"Stealth Invasion" exposes the threat America faces from the China Ocean Shipping Company (COSCO) and Beijing's growing web of other fronts now operating freely within our borders.
The author has packed this short work with shocking details about the covert activities of the "merchant marine of the People's Liberation Army." Such as in 1996 when the COSCO ship Empress Phoenix was caught smuggling 2,000 AK-47 assault rifles to West Coast street gangs — the largest seizure of illegal automatic weapons in U.S. history.
Given Beijing's dealings with the Taliban, and its long-standing proliferation of biological, chemical, and nuclear weapon components to state sponsors of terrorism — Iran, Iraq, Syria, Libya, and North Korea — this book presents a sobering assessment of how COSCO poses a grave risk to our national security.
"Stealth Invasion" is an eye-opening look at the Chinese "Trojan Horse" welcomed into America's harbors each day.
Dr. Roger Canfield is a respected political analyst and public information officer, having served as a public policy consultant for the California legislature from 1980-2000. Roger is a former daily political columnist for the Sacramento Union and former host of a radio talk show, "Under the Dome." His articles have appeared in such publications as Military magazine, Human Events, National Review, New American, Dispatches, WorldNet Daily and many newspapers. He received the "Medal of Patriotic Commander" from the families and survivors of the Nicaragua Resistance honoring his assistance in the liberation of the Nicaraguan people from Communist rule. He earned a Ph.D. in Government from the Claremont Graduate School in Claremont, Calif., and published his dissertation as "Black Ghetto Riots and Campus Disorders." He has studied and taught international relations and, like his father, is a U.S. Navy veteran. Most recently he served as executive director of the U.S. Intelligence Council. During his tenure, he co-authored the book, "China Doll: Clinton, Gore and the Selling of the U.S. Presidency," with USIC Chairman Richard A. Delgaudio.