Restricted Handling Daily Intel Brief
👉 Subscribe to The Restricted Handling Podcast https://www.restrictedhandling.com/ [https://www.restrictedhandling.com/] China is the main event in this June 9, 2026 Restricted Handling Daily Intel Brief, and Beijing is working every lever at once. Xi Jinping wraps up his high-profile visit to North Korea, Kim Jong Un gets the VIP treatment he wanted, and China quietly reminds Pyongyang that Moscow may be the flashy wartime friend, but Beijing still holds the long-term patron card. This episode breaks down what Xi's trip to Pyongyang really means for China, North Korea, Russia, and the US. The ceremony was shiny. The message was strategic. China wants leverage over Kim, especially as North Korea grows closer to Russia through military support, diplomatic alignment, and that increasingly awkward "we are definitely best friends now" energy coming out of Moscow and Pyongyang. We also move into the Taiwan Strait, where China's coast guard, military pressure, and information operations are all part of a larger campaign to normalize Beijing's claims around Taiwan. Taiwan is not just a regional flashpoint. It is the beating heart of the global AI hardware and semiconductor ecosystem. That means every Chinese patrol, every maritime warning, and every gray-zone move around Taiwan has implications for Nvidia, TSMC, Foxconn, US strategy, and the future of advanced technology. The South China Sea is also heating up. The Philippines is pushing back after a suspicious floating structure appeared at Scarborough Shoal, while China insists its activities are legitimate. At the same time, Beijing is pushing narratives around Japan, the Philippines, and Taiwan's waters, showing once again that China's playbook includes ships, statements, maps, and online influence campaigns. Very subtle stuff, Beijing. Very low-key. Nobody noticed. On the tech front, the US expanded its list of Chinese companies with alleged military ties, including major names like BYD, Alibaba, Baidu, WuXi AppTec, RoboSense, and Unitree. This is not just a business story. It is the latest round in the US-China competition over AI, electric vehicles, robotics, biotech, chips, drones, and military-civil fusion. Then we get into China's reported $295 billion AI infrastructure plan, a massive push to build interconnected data centers using domestic suppliers and state-backed systems. Beijing wants scale, control, and independence from foreign chips. Pair that with China's strong May export numbers in high-tech goods, autos, and integrated circuits, and you get a picture of a country trying to turn industrial capacity into geopolitical leverage. This episode is packed with China news, Taiwan Strait analysis, North Korea updates, South China Sea tensions, US-China tech competition, AI infrastructure, sanctions risk, military-intelligence implications, and the strategic moves shaping the next phase of great power competition. 👉 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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