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Lực lượng phòng vệ Nhật Bản - 日本国自衛隊 - The Japan Self Defence Forces P2

Chủ đề trong 'Kỹ thuật quân sự nước ngoài' bởi Minuteman3, 08/06/2009.

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  1. oplots

    oplots Thành viên gắn bó với ttvnol.com Đang bị khóa

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    Nhật chưa bao giờ dám cho tàu bay, tàu bè ra đi tuần tiểu Kuril, hơn nữa Kuril cũng có người Nga ở trên đó, còn Điếu Ngư, bọn Nhật lùn nói là của nó mà chẳng dám chặn TQ tiến hành tuần tra thường xuyên, cũng ko dám cho người hoặc triển khai quân đồn trú trên đó để khẳng định chủ quyền

    Khẳng định chủ quyền 1 đảo nào đó, việc trước tiên là phải được quốc tế công nhận, sau đó là đóng quân

    TQ bố chí khí tài trên các đảo ở Nam Sa


    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]

    Nhiều đảo ở Nam Sa, diện tích nhỏ hơn Điêu Ngư, nhưng TQ vẫn bồi lấp, xây dựng được cả đường băng, đặt khu hành chính, quân sự khẳng định chủ quyền, tại sao Nhật ko dám làm vậy với Điếu Ngư ?

    [​IMG]
    Lần cập nhật cuối: 19/05/2018
  2. Electoker

    Electoker Thành viên gắn bó với ttvnol.com Đang bị khóa

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    Nhật nó từng dám hấp diêm chái nà rồi đó thôi.
  3. oplots

    oplots Thành viên gắn bó với ttvnol.com Đang bị khóa

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    Nhật hấp Tàu Tưởng thì liên quan gì tới CHNDTH :)) ngu lịch sử mà cứ thích bi bô, kiểu như Mỹ đóng quân ở Hàn Quốc thì =>> Mỹ cũng đang đóng quân ở Triều Tiên
  4. despair

    despair Thành viên gắn bó với ttvnol.com

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    Hàng năm nó vẫn tổ chức tour cho đàn ông Nhật sang Trung Quốc kỷ niệm "trận" Nam Kinh đó thôi. Quá mất dạy
    --- Gộp bài viết: 19/05/2018, Bài cũ từ: 19/05/2018 ---
    Lần cập nhật cuối: 19/05/2018
  5. oplots

    oplots Thành viên gắn bó với ttvnol.com Đang bị khóa

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    Nam Kinh của Tàu Tưởng chứ liên quan gì tới CHNDTH vậy mấy thằng rồ Mỹ stupid :)) tìm Tàu Tưởng mà chửi nó ko giữ được chứ sao cứ đá sang quân Mao làm gì vậy lũ hèn =))

    Dân Nhật bỏ tiền mua vé thăm Kuril, nhục quá bây ơi đảo của mình phải bỏ tiền mua vé thăm, nghe bảo Nhật giàu hơn Nga, mạnh hơn Nga mà sao ko dám đánh Nga chiếm lại nhể :cool:

    Lần cập nhật cuối: 19/05/2018
  6. despair

    despair Thành viên gắn bó với ttvnol.com

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    đã bảo "gái bây giờ" nó là Tàu có Mao, chứ không phải gái như hồi Nam Kinh ... thế mà nó éo nghe !!!

    Hay nó nghĩ, gái Tàu Tưởng giờ democracy quá, giá cao với lại không ở Nam Kinh
  7. despair

    despair Thành viên gắn bó với ttvnol.com

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    400 đàn ông Nhật qua Trung Quốc thuê hơn 500 thành viên hội Phụ nữ Trung Hoa để chơi, kỷ niệm ngày Nhật Bản tấn công Trung Quốc. Vừa xóa đói giảm nghèo giúp đỡ TQ luôn
    ---
    http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/en/doc/2003-09/30/content_268745.htm
    http://en.people.cn/200310/08/eng20031008_125532.shtml
    http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/en/doc/2003-10/08/content_269770.htm
    http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/20...n-workers-japanese-tourists-local-prostitutes

    Japan to investigate *** orgy allegations
    October 7, 2003 - 2:40PM






    Japan will open an investigation into complaints from Beijing that a group of Japanese tourists allegedly hired hundreds of prostitutes for an orgy in a ritzy Chinese hotel on a sensitive World War II anniversary, the top government spokesman said today.

    Chinese news reports said more than 400 Japanese male tourists had *** with Chinese prostitutes at the Zhuhai International Conference Centre Hotel on September 16-18, which is the anniversary of an attack by Japanese forces in 1931 that China regards as the start of its World War II occupation.

    Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Kong Quan called the case "extremely odious" and asked the Japanese government to "strengthen education of its citizens in this regard".

    Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuo Fukuda said today that Tokyo was told on Sunday by local Chinese authorities that they had verified Japanese tourists took part in the orgy.

    It wasn't clear how many people were involved, he said.

    The men were believed to be part of a company tour, and Fukuda said the government would launch an investigation into the firm. He did not elaborate.

    The group allegedly hired as many as 500 prostitutes in the southern city of Zhuhai, near Macau.

    The fracas has been carried prominently by Japanese media, which have reported the tourists were in China as part of a trip arranged by a construction company based in the western Japan city of Osaka.

    The name of the company, which has reportedly denied any involvement in procuring prostitutes, has been withheld by the media.

    China's reaction highlights simmering anger at Japan's wartime conduct. Many Chinese believe that Japan has never fully atoned for atrocities that included mass rapes by Japanese soldiers and the use of slave labour.

    Chinese left hundreds of postings on websites accusing the tourists of trying to humiliate China by timing the orgy on the date of the 1931 Japanese attack on the north-eastern city of Shenyang, then known as Mukden.

    After the initial reports surfaced, Foreign Minister Yoriko Kawaguchi said she regrets "the kind of act that would damage women's dignity" and urged Japanese tourists to obey the laws of China.

    Prostitution is illegal, but still widespread, in China.

    'I stepped out of the lift and into an orgy'


    By Michael Tyler

    12:01AM BST 05 Oct 2003


    The down arrow lit up as Zhou Guang Chuan pressed the button *****mmon a lift for the journey from the seventh floor of his hotel to the lobby where he was to meet a group of friends.

    It was 12.30am and Zhou, an executive for a pharmaceuticals company in Henan province, had retired to his room to rest for a few hours after checking in to the International Conference Centre Hotel in Zhuhai.

    But as the lift doors opened, Zhou froze in midstep. The small interior was full of Japanese men cavorting with Chinese girls. "I saw one of the Japanese men lean across and put his hand in a girl's top and fondle her breasts," he recounts. "When I got into the lift I felt furious and humiliated."

    When Zhou arrived at the lobby he was unable to find his friends because of the sheer number of guests. The businessman had unwittingly walked into the middle of an orgy at the five-star hotel involving nearly 400 Japanese men and more than 500 Chinese prostitutes.

    The incident two weeks ago has infuriated China and embarrassed Japan, inflaming relations between the fractious East Asian rivals all the more because of its timing: September 18, 2003 was the 72nd anniversary of the Japanese army's invasion of China.

    The ensuing diplomatic spat has, however, been accompanied by a political row in Zhuhai that is turning into a battle for the heart and soul of the country's Communist Party.

    But Zhou was unaware of the repercussions that were to unfold as he began to investigate the strange goings-on in the hotel. "I noticed that there were more than 300 Japanese men and more than 500 Chinese women in the lobby. At the time I saw two buses arrive and more Japanese men and Chinese women coming into the hotel."

    Zhou then spotted a discarded businesscard on the floor which had Japanese characters penned onto it. The name on the card was Zhou Wu, a "mama-san", or madame.

    Outraged and intrigued in equal measure, the businessman went up to the 13th floor. "I pushed a door open slightly and saw two Japanese men and five Chinese girls having ***," he said. "The girls did not even look ashamed and they were certainly not being forced."

    The orgy was spread across three floors - the 13th, 14th and 15th. It was not curtailed by hotel security because, as one guard said: "We know the rules. We are meant to turn a blind eye to the girls, but this tour got out of hand because there were too many girls and these Japanese men were not civilised.

    "One Japanese man and his prostitute were caught having *** in the hotel toilets near a Chinese businessman and he was not happy. By the time I arrived, they had finished but the Japanese man was still playing with her [private parts]. They just did not care. Later on, I had to deal with an argument on the 14th floor and found this prostitute and Japanese man shouting at each other. She was wearing a tiny negligee and you could see everything, and he was wearing nothing.

    "There were *******s on the bed and I became too embarrassed by the whole thing. When I was walking back to the lift, I could hear lots of shouting and moaning. One door was wide open and I could see two Japanese men standing there, naked, with a Chinese woman kneeling in between then wearing nothing. She was fondling them and just laughed when she saw me."

    Later that morning Zhou confronted a Chinese translator for the Japanese party and insisted that he ask some of the men what they were doing in the Guangdong province. "The translator told me that they said they were here to play with Chinese girls," he said.

    Zhou, who admits that he has little time for the Japanese, returned home after two days determined to get even. In the ensuing five days, he claims to have made more than 100 calls to the police and government in Zhuhai but his complaints fell on deaf ears. "So I went to the newspapers," he says, "because I hoped that the Hong Kong media would tell the outside world, tell the Japanese that their citizens have no culture and no morals. They are the worst - worse than animals and they should never be allowed to enter China."

    The next day the story appeared in the independently minded and popular Nanfang Daily, based in the provincial capital Guangzhou, as well as in the Beijing Youth Daily. If Zhou had wanted to create impact, he certainly succeeded. A day later national newspapers picked up the story and the provincial Public Security Bureau chief descended on Zhuhai with 100 officers.

    By last week the story had spiralled out of the grasp of the local Communist Party officials and the central government in Beijing became involved. Kong Quan, the foreign ministry spokesman, denounced the orgy and Beijing ordered the hotel to be sealed on Tuesday.

    The Japanese government - called to account by Beijing - duly expressed regrets. But what is still unclear is the wider motives of their nationals. On the day they were due to leave, the Japanese party apparently tried to erect a large Japanese flag as a backdrop for their group photos. The date was the exact anniversary of the Japanese invasion in 1931. They were prevented from doing so by the hotel management which told them that such a stunt was unacceptable.

    China's revulsion for imperial Japan's invasion and annexation of north-eastern China can be best appreciated by a visit to its hate-filled internet chatrooms. In one, a message reads: "They are monsters. They defiled our country and it's time we got even."

    By the time Japan was defeated in 1945, China had lost 20 million people and endured the Rape of Nanking during which crazed imperial troops slaughtered 300,000, including women and children.

    Such visceral loathing is not, perhaps, without reason. What is strange is that the latest inflammation between the two countries should be set in sleepy Zhuhai. With little industry and a population of 1.2 million, Zhuhai has long been seen as a backwater even in a part of China long removed from the levers of power in Beijing. Although Zhuhai pitches itself as a holiday venue - the self-styled Chinese Riviera - it has suffered from bordering the former Portuguese colony of Macau, which has lured high-rollers with casinos and paid-for ***.

    In Mao's China, pimps risked the death penalty and prostitutes faced years in the bamboo gulags. But with China's capitalist revolution came an enormous growth in urban disposable income and vice. A US State Department report in 2001 estimated that as many as 10 million people were involved in the country's burgeoning *** trade, including police officers and government officials.

    Zhuhai's hotels, desperate for business, have built an unenviable reputation for meeting the demand for *** tours with enthusiasm. At the International Conference Centre Hotel, two assistant managers in the marketing department are understood to have arranged the tour two weeks ago. Since news of the story broke, hotel staff have gone to ground and, in many cases, their mobile telephones have been disconnected. It is not clear whether they have been arrested.

    What is clear is that the police investigation has focused first on rounding up the mama-sans. One, a woman called Jin, was in charge of the hotel's own nightclub "hostesses". Another was Zhou Wu, the woman whose businesscard Zhou Guang Chuan found soon after his arrival, who had fled to her home province of Hunan. Both are likely to face lengthy prison sentences.

    Then the inevitable crackdown came on the prostitutes. Eyewitnesses claim that they saw up to 40 police wagons driving the women away. One observer said: "The police just took all the girls. I've seen nothing like it."

    The number of women rounded up is believed to have been 400, which would explain why officials confidently believe that the current total of arrests over the incident stands at more than 1,000. Last week there were no prostitutes to be seen in Zhuhai and nightclubs were closed or, at the very least, stripped of vice. Several senior local policemen and government officials have already been fired.

    But the investigation has far from reached its conclusion. Rows of black limousines - with number-plates from provinces across China - indicate that senior party officials are here.

    Rumours have been mounting that the hotel is connected with business interests close to the family of Zeng Qinghong, China's vice president. If true, this would explain why the authorities took so long to respond to the repeated telephone calls made by Zhou Guang Chuan - the businessman who blew the whistle - but also why the scandal, once it became public, spiralled out of control.

    Back in the southern Chinese city of Zhuhai, celebrations were being held late last week for one of the busiest holidays of the year. Holidaymakers milled around the beachfront where a loud pop concert was in full swing. The floodlights from the stage caught the gaudy splendour of the looming 20-storey International Conference Centre Hotel, replete with its Capitol Hill style dome, in silhouette. But there was not a single light on inside. It stood empty.

    Whether the rumours of Beijing political rivalry are correct, one thing will hold true: the law of supply and demand. It is just a matter of time before China's working girls - and the Japanese *** tourists - are back.
    Lần cập nhật cuối: 20/05/2018
  8. oplots

    oplots Thành viên gắn bó với ttvnol.com Đang bị khóa

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    khi nào Nhật mới chiếm lại được Kuril nhĩ ?
  9. despair

    despair Thành viên gắn bó với ttvnol.com

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    Quả thực đàn ông Nhật mạnh, mà "xấu" quá cơ !!!
    chọn dịp kỷ niệm Nhật tấn công Trung Quốc 18/9, để thuê khách sạn 5 sao nổi tiếng 3 ngày 16-17-18/9 thuê hơn 500 hội viên hội phụ nữ CHND Trung Hoa để thác loạn.
    Khách hàng không thấy có gì ép buộc cả.

    ----
    Thế mà cứ nói TRung Quốc thiếu phụ nữ !!! Láo khoét
    Lần cập nhật cuối: 20/05/2018
  10. Electoker

    Electoker Thành viên gắn bó với ttvnol.com Đang bị khóa

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    Bác làm em nhớ và thèm đi Chái nà quá.
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