The Wall Street Journal is reporting that China's biggest bank signed an agreement that would make it the first Beijing-controlled financial institution to acquire retail bank branches in the U.S., though regulators could still block the deal.
Under the deal, Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd., by some measures the world's largest bank, agreed to acquire a majority stake in Bank of East Asia Ltd.'s U.S. subsidiary. ICBC, as the bank is known, is based in Beijing and is 70% owned by the [Communist] Chinese government.
Bank of East Asia has a total of 13 branches in New York and California. ICBC and Bank of East Asia have talked to U.S. regulators about the deal.
The move represents what could be the start of big expansions by Chinese financial institutions in the U.S.
If ICBC's deal to acquire Bank of East Asia's U.S. subsidiary goes through, Americans could walk into the retail branches, open check and savings accounts and, most significantly for many investors, open yuan accounts to trade the currency.
Signed in Chicago on the last day of Chinese President Hu Jintao's state visit to the U.S., the move, comes as both Beijing and Washington are calling for greater commercial ties between the two countries.
From "Greater Commercial Ties" To...
This is on the heels of Secretary of Defense Robert Gates recently calling for "stronger military ties" between the US Armed Forces and the military of Communist China.
According to Reuters;
"Gates and his Chinese counterpart [Liang Guanglie] agreed on Monday that stronger military ties were needed to avoid missteps between the two global giants."
A Chinese Base On American Soil?
In 1998, the Chinese government attempted to lease long-term the now abandoned US Naval Base in Long Beach, California.
Under the guise of leasing in the name of COSCO (Chinese Overseas Shipping Company), it was discovered that COSCO is actually a Communist Chinese government owned company.
If the deal would have gone through, the Chinese would have had in essence, a Naval base on US Soil.
The negotiations came to a halt when the Republican-controlled Congress squashed the deal due to national security concerns.
NOTE:
China has over 7 million troops in uniform (Active, Reservists, Para-Military) as well as 668 million Chinese (both men and women) available for a military draft.
The United States has 2.5 million troops in uniform (Active, Reservists, Para-Military) as well as 120 million Americans (both men and women aged 18-44 available for the draft).
The 120 million total is wildly optimistic, in light that the Department of Defense has already released information showing that 75% of Americans between the ages of 17-24 are UNFIT for military service (Three main reasons: too fat, too stupid, too criminal).
A realistic number of Americans who could be called up in time of a grave national emergency would be somewhere closer to 15-20 million.
An equally realistic number if we ever went to war with Communist China would be roughly 675 million of them against roughly 22 million of us.












Comments
What does the number of military personnel in China or the US have to do with China opening banks in the US? This story started with one theme and ended with another. KISS rule needs to be applied to his article.
Eric Watson ~
The subject is China and you would recognize that had you read the article in its entirety.
Still has nothing to do with the number of military personnel in China. Very stupid article. Too convoluted.
WOW...talk about mindless propaganda! What started as an informative banking news article , ends as a mindless statement about the disparity of ground troops for a conflict that will never take happen.
Never in the past 60 years has China invaded a country. Tibet does not count, as history has proven that it was part of China since before America was even a country.
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