then there s this. fox on top of china threats heating up and now the u.s. cracking down. from senators taking on tik tok, which could be used to track our movements to defense officials taking aim at chinese made cranes that could be used to track our military shipments. we have you covered with kelly o grady with the crane threat. edward lawrence with the tik tok threat and lieutenant general jerry boykin on suddenly a china global threat. welcome, everybody. i m neil cavuto. this is your busy world yet again. it s a pattern, isn t it? let s go to kelly o grady in california on a different version of chinese spying. kelly? that s right, neil. this is the new possible chinese spy threat. i m at the port of l.a. these cranes are hard to miss. hiding in plane sight. so for context, they re used to transport containers. the concern that are made by a chinese manufacturing company are being used to spy on. they re being used to call these cranes to a trojan horse that i have s
Political resets between adversaries or friends who have drifted apart require political will and viable strategies on both sides. After years of strain,
or the ukraine or anything like that in the short term. neil: all right. their focus will remain on a taiwan. i m wondering what you make of what they make of our sending 200 troops there, now having the taiwanese president in this country, to be a guest of kevin mccarthy in washington. these are all acts that they deem provocative. what do you think? no, listen, i think what we re doing is i m glad to see it happening. i m glad to see the president is thinking clearly on this issue. but i think that the chinese do see it as provocative. the chinese you know, we had at one time, neil, back in the vietnam war and i know this because i went into taiwan coming out of vietnam. we had a huge military assistance group there.
Members of the U.S. Army Military Assistance Group had the opportunity to present to students at the Education and Skills International School located in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
Although U.S.-Saudi bilateral ties are on the mend, ambiguities and the transactional nature of the 1945 oil-for-security covenant contribute to mistrust and tensions. The burden of fixing or stabilizing the relationship is a shared responsibility. It’s time for Washington and Riyadh to reconfigure their security ties in accordance with new U.S. geopolitical priorities and new Saudi defense requirements. This report lays out such a process.