Choppers
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2009
- Messages
- 1,300
- Reaction score
- 0
- Country
- Location
Obama ignores Beijing threat, hosts Dalai
REUTERS, Feb 19, 2010, 12.40am IST
WASHINGTON: President Barack Obama hosted the Dalai Lama at the White House on Thursday, brushing aside Chinas warning that the meeting with the exiled Tibetan leader could further damage strained Sino-US ties.
Obamas first presidential meeting with the Dalai Lama was sure to draw angry complaints from Beijing, which is at odds with Washington over trade, currencies, US arms sales to Taiwan and Chinese internet censorship.
By going ahead with the meeting over Chinese objections, Obama may be trying to show his resolve against an increasingly assertive Beijing after facing criticism at home for being too soft with Chinas leaders on his November trip Chinese officials have known about this and their reaction is their reaction, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said dismissively.
Gibbs said the US and China the worlds largest and third-biggest economies have a mature relationship capable of withstanding disagreements. But mindful of Chinese sensitivities, the White House has sought to strike a balance in the Dalai Lamas visit. Obama had delayed meeting the Dalai Lama until after seeing Chinese leaders last year.
During Thursdays visit, Obama like his White House predecessors denied the Dalai Lama the symbolism of meeting in the Oval Office. Instead they met in the lesser-known Map Room. Such distinctions signaled that the monk was not being received as a political leader. The Dalai Lama entered the White House out of sight of scribes, and the talks were closed to media coverage.
Obama ignores Beijing threat, hosts Dalai - US - World - The Times of India
REUTERS, Feb 19, 2010, 12.40am IST
WASHINGTON: President Barack Obama hosted the Dalai Lama at the White House on Thursday, brushing aside Chinas warning that the meeting with the exiled Tibetan leader could further damage strained Sino-US ties.
Obamas first presidential meeting with the Dalai Lama was sure to draw angry complaints from Beijing, which is at odds with Washington over trade, currencies, US arms sales to Taiwan and Chinese internet censorship.
By going ahead with the meeting over Chinese objections, Obama may be trying to show his resolve against an increasingly assertive Beijing after facing criticism at home for being too soft with Chinas leaders on his November trip Chinese officials have known about this and their reaction is their reaction, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said dismissively.
Gibbs said the US and China the worlds largest and third-biggest economies have a mature relationship capable of withstanding disagreements. But mindful of Chinese sensitivities, the White House has sought to strike a balance in the Dalai Lamas visit. Obama had delayed meeting the Dalai Lama until after seeing Chinese leaders last year.
During Thursdays visit, Obama like his White House predecessors denied the Dalai Lama the symbolism of meeting in the Oval Office. Instead they met in the lesser-known Map Room. Such distinctions signaled that the monk was not being received as a political leader. The Dalai Lama entered the White House out of sight of scribes, and the talks were closed to media coverage.
Obama ignores Beijing threat, hosts Dalai - US - World - The Times of India