DiscoverThe Restricted Handling PodcastRH 12.5.25 | China: Warships, Hackers, Nukes & Pandas
RH 12.5.25 | China: Warships, Hackers, Nukes & Pandas

RH 12.5.25 | China: Warships, Hackers, Nukes & Pandas

Update: 2025-12-05
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Strap in for today’s episode of The Restricted Handling Podcast — where the South China Sea’s heating up faster than a hotpot at midnight, cyber spies are back on the prowl, and Xi Jinping’s mixing hard power with panda diplomacy. We’re diving deep into the biggest stories shaking the Indo-Pacific and beyond on December 5, 2025. 

China’s going full throttle on a maritime flex, unleashing more than 100 naval and coast guard vessels across the Pacific — the largest show of force in its modern history. From the Yellow Sea down to the South China Sea, Beijing’s ships are running mock attack drills, practicing blockade tactics, and pushing into international waters with the confidence of a country ready to rewrite the region’s balance of power. Taiwan’s scrambling fighters, Japan’s deploying missiles, and Australia’s watching every wave from above. It’s not just saber-rattling anymore — it’s strategic theater on a global stage. 

Meanwhile, under the waves, South Korea just got the U.S. green light for its long-coveted nuclear-powered submarines, marking a seismic shift in the region’s defense dynamics. Tokyo’s uneasy, Pyongyang’s threatening a “nuclear domino,” and Washington’s cheering from the sidelines as another ally gears up to counter China’s expanding blue-water navy. The underwater chess match of the Indo-Pacific just went three-dimensional. 

Back on shore, the digital battlefield’s lighting up too. The U.S. and Canada exposed a Chinese-linked hacking campaign — code-named “Brickstorm” — that’s infiltrated critical infrastructure networks across North America. The malware has been quietly lurking for over a year, with the potential to steal data, seize systems, or even cause sabotage. Beijing’s denying everything (as usual), while Washington’s choosing to play nice for now, pausing sanctions against China’s spy agency to preserve the fragile Trump–Xi trade truce. 

But it’s not all aggression — Xi’s still trying to charm the world, this time with French President Emmanuel Macron in Chengdu. Between panda gifts and photo ops, the visit was heavy on smiles and light on substance. No Airbus mega-deal, no tariff relief — just plenty of handshakes and a reminder that China’s playing the long diplomatic game. 

And if that wasn’t enough, we’ll touch on tungsten monopolies, drone fortresses in the Spratly Islands, and Volkswagen’s bid to become more Chinese than the Chinese. 

From warships to hackers, nukes to pandas, this episode breaks down how Beijing’s blending power projection, cyber warfare, and economic diplomacy into one high-stakes play for dominance. Buckle up — it’s The Restricted Handling Podcast, and we’re not pulling punches. 

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RH 12.5.25 | China: Warships, Hackers, Nukes & Pandas

RH 12.5.25 | China: Warships, Hackers, Nukes & Pandas

Former CIA Officers Ryan Fugit and Glenn Corn