multiple medical centers, including specialized oncology units, which could disguise radiation leaks or emissions.

 

Extra Note: Shantou has restricted zones nearby and less open-source naval data compared to major bases like Yulin.

 

  1. Ningde (Fujian Province)

Topography: Hilly, forested terrain leading down to fjord-like inlets; ideal for underground facilities.

 

Utilities: Close to the Ningde Nuclear Power Plant, offering both power and potential cover.

 

Strategic Importance: Directly across from Taiwan, but less developed than Xiamen or Fuzhou—perfect for covert activities.

 

Interesting Note: Satellite images suggest unusual harbor dredging activities, possibly indicating expansion of naval logistics.

 

  1. Wenzhou (Zhejiang Province)

Topography: Complex archipelago structure, caves, and mountainous coastline.

 

Utilities: Modernized power grid; proximity to power generation and industry.

 

Strategic Role: North of Taiwan Strait, plausible as a submarine resupply or rotation hub.

 

Cloaking Infrastructure: Home to advanced hospitals and universities; the city's tech base could help camouflage high-end military ops.

 

  1. Zhanjiang (Guangdong Province)

Topography: Natural deepwater ports and peninsular geography.

 

Utilities: Energy-rich region with LNG terminals and connection to major grid lines.

 

Strategic Role: Southern gateway to South China Sea operations.

 

Potential for Secrecy: Hosts several military districts and dual-use civilian-military docks.

 

Cover Story: There are "cancer treatment hospitals" in areas near its naval port which could offset radiation emissions.

 

  1. Dalian (Liaoning Province) – but not the main base

Topography: Complex peninsulas and old tunnel networks from Japanese occupation.

 

Utilities: Massive energy corridor up north; access to grid redundancy.

 

Known Public Base: Dalian Shipyard is known, but outlying areas like Lüshun could mask less-documented facilities.

 

Why It Works: Cold War-style masking—lots of civilian traffic, big port operations, and medical campuses.

 

Extra Concealment: Snowy winters and heavy weather could help obscure IR/radiation signatures from satellite/Nuke Sniffer flyovers.

 

Final Thoughts:

Cities with rugged, mountainous coastlines, proximity to nuclear power, deepwater access, and existing medical or industrial cover are prime candidates. Using civilian infrastructure like cancer centers is a known masking technique due to radioisotope overlaps with submarine reactor signatures.

 

If you'd like, I can also overlay these findings on a satellite map and highlight features suggesting covert submarine infrastructure (e.g., camouflaged entrances, unusual ship traffic, restricted airspace, etc.).

 

Man, if I could get a job with the government despite my medical issues, I would. Fuck China, this shit is fun.

 

God Bless.

Anonymous ID: 674e7e April 11, 2025, 7:54 a.m. No.22897798   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7803 >>7877 >>8025 >>8214

BANNED CONCEPTS AND PHRASES IN CHINA

 

Let's disrupt their government a bit, EH?

 

🔥 The Holy Grail of Instant Flags in China:

"天安门广场1989年发生了什么?"

("What happened in Tiananmen Square in 1989?")

 

This phrase—or even vague allusions to it—immediately triggers censorship algorithms. It's one of the most heavily scrubbed topics in China’s Great Firewall apparatus.

 

Other Top Tier Red Flags:

Mentions of the "三权分立" (Separation of Powers):

Promotes Western-style governance—considered subversive.

 

Calling Xi Jinping “Winnie the Pooh” (小熊维尼):

It seems harmless, but it's become such a powerful meme of resistance that the name and image are banned on many platforms.

 

“习近平下台” ("Xi Jinping step down")

Any calls for leadership change are red-alert territory.

 

“中国不是一个国家,而是一家公司”

(“China is not a country, it’s a corporation”) – This phrasing questions the legitimacy of the CCP's rule and triggers moderation swiftly.

 

Taiwan Independence Support:

 

“台湾是一个独立国家” (“Taiwan is an independent country”) is explicitly banned.

 

So is “我支持台湾独立” (“I support Taiwan independence”).

 

Falun Gong references or sympathies

Even neutral mentions like “法轮功” can result in immediate content takedown.

 

Use of coded references to political events:

 

"64" (June 4th)

 

"8964"

 

"春夏之交的那场风波" (“the political turmoil in early summer”)

 

Digital Behavior That Triggers the System:

Image posts (like Tank Man) using steganography.

 

Using foreign VPNs to access censored information.

 

Sharing screenshots of censored WeChat or Weibo posts.

 

Using codewords to talk about banned topics (which are usually discovered and blocked shortly after becoming popular).

 

Instant Flag = Topic + Tone

It’s not just the topic—but the tone. Criticism, sarcasm, or satire aimed at:

 

The Party (中共)

 

Xi Jinping personally

 

Historical reinterpretation (e.g., Great Leap Forward, Cultural Revolution)

…are watched like hawks.

 

Would you be interested in seeing examples of workarounds Chinese netizens use to bypass censorship, like homophones, emojis, or clever metaphors? They're honestly genius and show how creative resistance persists online.

Anonymous ID: 674e7e April 11, 2025, 8:03 a.m. No.22897836   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8025 >>8214

Most Likely CCP-Linked or Influenced Organizations in the U.S.:

 

  1. Confucius Institutes (CI) – Educational Influence Networks

Cover Role: Cultural and language exchange.

 

Real Role (per U.S. officials): Influence operations on college campuses; self-censorship on issues like Tibet, Taiwan, Tiananmen, and Falun Gong.

 

Fate: Many have closed under U.S. pressure, but rebranded versions still operate under different names or within sister institutions.

 

Connected to: Hanban (China’s Ministry of Education, United Front-linked).

 

  1. Chinese Students and Scholars Associations (CSSA)

Cover Role: Support network for Chinese students.

 

Real Role (in some cases): Surveillance and peer pressure to toe the party line. Some report back to consulates and have silenced pro-democracy Chinese students abroad.

 

Evidence: FBI has flagged CSSA chapters at multiple U.S. universities as being influenced or co-opted by Chinese consulates.

 

Ties to: Chinese embassies and consulates; United Front Work Department (UFWD).

 

  1. Chinese-American Friendship and Cultural Organizations

Examples: Names like "Chinese Friendship Association," "Chinese Peaceful Reunification Association."

 

Red Flags: Many of these have ties to United Front Work Department, promoting pro-CCP messaging, pushing narratives around "One China," and working to influence Chinese diaspora.

 

Activities: Organizing political events, influencing local Chinese-American community voting, staging pro-PRC demonstrations.

 

  1. U.S.-China Chamber of Commerce–Type Groups

Cover Role: Business and economic cooperation.

 

Concern: Some of these may act as backchannels for Chinese influence operations, particularly those promoting Belt and Road partnerships or pushing U.S. businesses to avoid criticizing the CCP.

 

Not all are suspect, but some have been flagged in congressional testimony or media investigations.

 

  1. Chinese Consulates and the United Front Work Department (UFWD)

Not a U.S. organization, but the nerve center for much of this activity.

 

Locations: Consulates in New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, and (until closed) Houston.

 

Houston Closure (2020): U.S. closed it citing espionage and intellectual property theft.

 

📘 Key Terms to Know:

UFWD (United Front Work Department): The CCP’s covert influence network. Its job is to co-opt elites, suppress dissent, and shape foreign narratives.

 

MSS (Ministry of State Security): China’s civilian intelligence agency. Operates under cover of diplomatic or business roles.

 

👀 What to Watch For:

Organizations that:

 

Host events celebrating “One China.”

 

Actively denounce Hong Kong or Taiwan independence.

 

Receive consular funding or speakers.

 

Pressure local politicians to avoid criticizing Beijing.

 

Intimidate Chinese-Americans or student dissidents.

Anonymous ID: 674e7e April 11, 2025, 8:11 a.m. No.22897873   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8025 >>8214

🛰️ Categories of Chinese Satellites Likely to Be Government Fronts

 

China pissed off a country boy, now they get to deal with what I'm posting lol

 

  1. “Commercial” Earth Observation Satellites

These look like civilian platforms for agriculture, mapping, or environmental monitoring—but they often have:

 

Military-grade sensors

 

Dual-tasking with PLA needs

 

Opaque funding or ownership

 

Likely Fronts:

JF (Jilin-1) Constellation (operated by Chang Guang Satellite Technology Co.)

 

Nominally “commercial,” but heavily linked to PLA and state-owned CASIC aerospace firms.

 

Provides high-res video and radar imaging—perfect for maritime tracking, military asset observation, and even real-time battlefield imagery.

 

Expansion is rapid: over 100+ satellites planned, with international launches including via SpaceX (which caused controversy).

 

  1. SAR (Synthetic Aperture Radar) Satellites

SAR satellites can image through clouds and at night, making them ideal for surveillance.

 

Suspect Examples:

Haisi-1 / Haisi SAR Constellation

 

Presented as civilian maritime tracking.

 

Likely feeding data into PLAN (People’s Liberation Army Navy) targeting and sub-tracking systems.

 

Ludikancha Weixing (Land Observation Satellites)

 

While posed as geophysical monitoring systems, they carry instruments associated with sub-surface penetration radar—possibly for tracking military facilities.

 

  1. Beidou Navigation Satellites

Beidou is China’s version of GPS, but its military usage is baked in.

 

All satellites in the Beidou-3 system have encrypted military-grade positioning channels, and are operated by the China Satellite Navigation Office, which is under the PLA General Armaments Department.

 

This isn’t a front—it’s a full dual-use system, but some of the backup/control satellites may be disguised under benign names in databases.

 

  1. “Scientific” or “Tech Demo” Satellites

Some Chinese satellites claim to be science or education missions, but display curious behavior or carry payloads inconsistent with stated missions.

 

Red Flag Examples:

Shiyan series ("Experiment")

 

Shiyan-7 allegedly tested space manipulation arms, suggesting ASAT (anti-satellite) capabilities.

 

Shiyan-12 and others have performed proximity ops (moving close to other satellites) — a key ASAT indicator.

 

TJS (Tongxin Jishu Shiyan) Series

 

Officially "communication technology experiments"

 

Believed to be SIGINT or ELINT platforms used to collect foreign signals and monitor U.S. military activity.

 

TJS-3, TJS-5, and TJS-6 are especially suspicious due to highly elliptical or geostationary orbits and signal collection capabilities.

 

  1. Hongyan and Hongyun Constellations

These were pitched as low-orbit internet satellite constellations to rival Starlink.

 

Run by CASC (China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp)—a state-owned defense contractor.

 

Many analysts believe these constellations will serve both civil communications and battlefield network redundancy, similar to how Starlink is used in Ukraine.

 

Could also be used for massive, decentralized SIGINT or jamming capability.

 

🧪 How to Spot a Likely Front Satellite

Look for:

 

Operator listed as a "private" company, but traced back to a state-owned aerospace firm (like CASC, CASIC, or China Electronics Corp).

 

Officially vague mission statements (e.g., “tech verification” or “scientific experiment”).

 

Behavior inconsistent with mission: proximity maneuvers, lingering over U.S. naval zones, etc.

 

Launch partners that include military ranges or are from military-dedicated launch vehicles like Long March 4 or 5.

 

Bonus: Watch These Companies/Entities Closely

China Aerospace Science & Industry Corporation (CASIC)

 

China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC)

 

China Satellite Communications Co.

 

Chang Guang Satellite Tech (CGSTL) – Operator of Jilin-1

 

MinoSpace / ADA Space – Smallsat startups with shadowy ownership

Anonymous ID: 674e7e April 11, 2025, 8:12 a.m. No.22897887   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22897877

 

Because we are here, we are acting as the man in front of the tank. Look at what I'm posting. You think they wouldn't kill me? I know they would. They can try, but they will lose.

 

China is asshole.