The Connection Between China’s Unmourned Soldiers, Its Theft of Intellectual Property

The Connection Between China’s Unmourned Soldiers, Its Theft of Intellectual Property
Members of City Youth organizations hold posters and light candles to pay tribute to the soldiers who lost their lives following a recent clash between India and China, in Hyderabad on June 17, 2020. Noah Seelam/AFP via Getty Images
Michael Ledeen
Updated:
Commentary
China hasn’t disclosed how many of its citizens died in the border clash with India on June 15. India staged a memorial service for those of its people who perished in the conflict, while Chinese lamentations were limited to Weibo, the Chinese version of Twitter.
Michael Ledeen
Michael Ledeen
Author
Michael Ledeen is freedom scholar at Foundation for Defense of Democracies. He has served as a consultant to the National Security Council and the departments of State and Defense, and as a special adviser to the Secretary of State. He is the author of 35 books, most recently “Field of Fight: How to Win the War Against Radical Islam and its Allies,” co-authored with retired Lt. Gen. Michael T. Flynn.
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