I think he pissed on our bonfireCougar wrote:
WELL, WAY TO RAIN ON OUR PARADE JERKOFF!!JahManRed wrote:
What does it do to china? How does it affect them? You can bet that every intelligence agency on earth has a more detailed satellite photo of it in their possession already. They would only be in procession of such photos because china wants them to. By taking it out from cover China is effectively saying to the world, "look what we got, don't fuck with us"
The blurry view of an already documented submarine on your computer screen does not constitute ownage, five spanking new Jin-class SSBNs does.
What a party pooper.
There is a guy hiding behind a crate.
The US gov't airbrush out most their up-to-date military technology that appears on google earth satellite pictures. I think China should be given the privilege too!
Huh? Says who?Larkin wrote:
The US gov't airbrush out most their up-to-date military technology that appears on google earth satellite pictures. I think China should be given the privilege too!
China seems to care about what's on google. At least they have seemed to in the past.Bubbalo wrote:
Why would China care? It proves that they have one.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
FAS.org and GlobalSecurity.org are two of the most in-depth, realistic, logical security/policy analysis public think tanks around. Too bad the US Military doesn't give them access to their satellite images or information.
lol thats a good responseRyan wrote:
I'm so excited. Lets bomb it.
Regardless what everyone thinks and writes, no doubt China would be pretty pissed @ this lapse in security. Those guys HATE
ANYONE spying on ANYTHING to do with their military hardware. If you got caught taking a photo with a camera you prolly get
branded a spy and executed for espionage, (with the cost of the bullet used being billed to your family).
ANYONE spying on ANYTHING to do with their military hardware. If you got caught taking a photo with a camera you prolly get
branded a spy and executed for espionage, (with the cost of the bullet used being billed to your family).
Last edited by -101-InvaderZim (2007-07-06 19:23:00)
Oooh, that's a good offer. When China comes to point the finger at the U.S., we can truthfully say:Ryan wrote:
I'm so excited. Lets bomb it.
"Blame Canada."
Last edited by cowami (2007-07-06 19:42:34)

Didnt they test their anti-sat weapons recently?agent146 wrote:
Chinese official: 'uhh thats not a submarine thats thats...thats.....OMG some one shoot down google's satelite"
*and then battlefield 2 erupted*
Google is currently being targeted...
No, they've censored their Google because they censor everything they can internally.Kmarion wrote:
China seems to care about what's on google. At least they have seemed to in the past.Bubbalo wrote:
Why would China care? It proves that they have one.
Yes shooting an old weather satellite that you know the exact position is such a marvel. I'm still laughing at the sub.golgoj4 wrote:
Didnt they test their anti-sat weapons recently?agent146 wrote:
Chinese official: 'uhh thats not a submarine thats thats...thats.....OMG some one shoot down google's satelite"
*and then battlefield 2 erupted*
Google is currently being targeted...
I've read reports that stated China KNEW the sat was overhead and WANTED pics of it taken to act as a deterrent.-101-InvaderZim wrote:
Regardless what everyone thinks and writes, no doubt China would be pretty pissed @ this lapse in security. Those guys HATE
ANYONE spying on ANYTHING to do with their military hardware. If you got caught taking a photo with a camera you prolly get
branded a spy and executed for espionage, (with the cost of the bullet used being billed to your family).
I'll try and find where I read it. The article also stated that in the past China has literally opened up a sub so from a sat you could partially see the nuclear reactor. This was considered "sabre rattling" at the time.
That is really interesting. I had a professor once who claimed that spying promotes peace. The more every country knows about the others, the more each country will know exactly what it has to do (or who it has to ally itself with) to avoid being weaker than an adversary. Equal power on both sides leads to peace and stability.T.Pike wrote:
I've read reports that stated China KNEW the sat was overhead and WANTED pics of it taken to act as a deterrent.-101-InvaderZim wrote:
Regardless what everyone thinks and writes, no doubt China would be pretty pissed @ this lapse in security. Those guys HATE
ANYONE spying on ANYTHING to do with their military hardware. If you got caught taking a photo with a camera you prolly get
branded a spy and executed for espionage, (with the cost of the bullet used being billed to your family).
I'll try and find where I read it. The article also stated that in the past China has literally opened up a sub so from a sat you could partially see the nuclear reactor. This was considered "sabre rattling" at the time.
When you accomplish it, feel free to make light of it. Doesn't take THAT long to estimate the orbit of a non military sat.cyborg_ninja-117 wrote:
Yes shooting an old weather satellite that you know the exact position is such a marvel. I'm still laughing at the sub.golgoj4 wrote:
Didnt they test their anti-sat weapons recently?agent146 wrote:
Chinese official: 'uhh thats not a submarine thats thats...thats.....OMG some one shoot down google's satelite"
*and then battlefield 2 erupted*
Google is currently being targeted...
Well you sure must hate chinaCougar wrote:
WELL, WAY TO RAIN ON OUR PARADE JERKOFF!!JahManRed wrote:
What does it do to china? How does it affect them? You can bet that every intelligence agency on earth has a more detailed satellite photo of it in their possession already. They would only be in procession of such photos because china wants them to. By taking it out from cover China is effectively saying to the world, "look what we got, don't fuck with us"
The blurry view of an already documented submarine on your computer screen does not constitute ownage, five spanking new Jin-class SSBNs does.
What a party pooper.