Monday, April 5, 2021

White House News (白宮消息) | Apr. 5 , 2021

2 - White House News in Chinese (weebly.com)

 

美乌炒俄大军集结边境 乌东部局势升级?20210404 |《今日关注》CCTV中文国际
Apr 5, 2021
Russian-Chinese escalation in confrontation of US, NATO

Apr. 5 - The atmosphere of the Cold War is beginning to reappear in many ways. Last week, Italy expelled two Russian diplomats after arresting an Italian Navy captain accused of passing secret documents to a Russian military official in exchange for money. The incident has been treated as spying and a serious national security breach. The intelligence passed on included information on NATO, which has raised concerns across western countries and US military allies.

This incident comes at a time when the Biden administration, and in particular, new CIA Director Bill Burns, have made it clear that Russia’s aggressive approach to spying on US and NATO countries is a major risk. Increasingly, US allies should be taking precautions to counter Russian influence and interference, recreating the atmosphere of the USSR-era cold war. US allies should be working together to address the risks, which could lead to escalation against Russia, as we may begin to see political change in pro-Russia and China countries that are taking an active role in the more aggressive approach from both countries.

It is critical to note that these strong positions on China and Russia will have implications for US allies, NATO, EU and even countries that are considered close to the US as recipients of aid and grants. It could lead to an atmosphere even more akin to the cold war as alliances are reshaped according to the approach and actions the US takes. So, countries that rely on the US must focus on a strong political strategy in addition to managing issues such as human rights, civil liberties and democracy in order to manage an ally like the US, as it readies to apply a global strategy to lead the world to address the most urgent global challenges.      continue to read


Chinese President Xi Jinping and Saudi Arabia's King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud.
China playing the long game in the Middle East
Beijing is setting a new tone for easing tensions and rivalry in the historically volatile region

Apr. 3 - This is part II of a three-part series: China-Iran pact is a game-changer. Read Part 1: China neutralizes the US campaign on Muslim Uighur issue

In an exclusive interview with Al-Arabiya last week, China’s State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi outlined Beijing’s approach to the West Asian region with particular reference to the tensions in the Persian Gulf.

Wang lamented that “due to protracted conflicts and turmoil in the more recent history, the region descended into a security lowland… For the region to emerge from chaos and enjoy stability, it must break free from the shadows of big-power geopolitical rivalry and independently explore development paths suited to its regional realities.     more


China's President Xi Jinping (L) listens to Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz as Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi looks on during their meeting at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on March 16, 2017. Since that meeting China's status has grown in the region
China rising across the Middle East
Meetings, deals and agreements demonstrate Beijing's growing influence in the region

Apr. 5 - Shaking hands and signing deals from Abu Dhabi to Ankara, Tehran to Riyadh, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi’s recent Middle Eastern tour once again demonstrated China’s growing influence in the region.


Yet, while the trip saw some impressive numbers talked and important political statements made, the visit may have had more to do with a country many miles from the region: the United States.

Coming hot on the heels of angry exchanges between Chinese and US officials in Alaska last month, Wang Yi’s visit saw him go to the capitals of a number of countries also at odds with Washington.

“It was a win-win,” Aykan Erdemir, Senior Director of the Turkey Program at the Foundation for Defence of Democracies in Washington DC, told Asia Times“China could signal to the US that it has substantial relations with Washington’s challengers and adversaries, while those countries could signal to the US that they have another option.”

Wang Yi’s six-country tour started on March 24 in Saudi Arabia, where he held talks with Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud in Riyadh.

He then met with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, known as MBS, at NEOM, a brand-new city being built in the northwest of the Kingdom.

The visit saw further pledges of economic co-operation, building on the highly successful relationship between the two countries that have been growing since Chinese President Xi Jinping visited Riyadh back in 2016.


“Saudi Arabia wants to align its economic development plans with China’s and to get more Chinese investment and technology,” Jonathan Fulton, Assistant Professor of Political Science at Zayed University in Abu Dhabi, told Asia Times.
Yet, a major key moment in the visit was political, not economic.     more


Higher long-term interest rates could end the extraordinary bull run for giant tech stocks in the US and China. 
Biden’s $US7 trillion punt on US growth and economic supremacy

Apr. 5 - For the first time in two decades the US economy seems likely to grow faster and contribute more to global growth this year than China’s. Whether that’s a good thing is in the eye of the beholder.

Since 2000 China has been the major contributor to global growth. That position was enhanced by its response to the 2008 financial crisis, when its massive stimulus programs powered its growth rate even as other large economies floundered and then stagnated.

It has emerged from the pandemic with an economy less damaged and recovering faster than any other major economy. While its GDP growth of 2.3 per cent last year was its lowest for 45 years it was still the only large economy to record positive growth. The US economy shrank 3.5 per cent in 2020 and the European Union’s 6.2 per cent.

Yet its target for 2021 – above six per cent – surprised economists with its apparent modesty, given the economy is still rebounding from the pandemic amid a global recovery.

The reason for such a moderate growth target (by China’s standards) is that the authorities have resumed an economic strategy that was temporarily abandoned during the pandemic.     continue to read

Saturday, April 3, 2021

White House News (白宮消息) | Apr. 3 , 2021

 2 - White House News in Chinese (weebly.com)

...Labor positions
Walsh joined the Laborers' Union Local 223 at age 21 and served as the union's president until he became the mayor of Boston.[6]

He was elected secretary-treasurer and general agent of the Boston Metropolitan District Building Trades Council, a union umbrella group, in the fall of 2010. In 2011, Walsh was named head of the Boston Building Trades, a position that came with a $175,000 yearly salary.[7] Walsh resigned his post when he announced he was running
​for mayor in 2013.[8]

State representative
Walsh was elected to the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1997. He represented the Thirteenth district of Suffolk County, which includes Dorchester and one precinct in Quincy.[9] He was the Chairman of the Committee on Ethics, and served as a Co-Chair of the Massachusetts Democratic Party Labor Caucus.[10] During his tenure he also served as the co-chair for the Special Commission on Public Construction Reform...

​...Secretary of Labor
On January 7, 2021, Walsh was nominated by President Joe Biden to serve as Secretary of Labor.[30] On February 11, 2021, the United States Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions voted to move Walsh's confirmation forward to a full Senate vote.[31] The nomination was confirmed by the United States Senate on March 22, 2021, by a vote of 68–29.[32][33] The next day, he was sworn in by Vice President Kamala Harris.
...     quoted from Wikipedia 


FEBRUARY 04: Labor secretary nominee Marty Walsh testifies at his confirmation hearing before the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee in the Dirksen Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill February 4, 2021 in Washington, DC. Walsh was previously the mayor of Boston. 
​Labor Secretary: We'll see Amazon union vote results in 'next few days'


Apr. 3 - ...The remarks echoed those made by President Joe Biden in a video last month that warned employers against intimidation meant to dissuade workers from organizing a union. While Biden did not mention Amazon by name, his reference to "workers in Alabama" was widely perceived as an allusion to the labor battle at the tech giant.

Amazon has aggressively opposed the union drive, hiring the same law firm — Morgan Lewis — that it did when it fought a union drive at a Delaware warehouse in 2014. Plus, the company created a website that warns of onerous dues payments and the negative impact of a union on day-to-day operations.

In a statement to Yahoo Finance in February, Amazon defended its opposition to union organizing among employees in Alabama.


​“The fact is that Amazon already offers what unions are requesting for employees: industry-leading pay, comprehensive benefits from the first day on the job, opportunities for career growth, all while working in a safe, modern work environment,” Amazon Spokesperson Maria Boschetti said....     quoted from


A view of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague, the Netherlands, March 31, 2021
Biden lifts US sanctions on ICC officials imposed by Trump
President Joe Biden on Friday lifted sanctions that Donald Trump had imposed on two top officials of the International Criminal Court, undoing one of the past administration's more aggressive moves targeting international institutions and officials.

Apr. 3 - Secretary of State Antony Blinken in a statement stressed that the United States still strongly disagreed with some actions by the court, which is a standing body based at The Hague in the Netherlands charged with handling genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes. The United States is not one of the about 120 member countries of the court.

“We believe, however, that our concerns about these cases would be better addressed” through diplomacy “rather than through the imposition of sanctions," Blinken wrote.

The removal of the sanctions was the latest signal that the Biden administration is intent on returning to the multilateral fold. The Trump administration had unapologetically removed the United States from numerous international institutions and agreements and harshly criticized others, including the ICC, deeming them flawed and working against American interests.


Since Biden took office, his administration has rejoined the World Health Organization, re-engaged with the U.N. Human Rights Council, returned to the Paris climate accord and on Friday started talks aimed at returning to the Iran nuclear deal. Trump had pulled out of all five.     source from
JOE BIDEN : THE BIDEN PLAN TO BUILD A MODERN, SUSTAINABLE INFRASTRUCTURE AND AN EQUITABLE CLEAN ENERGY FUTURE

Joe Biden was interested in politics at an early age. By age 29 he had already won a seat in the United States Senate becoming one of the youngest Senators in history. His life would meet with tragedy as his wife and daughter were killed in a car accident during a Christmas shopping outing. Biden, grief stricken, but determined to continue in the Senate would make the long daily commute from Willington, Delaware to Washington, DC to be both a Senator and father to his two remaining sons. He would go on to serve in the Senate for 36 years and have a distinguished career. Being an ambitious man, Biden ran for the office of the President in the 1988 election. He quickly gained recognition as a viable Democratic candidate but suddenly lost momentum and was forced to drop out of the race as accusations of plagiarism swirled about his campaign. He would throw his hat in the ring again for the highest office in the land in the 2008 election cycle, but his campaign was short lived. The Democratic front runner in the campaign, Barack Obama, recognized the qualities of Biden and he became the vice-presidential running mate for Obama. Biden’s long tenure in Washington and his considerable experience with international affairs made him a good counter for Obama’s weaknesses.Joe Biden would serve two productive terms as vice president of the United States under President Obama. After his term in office he was tempted to run again for the presidency in 2016, but the untimely death of his son, Beau, from cancer left him without the drive for the arduous campaign. Biden is still active speaking his mind, as he always has, on current issues.  it will be invested 46 th  president of the United States theJanuary 20, 2021.     source from

Friday, April 2, 2021

White House News (白宮消息) | Apr. 2 , 2021

 2 - White House News in Chinese (weebly.com)



Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga
Suga to hold talks with Biden in U.S. on April 16

Apr. 2, TOKYO - Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga will visit Washington for talks with President Joe Biden on April 16, the government said Friday. The trip had previously been announced, but not the exact date.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato told reporters that Suga will be the first foreign leader to meet Biden in person since he took office in January.

"That by itself is proof that the United States places importance on Japan," he said. "It is also significant as we demonstrate the strength of the Japan-U.S. alliance and the U.S. commitment to engage in the Indo-Pacific region."

Japan is eager to develop close relations with the new U.S. administration and was hoping to schedule Suga's visit earlier in April, or even sooner. Japanese media, including the Nikkei business newspaper, said Suga's trip was delayed because of a request from Washington.     continue to read


Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga at the virtual summit of the leaders of Australia, India, Japan and the US, on Mar 12, 2021.
Japan PM to meet Biden in US on Apr 16

Apr. 2 - ...The talks follow a visit by the Pentagon chief and top US diplomat to Japan in March, when the two countries warned China against "coercion and destabilising behaviour".

Kato said Suga's trip would be a chance to discuss "strengthening the Japan-US alliance" and issues ranging from the coronavirus to climate change.


Matters related to China and North Korea will also likely be on the agenda, Kato added. North Korea carried out missile tests last week in its first substantive provocation since Biden took office.

Suga, 72, became prime minister in September after his predecessor Shinzo Abe stepped down for health reasons...     quoted from


Biden's massive American infra plan has a China problem
  • Given the scale of this plan, experts say, it is fraught with implementation challenges and getting the Republicans on board with this plan would be a tall order

Apr. 2 - US President Joe Biden announced the much-awaited infrastructure plan on Thursday. The $2.3 trillion proposal includes funding for roads, bridges, ports, as well as aims to fight climate change. To pay for this program, corporate taxes would be raised from 21% to 28%.

Given the scale of this plan, experts say, it is fraught with implementation challenges. They feel, getting the Republicans on board with this plan, would be a tall order.


"If we look at the spending items in the American Jobs Plan, which go far beyond what Republicans consider ‘infrastructure’, and the financing of the plan, through higher corporate taxes, it is not likely that this plan will get Republican support in the Senate," analysts at Rabo Bank said in a report on 1 April.

Even if both Democrats and Republicans were to find a common ground on this, some analysts caution of an external hurdle.

"One of the biggest challenges with President Biden’s new infrastructure plan is that the prices of many of the materials needed to implement the plan (concrete, steel, copper, etc.) have risen significantly over the past year, partially due to stockpiling by China, which is already investing in its own infrastructure," Randy Frederick, vice president of trading and derivatives, Schwab Center for Financial Research, said in his latest blog.

"Other materials (lithium, cobalt, nickel, etc.) are either produced or processed almost exclusively by China. All of this makes maintaining positive trade relationships with China a critical, but challenging component of the plan," he added.

Ever since former President Donald Trump imposed trade restrictions on China, the relationship between US and China has been stretched, to say the least. So far, not much has changed on that front under Biden's presidency. Although, media reports state that Biden administration is still working out its overall China strategy.    source from

Thursday, April 1, 2021

White House News (白宮消息) | Apr. 1 , 2021

 2 - White House News in Chinese (weebly.com)


Koji Tomita is likely to be Japan’s next ambassador to the United States.
Japan’s next U.S. ambassador chosen for ties with Democrats

Date published on December 8, 2020
Koji Tomita, currently ambassador to South Korea, is tapped to become Japan's next envoy to the United States because of his close ties to the incoming Biden administration, government sources said.

Tomita held senior Foreign Ministry posts when Joe Biden was vice president under President Barack Obama and formed a strong network of contacts with U.S. Democrats.

He will replace the current ambassador, Shinsuke Sugiyama, 67, roughly coinciding with the president-elect’s inauguration in January, the sources said. Tomita, 63, is expected to assume the post by the end of January.     quoted from


New Japan envoy hopes to build "solid" ties with Biden administration

Date published on Jan. 20, 2021
New Japanese Ambassador to the United States Koji Tomita said Friday that he will seek to establish a "solid" relationship with the administration of President Joe Biden and coordinate the two countries' policies on China, North Korea and other issues.

"My immediate task is....to build relationship (with the new administration), including fostering a common awareness on various policy directions," Tomita said at his first press conference with Japanese media as successor to Shinsuke Sugiyama. It was held virtually amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Tomita said managing the security alliance is also a key part of his job, while noting that the Biden administration, which was launched on Jan. 20, has already offered reassuring signs to Tokyo by affirming the U.S. defense commitment over the Japan-controlled, China-claimed Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea.

Tokyo and Washington reached an agreement this week over Japan's costs of hosting U.S. military troops in the country that Tomita said was a sign of the "soundness" of the alliance.     continue to read


No gimmicks needed: The Biden doctrine and US-Japan relations

Apr. 1 - ...​U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken has said China represents “America’s biggest geopolitical test of the 21st century.” So, where is China on Japan’s strategic dashboard of concerns? “China is always a very big presence … the second largest economy with a population of 1.4 billion people,” Tomita said, and “it is in everyone’s interest to have stable relations with China.” But, he continued, “we have to be honest with our Chinese friends [about] certain aspects of their behavior — trade practices, human rights situation with Uyghurs and Hong Kong — and, from a Japanese perspective, it is particularly troubling to see the pattern of their maritime behavior which, in our eyes, amounts to unilateral attempts to change the status quo.”

  
Biden national security adviser Jake Sullivan and Secretary of State Blinken took some of that conversation — about cyber espionage, human rights violations, predatory trade behavior, aggressiveness in the South China Sea and around the Senkaku Islands — to their Chinese counterparts during a recent meeting in Alaska. Their testy exchange followed the first "Quad" meeting between leaders of the United States, Japan, Australia and India, highlighting the importance of a “free, open and inclusive Indo-Pacific region.” Biden, Japan’s Prime Minister Suga, Australia’s Prime Minister Scott Morrison and India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi co-wrote an opinion piece afterward, addressing collective global challenges like the pandemic, climate change, regional security and self-determination, without mentioning China. But everyone knows their virtual meeting was driven by shared concerns about China.

Tomita emphasized repeatedly during our conversation that the Biden administration “is very focused on the Indo-Pacific region, for a number of reasons. And Prime Minister Suga is incredibly committed to the task of strengthening further the Japan-U.S. alliance. And also working together with the U.S. for the free and open Indo-Pacific region.” For several reasons, yes, but mostly China....     quoted from
中国国防部提醒日方停止挑衅 美日狼狈为奸损人不利己 20210331 |《今日关注》CCTV中文国际
​Apr 1, 2021
Japan and US' attack of Chinese Coast Guard Law is for misleading public

Apr. 1 - Japanese Defense Minister Nobuo Kishi recently held talks with the visiting Indonesian Defense Minister Prabowo Subianto, during which he expressed grave concerns over China’s Coast Guard Law again, reported Kyodo News.


Since the Chinese Coast Guard Law came into effect on February 1, the response from the US and Japan has been not only intense but also unusual. Japan has expressed its “grave concerns” over the law for nearly ten times on bilateral or multilateral occasions. But all the caw and clamor cannot hide the two countries’ real intention of deliberately misleading the public opinions and international community.

​Washington and Tokyo’s criticisms of China’s Coast Guard Law focus on the unclear demarcation of sea areas within the jurisdiction, permission for the coast guard to use weapons and to take enforcement measures against foreign ships, and the “quasi-military nature” of the coast guard. But these criticisms are nothing but overreaction or even double standards both from the perspective of the international law, the similar laws in Japan and US, and the maritime enforcement practices.     continue to read

Minister of Foreign Affairs Summons Japanese Ambassador to ROK Koji Tomita​

1. Minister of Foreign Affairs Kang, Kyung-wha summoned Ambassador of Japan to the Republic of Korea Koji Tomita on the afternoon of March 6, and expressed deep regret over the Japanese government’s stronger entry restrictions on Korean nationals and strongly urged a prompt withdrawal of the unjust measure.

2. Minister Kang stressed that the ROK government is making progress in stopping the spread of COVID-19 through its outstanding diagnostic capabilities and transparent and robust quarantine system, and pointed out that it is very inappropriate for the Japanese government to take such measure at this point.

In particular, Minister Kang said that objective statistics, including the cumulative number of diagnostic tests conducted in the ROK and the ratio of the ROK’s population to the number of tests, clearly show the ROK’s proactive and preemptive quarantine capabilities and efforts, and added that it is rather the ROK government which is watching Japan’s response to COVID-19 with concern.

3. In addition, Minister Kang mentioned that it is all the more regretful that the Japanese government has enforced the measure without prior notification despite the ROK government’s repeated calls to refrain from taking additional measure. Saying that such measure is unfavorable and unscientific, the Minister urged the Japanese government once again to squarely face objective facts and situations and promptly withdraw the measure.

4. Minister Kang went on to say that if the Japanese government does not withdraw its measure, the ROK government cannot but consider necessary countermeasures, including those based on the principle of reciprocity.     source quoted from

Next 2nd Briefing Session on ROK Government’s Response to COVID-19 Held for Diplomatic Corps in ROK

Prev Outcome of Telephone Conversation between Foreign Ministers of ROK and Thailand (Mar. 5)

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