Chapter 938 (1/2)

This is Jiang Chen's only feeling for attending the UN summit.

Canberra, the capital of Australia, is located in the open valley of the Australian mountain area. It has a small population and beautiful scenery. It has been selected as the host of the UN outer space summit. The Australian government attaches great importance to the holding of this summit, because many heads of state and high-level representatives from the five permanent members of the Standing Committee will visit the summit. We can imagine the weight of the meeting.

As early as three days before the meeting, the area near the summit meeting place of Canberra city entered the state of martial law, with shops closed and factories closed. The whole streets of Canberra west district were empty and no one could see a trace of people.

The meeting was held smoothly without any twists and turns.

Usually, at such a summit attended by heads of state of many countries, more than one topic is discussed, even not limited to the issue of outer space development, and the highlight of the summit is often not put at the beginning.

The first issue to be discussed is not the space elevator, but the North Korea nuclear issue. Just two months ago, North Korea launched a suspected ballistic missile rocket, which is said to carry a nuclear warhead. What does this have to do with the outer space summit? There is, of course, a bit of a relationship. The use of outer space for peaceful purposes has always been the consensus of the international community.

Although the thin looking representative was impassioned enough in his speech, Jiang Chen, sitting next to Zhang Yaping, yawned.

No matter how long we discuss a problem that can't be solved at all, it's just a waste of time.

To sum up, the protagonists of the speeches are basically representatives of the North Korea and Secretary of State John Kerry of the United States, and the contents of the speeches of both sides can be summarized into four sentences.

”You are not allowed to launch rockets!”

”It's my right to launch rockets!”

”Will you try to launch it?”

”Hey, I did.”

Fight?

If we can, we will.

But war is never a matter that can be decided by one or two missiles and slapping the head, and international issues are absolutely not applicable to the player's thinking of ”a blast against the base will win”.

People will find reasons to convince themselves for what has happened, or deduce the so-called necessity with their own logic and limited information. The only common feature of all reasoning conclusions is that they have never been really correct.

People will always repeat the same tragedy, and mankind will always make the same mistakes.

Just believing this, Jiang Chen sat there fearlessly and yawned at NASA director Bolden who was looking at him. Then he looked at the nearest camera and estimated that it could not capture the part below his desk. He felt at ease and took out the future mobile phone from his pocket and started a mobile game produced by future technology.

Even if the space elevator is right here, even if they know the value of the device and can't afford it, they can only watch themselves walk in front of them.

Zhang Yaping takes a look at Jiang Chen sitting next to him, and he can't help but whisper a reminder.

”You're in a good mood.”

”Not bad. After three topics, we will have our space elevator. You don't have to be so nervous now. ” Jiang Chen did not look up, his eyes are still staring at the screen of the mobile phone.

Zhang Yaping was stunned and touched his face strangely.

”Am I nervous now?”

”It may be my delusion.”

As Jiang Chenyi predicted, there was no discussion on the North Korea nuclear issue. However, judging from Kerry's indifferent expression, he himself did not think that any results could be reached at such a meeting.

After the issue of whether North Korea launched missiles or rockets, the civil war in Turkey continued from the second half of last year to the present, and then the civil war in Ukraine. If the previous issues can be related to outer space, then the two issues are totally irrelevant. It was simply because there were not many opportunities for such high-level representatives to get together, so they forced a wave of discussion.