Chas,
Certainly an own goal for the USA, but classic Joe Biden to anyone who worked on the Hill during his Senate days. Note his public rudeness in the otherwise contrasting hearings involving Anita Hill and Scott Ritter, each of whom merited at least courtesy as a citizen and witness. I saw much the same on Codels where his speeches were almost always inner directed, with little if any calculation of purpose. Wayne
E WAYNE MERRY Senior Fellow for Europe & Eurasia American Foreign Policy Council 509 C Street, NE Washington,DC 20002 202-577-7556 (direct) 202-543-1007 (fax) wmerry@earthlink.net
On Jun 21, 2023, at 11:58 AM, Chas Freeman via Salon <salon@listserve.com> wrote:
The remark epitomizes our loss of diplomatic decorum. Whatever your judgment of the degree of autocracy in China, this is an own goal.
Chas
Biden did this moreover at a fundraiser near Palo Alto where one can imagine many of the attendees have long, deep business relations with China… So not a well-studied pander to this audience. He needs to control his motor-mouth.
US-China tensions: Biden calls Xi a dictator a day after Beijing talksImage source, Reuters Image caption, US President Joe Biden made the comments in California on Tuesday US President Joe Biden has called Chinese President Xi Jinping a dictator at a fundraising event in California. His
remarks came a day after US Secretary of State Antony Blinken met Mr Xi
for talks in Beijing, which were aimed at easing tensions between the
two superpowers. Mr Biden also said Mr Xi was embarrassed after an alleged Chinese spy balloon was shot down by the US. China is yet to respond to his comments. "The
reason why Xi Jinping got very upset, in terms of when I shot that
balloon down with two box cars full of spy equipment in it, was he
didn't know it was there," Mr Biden said on Tuesday. "That's a great embarrassment for dictators. When they didn't know what happened," he said. The
balloon, which China says was monitoring weather, drifted across the
continental US before being destroyed by American military aircraft in
February. Washington later said it was was part of a sprawling Chinese intelligence collection programme. Mr
Blinken's visit to Beijing - the first by a top US diplomat in almost
five years - restarted high-level communications between the two
countries. He postponed the visit after the balloon incident. Mr Xi said some progress had been made in Beijing, while Mr Blinken indicated both sides were open to more talks. Major differences, however, remain between the two countries. Relations
have plummeted in the wake of a Trump-era trade war, Beijing's
assertive claims over Taiwan and the shooting down of the alleged spy
balloon.
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