Commentary Russia’s war with Ukraine saved the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and its People’s Republic of China (PRC). The isolation of Russia as part of the U.S.-led global information warfare campaign has driven Russia “back into the arms of Beijing,” just as China’s economy was imploding, and China desperately needed Russian energy and food. So the PRC now becomes more dependent on Russia, allowing the CCP to survive. China, as the world’s largest importer of food and energy, now has diminishing foreign currency reserves, and sees that Russia has nowhere else to go except to sell to the PRC. It took several decades to reach the point where the world had once again become strategically bipolar. The wake-up call for Beijing came with the May 7, 1999, “accidental” strike by U.S. direct attack munitions (DAM) on the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade, during U.S./NATO Operation Allied Force. The strike did far …