Restricted Handling Daily Intel Brief
👉 Subscribe to The Restricted Handling Podcast https://www.restrictedhandling.com/ [https://www.restrictedhandling.com/] Today's Restricted Handling Daily Intel Brief is all China, all consequence, and absolutely packed with the kind of geopolitical chaos that makes your morning coffee feel underpowered. Ryan and Glenn break down the biggest China-related national security stories shaping the day, starting with Beijing's potential role in the Iran nuclear endgame. Could China become the unlikely custodian of Iran's highly enriched uranium? That is the question sitting right at the intersection of US diplomacy, Middle East security, nuclear nonproliferation, and great-power competition. President Trump wants Iran's enriched material removed or destroyed, Tehran wants to preserve leverage, and Beijing is hovering nearby with the diplomatic equivalent of a camera crew and a press release ready to go. Then the episode moves into a major Five Eyes intelligence warning about Chinese espionage on job platforms like LinkedIn, Indeed, and Upwork. Fake recruiters, fake consulting gigs, paid trial reports, and cleared personnel getting targeted by Chinese military intelligence. It is cyber-enabled human intelligence with a business-casual profile picture, and it is exactly the kind of quiet threat that can do real damage before anyone realizes the inbox message was not just another sketchy career opportunity. The brief also hits China's pressure campaign against Taiwan's international relationships, including Beijing's one-year travel bans on four New Zealand lawmakers after their May visit to Taiwan. That move says a lot about how China is trying to raise the cost of normal democratic engagement with Taipei. Add in Taiwan President Lai Ching-te's comments on Tiananmen, Secretary of State Marco Rubio's statement on Chinese censorship, and reporting on young Chinese citizens discovering the history of June 4 through unexpected channels, and you get a sharp look at how Beijing tries to manage memory, diplomacy, and pressure all at once. In the South China Sea, the episode covers the rapid transformation of Antelope Reef from a mostly submerged feature into a six-square-kilometer reclaimed landmass. China is moving fast, Vietnam is dredging too, the Philippines is reinforcing its positions, and ASEAN's code-of-conduct process continues to look like it is stuck in a waiting room with bad Wi-Fi. This is maritime competition in real time, with sand, sovereignty, and strategy all piled on top of each other. On the economic front, Ryan and Glenn unpack why Iranian and Russian crude are weakening in China despite tighter supply, and why Shandong refiners are not exactly sprinting to buy sanctioned oil. They also cover the warmer note in South Korea-China flight rights, the first expansion in seven years. Finally, the brief closes with the strategic military developments that matter, including Taiwan's expanding anti-ship missile force and China's newly observed mystery submarine. Not endless weapons trivia, just the key military details that explain where deterrence, sea control, and Indo-Pacific contingency planning may be headed. 👉 Subscribe to The Restricted Handling Podcast https://www.restrictedhandling.com/ [https://www.restrictedhandling.com/] Get the daily intelligence brief Ryan and Glenn read covering Russia, China, Iran, North Korea, the Middle East, geopolitics, sanctions, military and intel operations. Save a few hours of your time getting ahead of the news cycle at restrictedhandling.com.
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