U.S. Bombing of Iran Uncovers Shocking Secrets – Reports Emerge of Zhang Youxia Criticizing Xi Jinping in Beijing

Zhang Youxia, during his speech on stage, was full of assertiveness, displaying the demeanour of a top military boss. Military officers below the stage were taking notes with their heads down, showing complete submission. (video screenshot).

[People News] On the night of June 21, the U.S. military deployed multiple B-2 bombers to successfully strike three Iranian nuclear facilities. Beijing immediately jumped to condemn the U.S. in strong terms. However, a former U.S. official revealed shocking details on the X platform: it was the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) that had supplied Iran with everything needed to build its nuclear facilities.

On June 22, former President Donald Trump issued a statement confirming that all participating U.S. aircraft had safely exited Iranian airspace and returned. Following that, China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a statement on its official website, strongly condemning the U.S. for bombing Iranian nuclear facilities that are under the supervision of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

An editorial in The Wall Street Journal further enraged Beijing, prompting Chinese state media at all levels to denounce the bombing as a "stepping stone" for future U.S. interference in China’s internal affairs.

On June 23, Marshall Billingslea, former Assistant Secretary for Terrorist Financing at the U.S. Department of the Treasury, posted on X: "In the coming days, when you hear China (the CCP), such as its ambassador to the UN, lecturing the U.S. on nuclear non-proliferation, remember: it was Communist China that sold Iran everything needed to build enriched uranium facilities—even the blueprints and test isotopes."

Publicly available data shows Iran’s nuclear program owes much to CCP support. As early as the 1980s, China helped Iran build a research reactor and set up a uranium enrichment plant near Isfahan. This continued through to March 2021, when the two nations signed a "25-Year Comprehensive Cooperation Agreement."

This agreement was signed under Xi Jinping’s leadership. Economist Su Xiaohé analysed in a broadcast why the CCP reacted so strongly to the U.S. bombing of Iran: it’s because U.S. and Israeli intelligence agencies have uncovered evidence of CCP involvement in helping Iran build nuclear facilities.

Su Xiaohé stated that Iran’s nuclear bases were constructed by Chinese engineers; their missile and rocket technologies came from the Chinese military; and their uranium enrichment know-how was taught by Chinese experts. Even the mining of uranium ore was done with CCP assistance.

These policies, Su said, are particularly valued by Xi Jinping for three key reasons: 1. Supplying Iran with such technology serves to counterbalance the U.S. and Israel. 2. It gives China influence in the Middle East. 3. It allows China to exchange nuclear enrichment technology for Iranian oil, which accounts for half of Iran’s oil exports.

China and Iran’s economic and trade ties have made them a de facto “community of shared destiny.” China is Iran’s largest oil buyer, and nearly 20 million barrels of oil pass through the Strait of Hormuz daily.

Now that Xi’s plans have been exposed, Su Xiaohé commented that Xi Jinping is in serious trouble.

Su also shared a rumour circulating in Beijing: After Iran was bombed, the Central Military Commission of the CCP held an emergency meeting chaired personally by Zhang Youxia. Xi Jinping, now stripped of military power, was invited to attend—not to lead, but to be criticised for his reckless policy direction. The meeting reportedly concluded with three key points:

1. Xi’s actions have been fully exposed on the global stage and will bring serious trouble to both the Party and the nation.  2. The technology China supplied Iran lags far behind that of the U.S.; with the bombing, China’s "core tech" has now been revealed. 3. Given how the U.S. bombed Iran’s facilities as if no defence existed, Taiwan need no longer fear the CCP; for the next 50 years, Taiwan can rest easy and focus on developing its economy.

After the U.S. military’s successful raid on Iran’s nuclear facilities, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Dan Caine disclosed on June 23 that the mission was conducted under extreme secrecy and maintained full tactical surprise. Iran had no idea it was coming, and the returning U.S. formation was not intercepted. Iran’s air defence systems and fighter jets never even reacted.

(Originally published by  People News)