What's new

Obama to meet Dalai Lama: White House

jha

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Dec 19, 2009
Messages
10,962
Reaction score
-8
Country
India
Location
India
WASHINGTON: Notwithstanding the strong objections raised by China, the White House has asserted that US President Barack Obama, plans to meet

Twitter Facebook Share
Email Print Save Comment
Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, when he is in Washington next time.

However, no dates for the Obama-Dalai lama meeting were announced by the White House.

"The President told China's leaders during his trip last year that he would meet with the Dalai Lama, and he intends to do so. The Dalai Lama is an internationally respected religious and cultural leader, and the President will meet him in that capacity," Bill Burton, the White House Deputy Press Secretary said.

At the same time, Burton clarified that the US considers Tibet as a part of China. "To be clear, the US considers Tibet to be a part of China. We have human rights concerns about the treatment of Tibetans. We urge the government of China to protect the unique cultural and religious traditions of Tibet," Burton said.

The Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs, P J Crowley, said that China has made its views clear to the US on the Dalai Lama.

"Chinese have made clear their views regarding meetings with the Dalai Lama, regarding arms sales to Taiwan, and I think what we're clearly indicating is that we will continue to follow our national interest just as we would expect China to follow its national interest," he said.

Obama to meet Dalai Lama: White House - US - World - The Times of India
 
.
Obama to meet Dalai Lama, upset China

Peter Goodspeed, National Post Published: Wednesday, February 03, 2010

Read more: Obama to meet Dalai Lama, upset China
The National Post is now on Facebook. Join our fan community today.


To most in the West, the 75-year-old Dalai Lama is the world's most prominent political refugee, a spiritual leader to six million Tibetan Buddhists and a Nobel Peace Price winner. Canada has made him an honorary citizen, and the United States gave him the Congressional Medal of Honor.

To China's leaders he is "a wolf in monk's robes," a splitist, a former slave master and a dangerous separatist.

Yang Jiechi, the Chinese Foreign Minister, has insisted on several occasions shunning the Dalai Lama should be considered one of the "basic principles of international relations."

So it came as no real surprise yesterday when Chinese officials warned Barack Obama any meeting with the Dalai Lama will "seriously undermine the political foundation of Sino-U. S. relations."

Zhu Weiqun, deputy chief of the Communist Party's United Front, which steers ethnic affairs, issued the ultimatum during a Beijing news conference.

"We oppose any attempt by foreign forces to interfere in China's internal affairs using the Dalai Lama as an excuse," he said. "If the U.S. leader chooses to meet with the Dalai Lama, at this time, it will certainly threaten trust and cooperation between China and the United States."

"If that comes to pass, then China will be strongly opposed as always," he added. "How would that help the United States surmount the current economic crisis?"

The White House confirmed yesterday the U.S. President would meet the Dalai Lama, but did not give a date. There is speculation it could be during his lecture tour, which starts Feb. 21.

Mr. Obama passed up a meeting last fall before his first visit to China, but told Chinese officials in Beijing "he intends to do so."

A meeting now, just days after Washington announced plans to sell US$6.4-billion worth of weapons to Taiwan and while the United States and China are embroiled in disputes over trade, currency values, control of the Internet and China's jailing of dissidents, will further infuriate Beijing.

But it is virtually impossible for Mr. Obama to be seen backing away from an encounter because of China's wrath.

Every U.S. president since George H.W. Bush has met the Tibetan spiritual leader, but most have downplayed the meetings out of consideration for Beijing.

The senior Mr. Bush and Bill Clinton had unofficial meetings, "dropping in" as the Tibetan monk was visiting a senior advisor.

George W. Bush's meeting took place in his private White House residence, avoiding a more public event in the Oval Office.

In 2007, however, Mr. Bush broke with tradition and awarded the Dalai Lama the Congressional Medal of Honor in a public ceremony.

Other less-powerful states have felt China's anger over dealings with the Dalai Lama.

Last March, South Africa, fearing a Chinese boycott of the World Cup and trade sanctions, refused to issue the Dalai Lama a visa to attend a peace conference.

Angela Merkel, the German Chancellor, had two top-level meetings with Chinese officials canceled after she met the Dalai Lama in September 2007.

Beijing also scrapped a summit with the European Union last March after Nicolas Sarkozy, the French President and then-head of the EU, refused to pull out of a meeting with the Dalai Lama at a Nobel laureates' conference in Poland

A month later, crowds rioted in front of French stores in China after pro-Tibet activists disrupted the Paris leg of the Beijing Olympic torch relay.

Even Canada has found itself doing a diplomatic shuffle with the Dalai Lama.

In 2004, prime minister Paul Martin met the Tibetan spiritual leader, but the encounter was low-key.

Two years later, the new Conservative government of Stephen Harper infuriated China by awarding the Dalai Lama honourary Canadian citizenship.

In 2007, Canada-China relations plunged into a deep chill, when Mr. Harper met the Dalai Lama for 40 minutes in his office, and invited television cameras and photographers to record the event.

"This kind of disgusting conduct from Canada has seriously hurt Chinese people's feelings and seriously undermined Sino-Canadian relations," said a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman.

Last September, when the Dalai Lama paid a return visit to Canada, he had no meetings with Mr. Harper or Lawrence Cannon, the Foreign Affairs Minister. Governor-General Michaelle Jean, who was supposed to appear with him at a peace conference in Vancouver, cancelled.

Denmark probably holds the distinction for the most groveling climbdown after the Dalai Lama meeting with its prime minister last May triggered a small trade war.

By December, in a bid to ensure China's attendance at the Copenhagen climate change summit, Denmark promised to act with "caution" in future contacts with the Dali Lama and declared it is "fully aware of the importance and sensitivity of Tibet-related issues."

Don't expect Mr. Obama to follow suit.

But he may still try to find a way to deflect China's wrath, if only to salvage a Washington summit with Hu Jintao, the Chinese President, tentatively scheduled for April.

Read more: Obama to meet Dalai Lama, upset China
The National Post is now on Facebook. Join our fan community today.
 
.
http://www.google.co.in/url?sa=t&so...84W2DQ&usg=AFQjCNHzgmqna84y4qnPl8lNOOTIZxq62g

Obama to meet Dalai Lama despite Chinese warnings

BEIJING/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Barack Obama still plans to meet the Dalai Lama, the White House said on Tuesday, despite China's warning that such a meeting would hurt ties already strained by U.S. weapons sales to Taiwan.

Digging in on two points of discord, China vowed to impose unspecified sanctions against U.S. companies selling arms to Taiwan and said any meeting between Obama and the exiled Tibetan Buddhist leader would hurt bilateral ties.

The White House shrugged off Beijing's warning.


"The president told China's leaders during his trip last year that he would meet with the Dalai Lama and he intends to do so,"
White House spokesman Bill Burton told reporters traveling with Obama to New Hampshire.

"We expect that our relationship with China is mature enough where we can work on areas of mutual concern such as climate, the global economy and non-proliferation and discuss frankly and candidly those areas where we disagree."

China has become increasingly vocal in opposing meetings between foreign leaders and the Dalai Lama, who Beijing deems a dangerous separatist. A meeting between the Tibetan leader and Obama would raise tensions between the world's biggest and third-biggest economies.

Ties between the United States and China have also soured over trade and currency quarrels, cyber security and control of the Internet, and Beijing's jailing of dissidents.

U.S. State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said Washington wanted to "work through" disputes in various bilateral meetings the United States has with China.

"You have two of the most powerful nations on earth and our interests coincide in many areas and our interests collide occasionally in a handful of those," he told reporters.

A senior Democratic senator said on Tuesday he had asked 30 U.S. companies, including Apple, Facebook and Skype, for information on their human rights practices in China in the aftermath of Google's decision to no longer cooperate with Chinese Internet censorship efforts.

"Google sets a strong example in standing up to the Chinese government's continued failure to respect the fundamental human rights of free expression and privacy," Assistant Senate Majority Leader Dick Durbin said.

Google, the world's top Internet search engine, said last month it would not abide by Beijing-mandated censorship of its Chinese-language search engine and might quit the Chinese market entirely because of cyber attacks from China.

Recent cyber attacks on Google were a "wake-up call" and neither the government nor the private sector can fully protect the U.S. infrastructure, Dennis Blair, director of national intelligence, said on Tuesday.

"Malicious cyber activity is occurring on an unprecedented scale with extraordinary sophistication," he said in written testimony for a Senate intelligence committee hearing.

"China's aggressive cyber activities" were among challenges posed by the Chinese military, Blair added.

'DAMAGE TRUST'

There had been expectations that Obama would meet the Dalai Lama as early as this month, when the Tibetan leader visits the United States. The White House has not announced a schedule.

Zhu Weiqun, a vice minister of the United Front Work Department of China's ruling Communist Party, said Beijing would vehemently oppose a meeting.

"If the U.S. leader chooses this time to meet the Dalai Lama, that would damage trust and cooperation between our two countries, and how would that help the United States surmount the current economic crisis?" said Zhu, whose department steers party policy over ethnic issues.

China routinely opposes meetings between the Dalai Lama and foreign leaders, especially after violent unrest spread across Tibetan areas in March 2008. Beijing blamed the Dalai Lama's "clique" for the turmoil, a charge he repeatedly rejected.

Previous U.S. presidents, including Obama's predecessor George W. Bush, have met the Dalai Lama, drawing angry words from Beijing but no substantive reprisals.

But when French President Nicolas Sarkozy would not pull out of meeting the Dalai Lama while his country held the rotating presidency of the European Union in late 2008, China hit back by canceling a summit with the EU.

The Dalai Lama has said he wants a high level of genuine autonomy for his homeland, which he fled in 1959. China says his demands amount to calling for outright independence.

China recently hosted talks with envoys of the Dalai Lama but they achieved little.

The United States says it accepts Tibet is a part of China but wants Beijing to sit down with the Dalai Lama to address their differences over the region's future.

TAIWAN ARMS SALES

Beijing is already irate over U.S. proposals last week to sell $6.4 billion of weapons to Taiwan, the island that China treats as an illegitimate breakaway province.

The United States switched diplomatic recognition from Taipei to Beijing in 1979 but Washington remains Taiwan's biggest backer and is obliged by the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act to help in the island's defense.

Blair told the Senate intelligence hearing that China-Taiwan ties were now "relatively stable and positive" with progress on economic deals across the Taiwan Strait.

"Nevertheless, the military imbalance continues to grow, further underscoring the potential limits to cross-Strait progress," he said.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu on Tuesday repeated Beijing's threat to impose "corresponding sanctions" against U.S. companies that sell arms to Taiwan, saying the firms had "ignored China's opposition."

He offered no details on how China would impose sanctions.

Companies that could be affected by Chinese sanctions include Sikorsky Aircraft Corp, a unit of United Technologies Corp; Lockheed Martin Corp; Raytheon Co; and McDonnell Douglas, a unit of Boeing Co.

Bruce Lemkin, deputy under-secretary of the U.S. Air Force, said China had over-reacted to the arms sales.

"The U.S. has been consistent with our stated policy and we carry out those policies," he said. "So certainly we believe that China should continue to work with us on issues of mutual concern and to work with Taiwan."

China says the arms dispute will also damage cooperation with the United States over international issues. Washington has sought stronger Chinese support over several hotspots, chiefly the nuclear ambitions of Iran and North Korea.

A former senior U.S. diplomat earlier told Reuters that China may not follow up strong words with strong measures.

"Let's watch what they do, not what they say, because sometimes tough words in China are a substitute for tough action," said Susan Shirk, a professor specializing in Chinese foreign policy at the University of California, San Diego.
 
.
could you just post the link next time ==.=="
it troublesome to have to scroll on this forum... with such long replies...

with all the recent issues... we should ask, why is the US gov, trying to cause all the troubles on China.
What are their intention?
imagine it as a card game, the question is whats in the pot.
 
.
The President of the United States the 44th President Barak Obama is demanded to kow'tow to his holiness the Dalai Lama when he meats him.

He managed a 90degree bow to a secular King of Saudis. He should be on his all fours when he met his holiness. Let's wait and see.

Or Both of them are so ******* cheap and thus analysed as fakes. Dalai isn't holy, and Obama is just a thief that has hit a jack pot and snaked into the white house. His days in da haos is cunted.

Barak, you are a piece of **** if you don't meet him.

Throughout your campaign and to this day, you have been repeating that nigger's cheap ****: "YOU HAVE A DREAM." Yes, now you are living your american dream by living in the white house. But Imagine, how would another white man would ever use that house after you?

If you are not a good nigger to CHina, you are a very bad ******* nigger.


I implore the mods to let your post stand as is - to serve as a reminder so that in some future date (assuming internet will still be around) others can look back and see exactly why the "motherland" fell ...

It will go by the way of all other empires and wannabes - by madness and self-destruction.

The meek shall inherit the earth :pakistan:
 
Last edited:
.
why was my reply deleted?
I see nothing wrong with mine ==.=="
impose him a exiled king?
in a way, he was
and to the gov, yes, he no longer means much
consider this a political game?
consider him(Dalai Lama) a joke?

I don't see whats wrong~~
or just because I quoted the other guy's reply?
 
.
I implore the mods to let your post stand as is - to serve as a reminder so that in some future date (assuming internet will still be around) others can look back and see exactly why the "motherland" fell ...

It will go by the way of all other empires and wannabes - by madness and self-destruction.

The meek shall inherit the earth :pakistan:

Hey guy's i dont know whats wrong on the decision to meet?
just to know the fact?... anybody :undecided: no offence!! lol
 
.
Hey guy's i dont know whats wrong on the decision to meet?
just to know the fact?... anybody :undecided: no offence!! lol

It has nothing to do with DL - I couldn't care less.

My response only concerns albwd, with particular regard to the underlined part of his OP.

The "motherland" I referred to is neither yours, nor Amrika.
 
.
**
It has nothing to do with DL - I couldn't care less.

My response only concerns albwd, with particular regard to the underlined part of his OP.

The "motherland" I referred to is neither yours, nor Amrika**
What he's trying to say?:undecided:

i asked **Hey guy's i dont know whats wrong on the decision to meet?
just to know the fact?... anybody no offence!! lol
:what:

w8ing for reply
 
.
It has nothing to do with DL - I couldn't care less.

My response only concerns albwd, with particular regard to the underlined part of his OP.

The "motherland" I referred to is neither yours, nor Amrika.


Sweety, the only thing i want to say yo you;

"Du lay lo mo choi height" many times, may be not enough though.
:china::cheers::china:
 
. . .
My thumbs up to this. :tup:

Slap on the face of those who call him just an old fool.


Yes that's r8 mate... tibet is an independent country as well as dalai.. and he have full rights to meet anybody he wants! no one can control him... that was chinese leaders mindset to restrict their ppl around them, other than their own ppl who cares the words of china!!

The meet will be successful lets wait and see:tup: :tup:
:pop:
 
.
"Du lay lo mo choi height"

Care to explain sir, we dont understand your 'Mother tongue'.

Regards.


No problem buddy, just= "a way to show my love" to somebody i

care.

But if you are interesting in it, i might consider to offer the same to

you though. :smitten::pakistan::china:
 
.
No problem buddy, just= "a way to show my love" to somebody i

care.

But if you are interesting in it, i might consider to offer the same to

you though
. :smitten::pakistan::china:

What ever wonderful stuff that is, please keep it for yourself and 200 times the same from me for your family and friends with my humble regards.

Cheers.
 
.

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom