XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.usa, talk.politics.misc   
   XPost: sac.politics   
   From: ramon@conexus.net   
      
   In article    
   governor.swill@gmail.com wrote:   
   >   
   > ...I spent all my money at the sex shoppe.   
      
   TOKYO, May 23 (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden said on   
   Monday he would be willing to use force to defend Taiwan, as   
   part of a series of critical comments about China, but an aide   
   said the remark represented no change in U.S. policy on the self-   
   ruled island.   
      
   Biden's comment, made during the his first visit to Japan since   
   taking office, and as Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida   
   looked on, appeared to be a departure from existing U.S. policy   
   of so-called strategic ambiguity on Taiwan.   
      
   China considers the democratic island its territory, part of   
   "one China", and says it is the most sensitive and important   
   issue in its ties with the United States.   
      
   When a reporter asked Biden if the United States would defend   
   Taiwan if it were attacked, the president answered: "Yes."   
      
   "That's the commitment we made," he said, during a joint news   
   conference with the Japanese leader. "We agree with a one-China   
   policy. We've signed on to it and all the intended agreements   
   made from there. But the idea that, that it can be taken by   
   force, just taken by force, is just not, is just not   
   appropriate."   
      
   He added that it was his expectation that such an event would   
   not happen or be attempted.   
      
   Following Biden's comments, aWhite House official said there   
   were was no change in policy towards Taiwan.   
      
   The president's national security aides shifted in their seats   
   and tilted their heads, studying Biden closely as he responded   
   to the question on Taiwan. Several looked down as he made what   
   appeared to be an unambiguous commitment to Taiwan's defence.   
      
   Biden made a similar comment about defending Taiwan in October.   
   At that time, a White House spokesperson said Biden was not   
   announcing any change in U.S. policy and one analyst referred to   
   the comment as a "gaffe".   
      
   The United States has long agreed that there is one China,   
   including Taiwan, but it has adopted its "strategic ambiguity"   
   on the question of whether it would get involved in military   
   conflict over the island.   
      
   The remarks came as Biden made tough comments about China's   
   increasingly assertive posture in the region, saying he hoped   
   Russian President Vladimir Putin would pay a price for his   
   invasion of Ukraine in part to show China what it would face if   
   it were to invade Taiwan.   
      
   The comments are likely to both infuriate Beijing and overshadow   
   the centrepiece of Biden's Japan visit, the launch of an Indo-   
   Pacific Economic Framework, a broad plan providing an economic   
   pillar for U.S. engagement with Asia. read more   
      
   His trip includes meetings with the leaders of Japan, India and   
   Australia, in the "Quad" group of countries.   
      
   'STRONG JAPAN'   
   Japan's Kishida emphasised Tokyo's readiness to take a more   
   robust defence posture, something the United States has long   
   welcomed.   
      
   Kishida said that he told Biden that Japan would consider   
   various options to boost its defence capabilities, including the   
   ability to retaliate, signalling a potential shift in Japan's   
   defence policy.   
      
   That would include a "considerable increase" in its defence   
   budget, Kishida said.   
      
   "A strong Japan, and a strong US-Japan alliance, is a force for   
   good in the region," Biden said at the news conference following   
   their discussions.   
      
   Kishida said that he had gained support from Biden on Japan's   
   becoming a permanent member of the U.N. Security Council amid   
   growing calls for reform of the council. China and Russia are   
   permanent members.   
      
   Worries are growing in Asia about an increasingly assertive   
   China, particularly in light of its close ties to Russia, and   
   tension has risen over self-ruled Taiwan, which China considers   
   a renegade province.   
      
   https://www.reuters.com/world/biden-meets-japanese-emperor-start-   
   visit-launch-regional-economic-plan-2022-05-23/   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
|