What's new

Joe Biden elected the 46th President of the United States

Very curious to see how Biden handles Huawei saga.

I think he will keep the sanctions on Huawei. I think he will also likely continue Trump's trade war. However, I think his approach will be far more balanced with pressure being applied on areas that are critical, like Chinese technological development, while saving parts of the relationship that is beneficial to American corporations, like the business/commercial links. Biden won't go full retard like Trump/Pompeo just smashing everything up like a gorilla throwing a tantrum.

China haters might cheer Trump on, but they don't realize the more he flailed angrily against China, the more he was actually hurting America's standing in the world by forcing China to cut out American technology in its supply chain and also push it away from using the $ as reserve currency.
 
.
I think he will keep the sanctions on Huawei. I think he will also likely continue Trump's trade war. However, I think his approach will be far more balanced with pressure being applied on areas that are critical, like Chinese technological development, while saving parts of the relationship that is beneficial to American corporations, like the business/commercial links. Biden won't go full retard like Trump/Pompeo just smashing everything up like a gorilla throwing a tantrum.

China haters might cheer Trump on, but they don't realize the more he flailed angrily against China, the more he was actually hurting America's standing in the world by forcing China to cut out American technology in its supply chain and also push it away from using the $ as reserve currency.

I agree most of the sanctions will probably remain in place as there is bipartisan support for it in both the houses. I personally think the time to contain China came and went 10 years ago. The chipset foundries are the last resort, but even that will probably no longer be a leverage five years from now.
 
Last edited:
. .
I agree most of the sanctions will probably remain in place as they're there is bipartisan support for it in both the houses. I personally think the time to contain China came and went 10 years ago. The chipset foundries are the last resort, but even that will probably no longer be a leverage five years from now.

I agree with your timeline. Obviously, having Huawei as the main network provider to the US or five eyes nation was never going to fly. There is no way that would be palatable. In that respect, Trump's tech war made sense. The problem is that Trump operates with zero nuance, so he just took the sledgehammer across the board against all aspects of America's complicated and deep relationship with China, to the point that it would precipitate trends that would end up immensely hurting America years down the road. Trump is a deeply ignorant man, so of course these weren't things he truly understood.

Biden will continue to pursue policies that will try to contain China's technological advancement and political influence while fortifying the foundations of American dominance which are things such as confidence in America's leadership especially among its allies, the preponderance and strength of American corporations and the use of the USD as the global reserve currency.
 
.
(CNN)The General Services Administration has informed President-elect Joe Biden that the Trump administration is ready to begin the formal transition process, according to a letter from Administrator Emily Murphy sent Monday afternoon and obtained by CNN.
The letter is the first step the administration has taken to acknowledge President Donald Trump's defeat, more than two weeks after Biden was declared the winner in the election.
Murphy said she had not been pressured by the White House to delay the formal transition and did not make a decision "out of fear or favoritism."
"Please know that I came to my decision independently, based on the law and available facts," Murphy wrote. "I was never directly or indirectly pressured by any Executive Branch official -- including those who work at the White House or GSA -- with regard to the substance or timing of my decision. To be clear, I did not receive any direction to delay my determination."
The letter marks Murphy's formal sign off on Biden's victory, a normally perfunctory process known as ascertainment. The move will allow the transition to officially begin, permitting current administration agency officials to coordinate with the incoming Biden team, and providing millions in government funding for the transition.

It seems that Trump is reluctantly started to accept that Biden is the President elect and cannot be stop to take over the White House.

Trump has not officially conceded but his team is agreeing to transition.
What Trump does now is anyone's guess.
 
.
US should encourage China's rise, Biden national security pick Jake Sullivan says
Sullivan served as an adviser to Biden during his vice presidency
By Brittany De Lea | Fox News
November 23 2020

President-Elect Joe Biden announced additional nominations to his cabinet on Monday, including a National Security Adviser who has advocated for supporting China’s “rise” in the past.


Jake Sullivan has been tapped to fill the role, after previously advising Biden when he served as vice president in the Obama administration. Sullivan also worked for Hillary Clinton when she served as Secretary of State.

Sullivan could bring in a fresh perspective to relations with China when compared with the Trump administration if his past comments are an indication.

During a lecture he delivered on behalf of the Lowy Institute in 2017, Sullivan said leading foreign policy expert Owen Harries was “right” to warn against “containment” as a self-defeating policy, much like acquiescence.

“We need to strike a middle course – one that encourages China’s rise in a manner consistent with an open, fair, rules-based, regional order,” Sullivan said. “This will require care and prudence and strategic foresight, and maybe even more basically it will require sustained attention. It may not have escaped your notice that these are not in ample supply in Washington right now.”

During the same lecture, Sullivan said China policy needs to be about more than just bilateral ties, "it needs to be about our ties to the region that create an environment more conducive to a peaceful and positive sum Chinese rise," he said.

Sullivan reasoned that a thriving China, specifically from an economic standpoint, was good for the global economy, though it depends on the “parameters of the system within which China is rising.”


That sentiment resonates with current policy towards China, where the U.S. has worked to iron out trade agreements that level the playing field for domestic companies, concerning items like intellectual property protections and removing trade barriers.

The Trump administration engaged China directly in what amounted to a months-long trade war as it sought to coax Beijing into opening its economy.

A partial agreement was reached between the world’s two largest economies earlier this year.

While Biden’s approach may differ from Trump’s hardline tactics, his goals concerning economic relations with Beijing are likely similar.

Biden said the U.S. “does need to get tough on China,” in an essay in Foreign Affairs, where he advocated for using alliances as leverage to “shape the rules of the road” so that they “reflect democratic interests and values.”

Obviously disappointed with India's performance as an ally to "contain" China, this statement is based on reality.
Would be interesting to see the reaction of our "friendly neighbor"
 
.
Trump administration gives green light to proceed with Biden transition
The Trump campaign’s legal efforts to overturn the election have almost entirely failed


Joe-Biden-Reuters1605624388-0.jpg


WASHINGTON:
After weeks of waiting, President Donald Trump’s administration on Monday cleared the way for President-elect Joe Biden to transition to the White House, giving him access to briefings and funding even as Trump vowed to continue fighting the election results.

Trump, a Republican, has alleged widespread voter fraud in the Nov. 3 election without providing evidence. Although he did not concede or acknowledge his Democratic rival’s victory on Monday, Trump’s announcement that his staff would cooperate with Biden’s represented a significant shift and was the closest he has come to admitting defeat.
Biden won 306 state-by-state electoral votes, well over the 270 needed for victory, to Trump’s 232. Biden also holds a lead of more than 6 million in the national popular vote.

The Trump campaign’s legal efforts to overturn the election have almost entirely failed in key battleground states, and a growing number of Republican leaders, business executives and national security experts have urged the president to let the transition begin.

The president-elect has begun naming members of his team, including tapping trusted aide Antony Blinken to head the State Department, without waiting for government funding or a Trump concession. But critics have accused the president of undermining U.S. democracy and undercutting the next administration’s ability to fight the coronavirus pandemic with his refusal to accept the results.

On Monday, the General Services Administration, the federal agency that must sign off on presidential transitions, told Biden he could formally begin the hand-over process. GSA Administrator Emily Murphy said in a letter that Biden would get access to resources that had been denied to him because of the legal challenges seeking to overturn his win.

That means Biden’s team will now have federal funds and an official office to conduct his transition until he takes office on Jan. 20. It also paves the way for Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris to receive regular national security briefings that Trump also gets.

The GSA announcement came shortly after Michigan officials certified Biden as the victor in their state, making Trump’s legal efforts to change the election outcome even more unlikely to succeed.

Trump and his advisers said he would continue to pursue legal avenues but his decision to give Murphy the go-ahead to proceed with a transition for Biden’s administration indicated even the White House understood it was getting close to time to move on.

“Our case STRONGLY continues, we will keep up the good ... fight, and I believe we will prevail! Nevertheless, in the best interest of our Country, I am recommending that Emily and her team do what needs to be done with regard to initial protocols, and have told my team to do the same,” Trump said on Twitter.

A Trump adviser painted the move as similar to both candidates receiving briefings during the campaign and said the president’s statement was not a concession.

The Biden transition team said meetings would begin with federal officials on Washington’s response to the coronavirus pandemic, along with discussions of national security issues.

Two Trump administration officials said the Biden agency review teams could begin interacting with Trump agency officials as soon as Tuesday.

“This is probably the closest thing to a concession that President Trump could issue,” said Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer.

Murphy, who was appointed to the GSA job by Trump in 2017 and said she faced threats for not starting the transition earlier, told GSA employees in a letter that the decision to do so was hers alone.
“I was never pressured with regard to the substance or timing of my decision. The decision was solely mine,” she wrote. The GSA had insisted that Murphy would “ascertain” or formally approve the transition when the winner was clear.
Representative Don Beyer, who led the Obama administration’s transition at the Commerce Department in 2008, said Murphy’s delay was “costly and unnecessary” and warned that Trump could still do great harm in his remaining time in office.
Top Democrats in the House and Senate on Monday warned that an executive order signed by Trump in October could result in mass firings of federal employees in the final weeks of his presidency and allow the Republican president to install loyalists in the federal bureaucracy.

POLICY TEAM TAKES SHAPE
The now formalized transition and Michigan’s certification of Biden’s victory could prompt more Republicans to encourage Trump to concede as his chances of overturning the results fade.
Top Republicans in Michigan’s legislature pledged to honor the outcome in their state, likely dashing Trump’s hopes that the state legislature would name Trump supporters to serve as “electors” and support him rather than Biden.
Trump has been consulting his advisers for weeks, while eschewing standard responsibilities of the presidency. He has played several games of golf and avoided taking questions from reporters since the day of the election.
Biden, who plans to undo many of Trump’s “America First” policies, announced the top members of his foreign policy team earlier on Monday. He named Jake Sullivan as his national security adviser and Linda Thomas-Greenfield as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. Both have high-level government experience. John Kerry, a former U.S. senator, secretary of state and 2004 Democratic presidential nominee, will serve as Biden’s special climate envoy.
The president-elect is likely to tap former Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen to become the next Treasury secretary, according to two Biden allies, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss a personnel decision that was not yet public.
Biden also took a step toward reversing Trump’s hard-line immigration policies by naming Cuban-born lawyer Alejandro Mayorkas to head the Department of Homeland Security.

 
.
Biden to name ex-secretary of state Kerry as US climate czar
John Kerry will have a seat on the National Security Council in the White House, says transition team


former-us-secretary-of-state-john-kerry-photo-reuters-file


WASHINGTON:
US President-elect Joe Biden’s transition team said on Monday former Secretary of State John Kerry will be named climate czar, a sign that Biden views diplomatic skills as vital to the job.
As Biden’s special envoy for climate, Kerry will have a seat on the National Security Council in the White House, marking the first time an official will be dedicated to the issue in that organisation, Biden’s transition team said in a statement.
The NSC has played a powerful foreign policy role since it was created in 1947 under President Harry Truman.
Biden has pledged to reverse course on climate from President Donald Trump who doubts mainstream climate science. He yanked the United States out of the 2015 Paris agreement on climate, and dismantled Obama-era climate and environment regulations to boost drilling, mining and manufacturing.
Kerry, 76, called climate change “the world’s most fearsome weapon of mass destruction,” as secretary of state under former president Barack Obama. In travels from glaciers in Greenland to the Solomon Islands, Kerry emphasised cooperation on tackling climate change.
Before the landmark Paris agreement Kerry also pushed for China, the world top greenhouse gas emitter, and the United States, the second-leading polluter, to agree targets on emissions and work toward a global deal.
Kerry, who was also a longtime liberal senator from Massachusetts and 2004 presidential candidate, will likely get a quick start as Biden has pledged to rejoin the Paris agreement soon after he comes to office.
Appointing Kerry as climate envoy “sends the strongest possible signal about the importance of climate action to the incoming administration,” said Paul Bodnar, who was a senior director for energy and climate under Obama.
After leaving government Kerry continued to work on climate change. Late last year, Kerry launched World War Zero, a bipartisan group of world leaders and celebrities to combat climate change.

 
.
“We need to strike a middle course – one that encourages China’s rise in a manner consistent with an open, fair, rules-based, regional order,” Sullivan said.

Please understand the full sentence, specially this part: "in a manner consistent with an open, fair, rules-based, regional order".
 
.
That’s why Nixon’s Secretary of State Henry Kissinger is urging President-elect Joe Biden to normalize relations.

Just because Dr. Kissinger is urging to normalize relations does not make the title of the thread any more likely. President-elect Biden may or may not do so. It still remains to be seen.
 
.
so biden will vacate and open south China sea .

NO, he won't, Chian is baked into our politics as being an adversary and threat to the world.. Forbes is being its typical republican talking points.
 
. . . . .
Back
Top Bottom