Monday, April 26, 2021

White House News (白宮消息) | Apr. 26, 2021

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


Peter Craig Dutton (born 18 November 1970)[1] is an Australian Liberal Party politician who has been Minister for Defence and Leader of the House since March 2021 and the Member of Parliament (MP) for Dickson since 2001. Dutton previously served in numerous Cabinet roles under the HowardAbbottTurnbull and Morrison Governments, including as Minister for Home Affairs from 2017 to 2021.[2]

In the 
first August 2018 leadership spill, Dutton challenged Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull for the leadership of the Liberal Party, but was defeated by 48 votes to 35.[3] In the aftermath of the spill, Dutton announced his resignation from the Second Turnbull Ministry and rejected an invitation from Turnbull to remain in the Cabinet. During the fallout of the failed leadership bid, some Australians placed potatoes on doorways and windowsills across the country in recognition of Peter Dutton's apparent likeness to the vegetable.[4] In the second leadership contest, Dutton was defeated by Treasurer and acting Home Affairs Minister Scott Morrison by 45 votes to 40. Following the appointment of Morrison as the new Prime Minister on 24 August, Dutton was re-appointed Home Affairs Minister in the Morrison Government, but relinquished his duties and responsibilities for immigration and border protection.     from Wikipedia



Picture
Australian Defence Minister PetterDutton at the 2018 Sub-Regional Meeting on Counter Terrorism in Indonesia. 
​Australian defence minister speaks of war with China


Apr. 26 - In extraordinary comments on national television yesterday morning, Australia’s newly-installed Defence Minister Peter Dutton declared that the prospect of a near-term war with China over control of Taiwan should not be “discounted.”

Dutton’s statement formed part of a broader discussion within the Australian political and media establishment, which is openly canvassing participation in a catastrophic war in the Indo-Pacific.

The themes of “military preparedness,” “regional threats” and the glorification of recent army campaigns were prominent in yesterday’s commemorations of Anzac Day. The nationalist holiday, which “celebrates” the disastrous landing of Australian and New Zealand troops in Turkey in 1915 during World War, is a focal point of the promotion of militarism.

Dutton made the comments in an interview on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s “Insiders” program. His exchange with one of the program’s hosts, David Speers, demonstrated the extent to which the official media, including its nominally “liberal” wing, is actively campaigning for stepped-up Australian military activities in the region.


Speers repeatedly asserted that Beijing was responsible for growing tensions, declaring that “we’ve seen a lot of aggression from China.” The thrust of his questions was to demand to know how Australia was prepared to counter this “threat.”     more
中美在台湾问题上要避免爆炸性危险 20210425 |《海峡两岸》CCTV中文国际
Apr 26, 2021

U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping in 2015 
Taiwan could be the trigger for a catastrophic war

It is becoming a case of when, not if, there will be a war between the U.S. and China.

Apr. 26 - Nobody wants war and yet the public is being convinced that it might happen and if it does it will be a necessary evil.


China is now the accepted enemy. Its real crime is that it is eclipsing the U.S. as the world’s most powerful economy. America will never accept a China with greater economic power and associated prestige.

If it cannot out-trade its rival, or through alliances and trade war policies, manage to restrict and reduce China, then the final option becomes not only thinkable but a real option.

There is now no pretence about the aims and motivations of the U.S. in the region.

Speaking before the Senate Armed Services Committee hearing in March 2021, Admiral Philip Davidson, head of the Indo-Pacific Command declared:

“We absolutely must be prepared to fight and win should competition turn to conflict.”


the same time, the U.S. military has asked Congress to double its budget in the Pacific. The Pentagon made the request as part of its Pacific Deterrence Initiative. The focus of the "initiative" is based on providing a network of missiles in Taiwan, Okinawa and the Philippines that directly target China and with the capacity to 'sustain combat operations for extended periods'

​These missiles are only a few minutes flying time to Beijing.     more

Saturday, April 24, 2021

White House News (白宮消息) | Apr. 24 , 2021

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

Singh was born in Olney, Maryland and raised in Raleigh, North Carolina.[3] His great-granduncle was the first Asian American elected to Congress, Dalip Singh Saund.[4] Singh earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in economics and public policy from Duke University, followed by a dual Master of Business Administration and Master of Public Administration in international economics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Harvard Kennedy School.

Singh has worked as executive vice president and head of the markets group at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. He was also deputy assistant secretary of the Treasury for international affairs and acting Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Financial Markets in the Obama administration.[7][8][9]
It was reported he would be appointed as Deputy National Security Advisor at the National Security Council and deputy director of the National Economic Council to take office in mid-February 2021.[10][11]
     from Wikipedia
EXCLUSIVE-Biden will push allies to act on China forced labor at G7 -adviser

China has been accused of detaining at least 1 million Muslims, mostly Uighurs, in camps in Xinjiang province, but Beijing says they are vocational training centers

WASHINGTON, April 23 (Reuters) - The United States will urge its Group of Seven allies to increase pressure on China over the use of forced labor in its northwestern Xinjiang province, home to the Muslim Uighur minority, a top White House official said on Friday.

U.S. President Joe Biden will attend a meeting of the G7 advanced economies in person in Britain in June, where he is expected to focus on what he sees as a strategic rivalry between democracies and autocratic states, particularly China.

Daleep Singh, deputy national security adviser to Biden and deputy director of the National Economic Council, said the G7 meeting in Cornwall would focus on health security, a synchronized economic response to the COVID-19 pandemic, concrete actions on climate change, and "elevating shared democratic values within the G7."

"These are like-minded allies, and we want to take tangible and concrete actions that show our willingness to coordinate on non-market economies, such as China," Singh, who is helping to coordinate the meeting, told Reuters in an interview.

"The galvanizing challenge for the G7 is to show that open societies, democratic societies still have the best chance of solving the biggest problems in our world, and that top-down autocracies are not the best path," he said.

Singh said Washington has already taken strong actions against China over human rights abuses in Xinjiang, but would seek to expand the effort with G7 allies. Joint sanctions against Chinese officials accused of abuses in the province were announced last month by the United States, the European Union, Britain and Canada.

​China denies all accusations of abuse and has responded with punitive measures of its own against the EU.
Singh said details were still being worked out ahead of the meeting, but the summit offered an opportunity for U.S. allies to show solidarity on the issue...     mere
美欲推“反华法案” 中美关系面临更大风险? 20210423 |《今日关注》CCTV中文国际
Apr 24, 2021
Chinese and U.S. flags flutter outside the building of an American company in Beijing, China January 21, 2021.
U.S. lawmakers intensify bipartisan efforts to counter China


Apr. 24 - ​A bipartisan U.S. congressional push to counteract China picked up steam on Wednesday as a Senate committee overwhelmingly backed a bill pressing Beijing on human rights and economic competition, while other lawmakers introduced a measure seeking billions for technology research.

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee backed the "Strategic Competition Act of 2021" by 21-1, sending the bill for consideration by the 100-member Senate, even as committee members voiced a need to do even more to counteract Beijing.

The committee added dozens of amendments to the bill. One would force a boycott of the 2022 Beijing Olympics by U.S. officials, not athletes, which was also recommended by the U.S. Commission on Religious Freedom. read more
Separately, a group of Senate and House of Representatives lawmakers introduced the "Endless Frontier Act," calling for $100 billion over five years for basic and advanced technology research and $10 billion to create new "technology hubs" across the country. read more

Both bills have strong support from both political parties and are expected to become law. The desire for a hard line in dealings with China is one of the few truly bipartisan sentiments in the deeply divided U.S. Congress, which is narrowly controlled by President Joe Biden's fellow Democrats.

​The Biden administration supports the measures.

"With this overwhelming bipartisan vote, the Strategic Competition Act becomes the first of what we hope will be a cascade of legislative activity for our nation to finally meet the China challenge across every dimension of power, political, diplomatic, economic, innovation, military and even cultural," said Senator Bob Menendez, the Democratic chairman of the Senate panel.     more

Related Articles:
​U.S. lawmakers back $100 billion science push to compete with China

Top U.S. Senate Democrat directs lawmakers to craft bill to counter China

Panel recommends that U.S. officials not go to China's Olympics

Friday, April 23, 2021

White House News (白宮消息) | Apr. 23 , 2021

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

Modi called for “concrete action at a high speed, on large scale, and with a global scope” to combat climate change, adding he and US President Joe Biden are launching the “India-US Climate and Clean Energy Agenda 2030 partnership” to help “mobilise investments, demonstrate clean technologies, and enable green collaborations”.
Modi calls for quick action to save world at Leaders’ Summit on Climate 2021

Modi said that humanity is battling a pandemic and that it is a timely reminder that the grave threat of climate change has not disappeared

Apr. 23, New Delhi - Addressing the US-convened Leaders’ Summit on Climate 2021 in virtual format on Thursday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi called for “concrete action at a high speed, on large scale, and with a global scope” to combat climate change, adding he and US President Joe Biden are launching the “India-US Climate and Clean Energy Agenda 2030 partnership” to help “mobilise investments, demonstrate clean technologies, and enable green collaborations”.

Earlier, opening the summit, President Biden said: “The United States sets out on the road to cut greenhouse gases in half — in half by the end of this decade. That’s where we’re headed as a nation ... The signs are unmistakable. The science is undeniable. But the cost of inaction keeps mounting... I see an opportunity to create millions of good-paying, middle-class, union jobs.”

Prime Minister Modi, pointing out that “we, in India, are doing our part” and that India’s per capita carbon footprint is 60 per cent lower than the global average “because our lifestyle is rooted in sustainable traditional practices”, said: “Sustainable lifestyles and a guiding philosophy of ‘back to basics’ must be an important pillar of our economic strategy for the post-Covid era.”

​Thanking President Biden for “taking this initiative”, Mr Modi said that “humanity is battling a global pandemic right now and, this event is a timely reminder that the grave threat of climate change has not disappeared”. He added: “In fact, climate change is a lived reality for millions around the world. Their lives and livelihoods are already facing its adverse consequences”...     more


How India Can Throw China Back Across the Line of Actual Control
By essentially using the same tactics that China successfully used to fight the United States in the Korean War in 1950-53.

Date published on Apr. 23, 2021
Here's What You Need to Remember: Dougherty faults India’s current defense strategy, which calls for defending India’s long, mountainous Himalayas border with China with light forces, and then counterattacking into the Chinese-occupied Tibetan plateau to seize key terrain and bring China to the peace table.

How can India defeat China in a war, even though China has a larger and more technologically advanced military?


By essentially using the same tactics that China successfully used to fight the United States in the Korean War in 1950-53. Hit-and-run tactics in which Indian troops lurk in the Himalaya mountains, and then swooping down to surprise Chinese troops in the valleys below.


That’s the argument of an American defense expert who believes that India and America face parallel threats. While America is concerned about the security of the Western Pacific, India must worry about its disputed Himalayas border with China – over which the two nations fought in 1962 – as well as a growing Chinese presence in the Indian Ocean.     more
普京放狠话划红线 十万俄军布阵 俄乌边境告急?20210422 |《今日关注》CCTV中文国际
Apr 23, 2021
Russian invasion of Ukraine is 'imminent,' warns senior British lawmaker

​Apr. 22 - Russian President Vladimir Putin’s military deployments around the borders of Ukraine suggest “an invasion is imminent,” according to a senior British lawmaker.

“Half of Russia's land capability, military land capability, now have moved to surround eastern Ukraine,” House of Commons Defense Select Committee Chairman Tobias Ellwood said Wednesday. “I hope it isn't the case, but I fear that an invasion is imminent, and that is concerning.”

Russia’s mobilization around Ukraine exceeds even the levels reached in 2014, when Putin annexed Crimea from its neighbor and led to a conflict in eastern Ukraine. Putin’s intentions with the latest buildup have stoked alarm in Kyiv and Western capitals, although his next steps remain a subject of debate.

But Ellwood is inclined to think that Moscow is planning a rerun of Putin’s previous efforts to carve political satellites out of former Soviet vassal states — such as the Crimea crisis and the 2008 intervention in Georgia.

​“This is all because Putin wants to look strong and reignite that idea that it is a superpower,” Ellwood told the Council on Geostrategy, a British think tank. “And now, he's taking advantage of a disunited West”...     more

Related Article:

US AND NATO WARN RUSSIA NOT TO BLOCKADE UKRAINIAN PORTS

Thursday, April 22, 2021

White House News (白宮消息) | Apr. 22 , 2021

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

APRIL 21, 2021
President Biden on COVID-19 Vaccinations
President Biden delivered remarks on the state of the COVID-19 pandemic as the U.S. reached 200 million vaccinations. The president called on employers to provide paid leave for employees to get vaccinated and take time off if they experience side effects. He also announced the IRS will be providing reimbursements for employers who provide the paid time off. 
What would the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2021 do to local police departments?

Apr. 22 - ...It would create a national registry for data on complaints and records of police misconduct and direct the Department of Justice to “create uniform accreditation standards for law enforcement agencies and requires law enforcement officers to complete training on racial profiling, implicit bias, and the duty to intervene when another officer uses excessive force.” 


​The 137-page bill also created framework “to prevent and remedy racial profiling by law enforcement at the federal, state, and local levels.” The bill also limits unnecessary use of force, restricting specifically the use of “no-knock warrants, chokeholds and carotid holds”...    quoted from



APRIL 21, 2021
White House Daily Briefing
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki held a briefing of the Biden administration’s agenda. The press secretary took many questions on the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act saying it is one of the president’s priorities to get it passed. She was also asked about Russian President Vladimir Putin’s recent comments about western countries' interference saying it will not deter the U.S. holding Russia accountable for its actions. 


A Ukrainian soldier digs a trench near Horlivka in the Donetsk region.
U.S. Senate Committee Advances Bill To Increase Military Support To Ukraine


Apr. 22 - The U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee has unanimously advanced a bill to deliver military assistance to Ukraine, including lethal weapons, to help the Eastern European country counter Russian aggression.

The Ukraine Security Partnership Act would provide Ukraine with up to $300 million per year in military assistance until 2026, $150 million of which is subject to conditions. It needs to be passed by both the House and Senate and be signed by President Joe Biden to become law.

Kyiv is asking the West for more support amid a Russian military buildup near Ukraine's border and in occupied Crimea.
The United States and NATO say the Russian troop movements there are the largest since 2014, when Moscow illegally annexed Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula and backed separatists holding parts of the eastern regions of Donetsk and Luhansk in a conflict that has killed more than 13,000 people.     more

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  WH keeping public in dark on what Biden demanded of China’s Xi over arming Putin​ Mar. 18 - The White House was tight-lipped Friday about ...