Yahoo "news" says "president hopes meeting will get Xi Jinping to 'lower his guard""

I wonder if Obama will have his gay and transgender props for these meetings too. :lol:

The meat muppet show is directed by Valerie Jarrett who has her hand up his ass. It's bigger than any of the cocks bath house barry has ever enjoyed. He snaps to attention when ever a pinko cause needs him thanks to that vile thing.

It's almost hysterical that the chi-coms and muzbots generally revile butt piracy, they kill them publicly. Here we are though with an oxygen thief pole smoker for a "POTUS" watching the world shit the bed and on the brink of another global war.

We have to acknowledge that the "powers that be" see lower class humans as a resource that needs to be culled from time to time. There is no way we could have a more insipid presidency since Woodrow Wilson unless leftist billionaires decide to fund a Joe Biden. Obozo has been such a complete disaster that even incompetent RINOs in congress can barely keep him in check.






























































































































































































































































































































































































































































What's with the big blank space? Is that an image of Luddly Neddite's brain? :dunno:
 
It seems to me that if you want someone to lower their guard, you don't tell that to the media to have them broadcast it throughout the world.
 
Your first link had nothing but speculation, and no references to where they came up with that information. Your second link... well... was from a site called Topsecretwriters. :cuckoo: Your third link is one paragraph long and specifically says that the US DoD is trying to build trust and manage potential friction over the situation in Taiwan. Your fourth link is a guy trying to sell his book. Anything substantial?

Have you ever slept on sheets not stained with piss? I detest parasites like you. Our nation desperately needs a modern Augusto Pinochet that will encourage parasites like you to seek refuge in North Korea.

You will drain their meager resources in less than a month and they will be forced to embrace a free market economy much to your chagrin.
 
Daniel Russel tryin' to smooth over charge by William Stanton...

US officials seek to reassure Taiwan
Thu, Sep 24, 2015 - WASHINGTON BRIEFING: US Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia Daniel Russel said that the US would not paper over its differences with China on important issues
US officials are reassuring Taiwan that no matter what Chinese President Xi Jinping says about it during his summit with US President Barack Obama this week, Washington will not change its current policies. “It is normal for a Chinese leader to raise Taiwan,” US Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia and Pacific Affairs Daniel Russel told a media briefing on Tuesday. “We will always make clear when the issue arises that we place great importance on stability across the [Taiwan] Strait,” he said. “We respect the right of the people on Taiwan to exercise their democratic rights and will continue to counsel restraint on the part of Beijing in order to maintain trust and stability.”

Speaking at the same event, Daniel Kritenbrink, senior director for Asian affairs at the US National Security Council, said that the US respected Taiwan’s democratic process and had a long-standing position on cross-strait issues based on the “one China” policy, the six communiques and the Taiwan Relations Act (TRA). “Our fundamental interest is in cross-strait stability,” he said. Russel said that the US had an immensely complex relationship with China, one that was anchored in a commitment to prevent strategic rivalry and to ensure “we are working to reconcile our respective legitimate interests.” “We are digging down on problem areas. That will be a significant dimension of the summit. We do not paper over our differences with China on important issues,” he said. “We have serious differences over what constitutes acceptable behavior in cyberspace and in maritime space — particularly in the South China Sea.”

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Pro-Taiwan protesters on Tuesday shout during a rally in Seattle, Washington, as Chinese President Xi Jinping attends an event at the Westin Hotel nearby.

He said there were also differences on human rights and the treatment of civil society, as well as financial and regulatory policy. Russel said that the US was not trying to contain China and that US policy was not hostile. “The same rights that apply to the big and strong apply similarly to the small and weak. Freedom of navigation and freedom of over-flight are not rights that one country grants to another,” he said. “Strong and important countries like China have to ensure that small neighbors have the ability to exercise those same rights,” he said. Xi arrived in Seattle on Tuesday and is to meet with Obama at the White House later today and tomorrow.

As Xi arrived, the New York Times said that the US and China had been negotiating what could become the first arms control accord for cyberspace with a goal of announcing an agreement during Xi’s visit. According to the newspaper, the deal would safeguard critical infrastructure during peacetime, but was not expected to cover contentious issues such as the theft of intellectual property or data. An article by Bloomberg predicted that Xi’s visit would be overshadowed by China’s growing military assertiveness, its expanding economic espionage and its crackdown on human rights at home. “We have to be cognizant the level of anxiety, competition and tension in our relationship is here to stay,” former US Department of State official Kurt Campbell was quoted as saying by Bloomberg.

US officials seek to reassure Taiwan - Taipei Times
 
Schmoozin' with the Chinaman...

Hi-tech flavour: US tech titans attend Obama's state dinner for Xi
Sep 27, 2015, WASHINGTON: In a reflection of just how important Washington's relationship with Beijing has become, President Obama on Friday held his second state dinner for China, the only country to receive such a double honour from him.
And the guest list reflected just how important Beijing is to America's titans of techno logy. The guests included Mark Zuckerberg, who is try ing to persuade the Chinese government to lift a ban on Fa cebook, the company he foun ded, and Tim Cook, the chief executive of Apple, which sells more iPhones in China than in any other country .

Also on the list were Sa tya Nadella, the chief execu tive of Microsoft, which wants China to approve sales of its latest operating sy stem, Windows 10; Larry Elli son, the executive chairman of Oracle; and Jeffrey Kat zenberg, the chief executive of DreamWorks Animation. Zuckerberg, Cook and Nadella were seated at the head table with Obama and President Xi Jinping of China. The tech executives arrived just hours after Xi said in a news conference that his nation and the US had reached consensus on a "joint fight against cybercrimes".

In his toast, Obama acknowledged differences with the Chinese but said a history of cooperation dated back decades. "Just as you say in China that a sea accepts a hundred rivers, our countries together are stronger when we accept the diversity of the views and the contributions and uphold the rights of all our people," Obama said.

For this China state dinner, much about the evening was different, including the president being honoured -the previous dinner, in 2011, was for Hu Jintao -and the issues at stake. But poached Maine lobster was again on the menu.

Hi-tech flavour: US tech titans attend Obama's state dinner for Xi - The Times of India

See also:

Tech companies should do more than schmooze with China's president
Sep 21, 2015 - This week’s visit of China President Xi Jinping to Seattle is an honor, but one that’s tempered by broader concerns.
China’s decision to begin President Xi Jinping’s U.S. visit in Seattle is an honor. This momentous occasion recognizes the extraordinary relationship Washington state has long had with the world’s largest nation. By starting his first state trip with visits to Microsoft and Boeing, Xi Jinping underscores the importance of these companies to the world economy and of relationships between the leading superpowers. The companies offer more than just products to buy and export. They build powerful tools that carry people, companies and countries into the future. They create ecosystems of suppliers and service providers that foster clusters of industry.

Perhaps most important, they attract and train people who invent and build some of the world’s most complex and valuable products. China, like every other nation, seeks to learn from these companies and emulate the success Washington and the United States have had in nourishing them. A manifestation of this is the Global Innovation Exchange (GIX), the graduate technology institute that the University of Washington, Microsoft and China’s Tsinghua University are establishing in Bellevue. GIX helps cement a Washington-China relationship that should continue for generations.

Yet there are concerns about other paths China is taking to elevate its industry at the expense of U.S. companies, including its protectionism and apparent industrial espionage. Quantifying this is difficult, but in 2012, then-National Security Agency Director Keith Alexander said U.S. companies were losing $250 billion a year through intellectual property theft. International cybercrime has only increased since then, pushing the U.S. toward taking a harder line with China, including possible sanctions. More recently, China has reportedly pressed tech companies doing business there to let the government access their systems, exposing user-data and intellectual property.

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