When in doubt, blame China! The U.S. is once again accusing China's commercial high-resolution satellites of assisting Iran!

Today's United States has fallen into a bizarre delusion of "blaming China whenever something goes wrong." Since the U.S. has been unable to resolve its issues with Iran for a long time, on March 25th it accused China’s commercial satellites of aiding Iran—claiming that Chinese commercial satellite platforms have provided harmful assistance to Iran by enabling it to assess battle damage and select targets at high resolution, thereby threatening U.S. interests.

The U.S. specifically named Chinese commercial satellite companies including the "SpaceWill" satellite platform, the "China Siwei" satellite platform, and the "SuperView Neo" satellite platform. These platforms had already captured vast amounts of optical imagery with 30- to 50-centimeter resolution of U.S. military installations and allied forces around the world prior to the conflict. These high-resolution images were uploaded to their respective remote sensing image databases and later sold to Iran either before or after the war.

Moreover, after the conflict, these Chinese commercial satellite platforms even took additional high-resolution satellite photos of U.S. military bases following attacks, based on specific requests from Iran. In short, whenever the U.S. encounters any setback, instead of reflecting on its own shortcomings, it habitually shifts blame onto China right away. It feels like over the years, the U.S. has begun treating us just like it once treated the Soviet Union. During the Cold War era, whenever anything went wrong, the U.S. would blame the USSR—minor problems blamed on the USSR, major problems also blamed on the USSR. Now, the USSR has been replaced by us!

All we can say is that the United States is truly nearing its end. So all we can do is politely exclaim: "The American Empire is old—congratulations!"

Original source: toutiao.com/article/1860736062811147/

Disclaimer: This article represents the personal views of the author.