World News Thread & Breaking News!!

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Thesisus

New Member
Re: World News Thread

Taking Harder Stance Toward China, Obama Lines Up Allies

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WASHINGTON — The Obama administration, facing a confrontational relationship with China on exchange rates, trade and security issues, is stiffening its approach toward Beijing, seeking allies to confront a newly assertive power that officials now say has little intention of working with the United States.

In a shift from its assiduous one-on-one courtship of Beijing, the administration is trying to line up coalitions — among China’s next-door neighbors and far-flung trading partners — to present Chinese leaders with a unified front on thorny issues like the currency and their country’s territorial claims in the South China Sea.

The advantages and limitations of this new approach were on display over the weekend at a meeting of the world’s largest economies in South Korea. The United States won support for a concrete pledge to reduce trade imbalances, which will put more pressure on China to allow its currency to rise in value.

But Germany, Italy and Russia balked at an American proposal to place numerical limits on these imbalances, a step that would have further isolated Beijing. That left the Treasury secretary, Timothy F. Geithner, to make an unscheduled stop in China on his way home from South Korea to discuss the deepening tensions over exchange rates with a top Chinese finance official.

Administration officials speak of an alarming loss of trust and confidence between China and the United States over the past two years, forcing them to scale back hopes of working with the Chinese on major challenges like climate change, nuclear nonproliferation and a new global economic order.

The latest source of tension is over reports that China is withholding shipments of rare-earth minerals, which the United States uses to make advanced equipment like guided missiles. Administration officials, clearly worried, said they did not know whether Beijing’s motivation was strategic or economic.

“This administration came in with one dominant idea: make China a global partner in facing global challenges,” said David Shambaugh, director of the China policy program at George Washington University. “China failed to step up and play that role. Now, they realize they’re dealing with an increasingly narrow-minded, self-interested, truculent, hyper-nationalist and powerful country.”

To counter what some officials view as a surge of Chinese triumphalism, the United States is reinvigorating cold war alliances with Japan and South Korea, and shoring up its presence elsewhere in Asia. This week, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will visit Vietnam for the second time in four months, to attend an East Asian summit meeting likely to be dominated by the China questions.

Next month, President Obama plans to tour four major Asian democracies — Japan, Indonesia, India and South Korea — while bypassing China. The itinerary is not meant as a snub: Mr. Obama has already been to Beijing once, and his visit to Indonesia has long been delayed. But the symbolism is not lost on administration officials.

Jeffrey A. Bader, a major China policy adviser in the White House, said China’s muscle-flexing became especially noticeable after the 2008 economic crisis, in part because Beijing’s faster rebound led to a “widespread judgment that the U.S. was a declining power and that China was a rising power.”

But the administration, he said, is determined “to effectively counteract that impression by renewing American leadership.”

Political factors at home have contributed to the administration’s tougher posture. With the economy sputtering and unemployment high, Beijing has become an all-purpose target. In this Congressional election season, candidates in at least 30 races are demonizing China as a threat to American jobs.

At a time of partisan paralysis in Congress, anger over China’s currency has been one of the few areas of bipartisan agreement, culminating in the House’s overwhelming vote in September to threaten China with tariffs on its exports if Beijing did not let its currency, the renminbi, appreciate.

The trouble is that China’s own domestic forces may cause it to dig in its heels. With the Communist Party embarking on a transfer of leadership from President Hu Jintao to his anointed successor, Xi Jinping, the leadership is wary of changes that could hobble China’s growth.

There are also increasingly sharp divisions between China’s civilian leaders and elements of the People’s Liberation Army. Many Chinese military officers are openly hostile toward the United States, convinced that its recent naval exercises in the Yellow Sea amount to a policy of encircling China.

Even the administration’s efforts to collaborate with China on climate change and nonproliferation are viewed with suspicion by some in Beijing.

Mr. Obama’s aides, many of them veterans of the Clinton years, understand that especially on economic issues, there are elements of brinkmanship in the relationship, which can imply more acrimony than actually exists.

But the White House was concerned enough that last month it sent a high-level delegation to Beijing that included Mr. Bader; Lawrence H. Summers, the departing director of the National Economic Council; and Thomas E. Donilon, who has since been named national security adviser.

“We were struck by the seriousness with which they shared our commitment to managing differences and recognizing that our two countries were going to have a very large effect on the global economy,” Mr. Summers said.

Just before the meeting, China began allowing the renminbi to rise at a somewhat faster rate, though its total appreciation, since Beijing announced in June that it would loosen exchange-rate controls, still amounts to less than 3 percent. Economists estimate that the currency is undervalued by at least 20 percent.

Meanwhile, trade tensions between the two sides are flaring anew. The administration recently agreed to investigate charges by the United Steelworkers that China was violating trade laws with its state support of clean-energy technologies. That prompted China’s top energy official, Zhang Guobao, to accuse the administration of trying to win votes — a barb that angered White House officials.

Of the halt in shipments of rare-earth minerals, Mr. Summers said, “There are serious questions, both in the economic and in the strategy realm, that are going to require close study within our government.”

Beijing had earlier withheld these shipments to Japan, after a spat over a Chinese fishing vessel that collided with Japanese patrol boats near disputed islands. It was one of several recent provocative moves by Beijing toward its neighbors — including one that prompted the administration to enter the fray.

In Hanoi in July, Mrs. Clinton said the United States would help facilitate talks between Beijing and its neighbors over disputed islands in the South China Sea. Chinese officials were livid when it became clear that the United States had lined up 12 countries behind the American position.

With President Hu set to visit Washington early next year, administration officials said Mrs. Clinton would strike a more harmonious note in Asia this week. For now, they said, the United States feels it has made its point.

“The signal to Beijing ought to be clear,” Mr. Shambaugh said. “The U.S. has other closer, deeper friends in the region.”


It looks as if the US is taking a harder position towards China. However, it is interesting to note that Timothy Geithner had to make an unscheduled stop in China on his way home, after the US failed to acheive the results it originally wanted at the G20 meeting. It shows the growing importance of China.
 

Spartan95

Junior Member
Re: World News Thread

Looks like the RoK Navy just lost another ship:

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S. Korea's navy ship sinks after boat collision
(Agencies)
Updated: 2010-11-11 09:04

SEOUL - A South Korean navy ship sank after colliding with a larger fishing boat, leaving one sailor dead and two missing, the military said Thursday.

The 150-ton navy vessel was returning to its base following a routine patrol mission Wednesday when it collided with a 270-ton South Korean fishing boat in waters northwest of the southern resort island of Jeju, a spokesman at the Joint Chiefs of Staff said. The cause of the collision wasn't immediately known.

Twenty-eight navy sailors were rescued, but one of them died while being treated at a hospital on the island. Two others were missing, the spokesman said on condition of anonymity citing department policy.

Some of the injured sailors were being treated at a hospital, while others were to be sent back to their base, he said. Navy vessels and helicopters were searching for the missing crew.

Damage to the fishing boat wasn't severe, the spokesman said. It was not immediately known how many crew were aboard the fishing boat, but another Joint Chiefs of Staff spokesman said his office has not received any reports that any of them were injured.

The navy plans to conduct salvage operations on the sunken vessel.

The fishing boat sailed to Jeju Island after the collision, according to the first spokesman. The island, about an hour's flight from Seoul, is a popular honeymoon resort for South Koreans.

South Korea's military is on its highest alert ahead of a two-day gathering of leaders from the G20 advanced and developing economies in Seoul.

Sounds like a small coastal patrol vessel. Still, not shaping up to be a good year for the RoKN.
 

Spartan95

Junior Member
Re: World News Thread

Putting this here since rather than starting a specific thread on it.

These videos are actually widely circulated and condemned on Facebook as well.

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Bunny-crushing videos stir Chinese online anger
Posted: 25 November 2010 1650 hrs

BEIJING: A group of "crush fetishists" has caused an online storm in China after uploading graphic videos showing attractive young Chinese women crushing small rabbits.

In the widely circulated videos, several smiling women are seen in turn cuddling and playing with small bunnies just before crushing them as other giggling girls look on.

In one scene, a young woman places a bunny on a table before covering it with a plate of glass and sitting on it for about a minute. She then lifts the glass up to reveal the lifeless bunny, blood oozing from its snout.

Another of the girls dispatches one of the rodents by crushing it under her high heels.

Media reports said kittens were also among the animals abused in the videos, although it was unclear whether the same group of girls was responsible for their deaths.

The videos have sparked a heated response from Web users, who launched what is known in China as a "flesh search" -- an effort to reveal the girls' true identities.

"It is hard to imagine someone could be so perverted," said one chatroom entry on the popular portal NetEase.

"Flesh-search them! Uncover these rabbit abuse women and spit on them," said another.

Such online vigilantism has been effective in the past in exposing malfeasance by corrupt businessmen, officials, and others.

The searches have revealed that a user group of animal-crushing enthusiasts was organising and financing the videos, according to media reports.

A purported apology by one of the girls was circulated online this week, but many critics dismissed it as unauthentic and a bid by the fetish group to tamp down the outrage.

China Radio International quoted one girl identified as Huang Xiaoxiao as saying she had been paid to do several videos.

Payment starts at 100 yuan (about 15 US dollars) for crushing fruit, 200-300 yuan for "other small animals" and up to 400 yuan for rabbits, she was quoted saying.

Animal-crush videos are sold to fetishists in search of a sexual thrill. A bill to crack down on such videos is about to be voted into law in the United States, according to the US-based Humane Society.

China's censors have in recent years carried out a much-publicised crackdown on what they say is a proliferation of porn and other vulgar online content.

China has the world's largest number of Internet users, with 420 million according to the most recent Chinese count.

- AFP/ir
 

Scratch

Captain
Re: World News Thread

Another political crises in a west african country.
It seemed to go smooth initially. After a military coup and elections postponed for several times, a genereal election took place in Ivory Coast. The country even invited the UN to check the elections.
Then the elections showed the opposition candidate had won and the UN declared them for correct. But that is the point were the old ruling elite steped in and declared the current president was the winner. Military went onto the streets and out a curfew in place. I think there have been some clashes in the streets and people are concered with their security.
That puts further strains on an already rather weak economy in that country.
The EU, US, UN etc. already have called on the current president to accept the results and step down, what he refuses. It appears he actually has pulled back from the public to a place were he feels more secure. The AU and a west africaneconomy block have suspended Ivory Coast from their ranks.
So far the situation seems to be somewhat under controll. But I think the general area there is rather instable. A successfull election could have provided some stability for the region. Hopefully, the situation doesn't flare up in a wider context here. I don't see that right now. But then again it's also another issue hindering the general development of an african region

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Ivory Coast Faces Higher Prices, Shortages as Political Crisis Deepens
By Olivier Monnier and Pauline Bax - Dec 10, 2010 12:43 PM GMT+0100

Since Ivory Coast’s disputed presidential election on Nov. 28, prices have soared at Abidjan’s Treichville market, fuel has been in short supply and an evening curfew has damped business at clubs and restaurants.
“Everything has become more expensive,” said Mariam Kone, a food seller at Treichville.
The economic cost of the crisis is mounting, with no end in sight to the political deadlock that has seen two rival candidates sworn in as president. Cocoa farmers have slowed delivery to processing plants because of safety fears, while Newcrest Mining Ltd., Australia’s largest gold mining company, said on Dec. 6 that it had suspended operations at its Bonikro mine.
Opposition candidate Alassane Ouattara was named winner of the vote with 54.1 percent by the country’s electoral commission on Dec. 2. A day later, the Constitutional Council annulled the win by canceling votes in some northern regions over allegations of irregularities, and named incumbent President Laurent Gbagbo the victor.
“We need to know who our new president is so prices can go down again,” Kone said.
The United Nations, the European Union, the U.S. and the African Union have all called on Gbagbo to cede power to Ouattara. The Economic Community of West African States and the African Union suspended Ivory Coast from their regional blocs this week. ...

And another background story:

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Calamitous Côte d'Ivoire
Another big test for Africa
A once much admired country is falling fast. Don’t let its rulers ignore a fair election

Dec 9th 2010 | from PRINT EDITION

FOR more than three sunlit decades, Côte d’Ivoire glistened as the jewel of west Africa and throbbed as its economic engine. An array of nearby countries, such as Ghana and Nigeria, which had fallen into misrule and penury, envied the Ivorians’ stability and growing wealth. Under a benevolent and canny autocrat, Félix Houphouët-Boigny, who ran the show after independence from France in 1960 until he died in 1993, Côte d’Ivoire prospered, albeit with a clutch of Frenchmen pulling strings behind the scenes, often on France’s behalf. But once the old man had gone, the country succumbed to coups, chaos and ethnic division. Though still the world’s biggest supplier of cocoa, the economy slumped. In 2002 civil war erupted. A populist despot, Laurent Gbagbo, hung on as president. The jewel became a shameful, shabby trinket. ...
 
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Scratch

Captain
Re: World News Thread

Just a few hours and some articles later, the situation appears a lot darker. Security forces of the old and deselected government attacked young opposition protestors in their homes and took them away. Some say it starts to be like in the civil war days of 2003-4.
There's actually two presidents now. After the old one swore himseld in, his opponent did the same thing shortly thereafter and introduced his own cabinet. This guy is sitting in a hotel protected by UN peace keepers.
The situation seems heading to a confrontation. While the old president sais stuff like "there won't be a war, we'll sit and talk and solve the situation", his actions speak otherwise. Maybe he wants to appear better to the outside until he has consolidated his position.
Anyway, as I already said earlier, the region is rather fragile already. I hope the AU & UN can actually apply some usefull pressure here. It can also be chance for the AU to show that it can solve problems.

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Raids on Opposition Stir Fears in Ivory Coast
By ADAM NOSSITER - Published: December 10, 2010

ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast – The uniformed men came in the morning, while the youths in the opposition neighborhood were sleeping. Some wore masks.
They broke down metal doors, grabbed the young men from their beds and, yelling insults, beat them with truncheons. They took the youths away; one later died from the beatings, residents said. Within minutes, the dusty street was packed with angry mothers.
“Right in front of us, they severely mistreated our young ones!” lamented Mariam Diarra, after the young men had been hauled away early this week. Around her, dozens of distraught women milled about. [...]
Another season of political violence is breaking on this troubled country, after years of coups, unrest, civil war and an election that was meant to put it all to rights. But the voting seems to have done the opposite. Two presidents, backed by two armies, now stare at each other warily. Diplomats say the risk of a return to civil war is real.
And an ominous warning, unheard since the aftermath of the previous civil war six years ago, is being whispered on the streets: the government death squads are back.
A secret United Nations report detailed their activities in 2003-4. Never made public, it was suppressed, former United Nations officials say, for fear of upsetting the government of President Laurent Gbagbo and the fragile peace process that has now apparently ended in failure. [...]
In the last week, dozens of opposition supporters have been beaten or wounded by bullets, and at least 20 have been killed around the country, including nine in Abidjan alone, according to Amnesty International. On at least three occasions, residents say, masked, uniformed men have struck with guns and truncheons in opposition territory, mostly Muslim and poor, in this sprawling metropolis. [...]
As he spoke, others crowded in to show bruises and bandages. Women were beaten as well by the squad of about 30 officers and state security agents, residents said. ...

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UPDATE 2-Gbagbo hints at possible talks in Ivorian poll row
Fri Dec 10, 2010 6:44pm GMT

By David Lewis and Loucoumane Coulibaly

ABIDJAN, Dec 10 (Reuters) - Ivory Coast President Laurent Gbagbo has dismissed talk of a possible resumption of war and called for negotiations to end the crisis triggered by a dispute over a Nov. 28 presidential election.
The comments, published in the state-run Fraternite Matin newspaper on Friday, are the first signs from Gbagbo that he is ready for talks to end a deadlock after a top legal body named him as president, reversing election commission results that said his rival Alassane Ouattara had clearly won the vote.
Both men say they are serving as president, having named prime ministers and their respective governments. [...]
"We hear people say there will be war, that there will be an explosion. There will not be a war here. Things will end up with us sitting down (together)," Gbagbo was quoted as saying in the newspaper. "Let's sit down and talk. If there is a problem, we will sit down and talk."
 

Schumacher

Senior Member
Re: World News Thread

What do you guys think of this ? You can watch the entire program on the link.
Somewhat worrying for those who fly a lot considering the large number of B737NG out there.

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bladerunner

Banned Idiot
Re: World News Thread

What do you guys think of this ? You can watch the entire program on the link.
Somewhat worrying for those who fly a lot considering the large number of B737NG out there.

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IMO The Cargo Door Saga in the DC10 spelt the beginning of the end for Mcdonnell Douglas, so I suspect if any downing of the 737 is owed to large scale structure failure as a result of this defect, then the same could happen to Boeing
 

Schumacher

Senior Member
Re: World News Thread

IMO The Cargo Door Saga in the DC10 spelt the beginning of the end for Mcdonnell Douglas, so I suspect if any downing of the 737 is owed to large scale structure failure as a result of this defect, then the same could happen to Boeing

Talking about the end of Boeing is a bit too much at this point even if the allegations are true. US will never let it happen at this point, it's just too important to the nation.
Maybe that's why the Justice Department and FAA are alleged to be 'helping' Boeing on this issue.
 

Scratch

Captain
Re: World News Thread

More trouble in Ivory Coast. Opposition protestors marching towards the state news broadcaster have been shot at by military persoal loyal to the incumbent presidet. Several were killed. One of their leaders, the so called "street general of Abidjan", has rallied supporters to "take back full sovereignty over the country". And people dressed in military uniform have attacked UN peacekeepers returning from a patrol.

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Masked men open fire on UN base in Ivory Coast
By MARCO CHOWN OVED - The Associated Press - Saturday, December 18, 2010; 9:33 AM

ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast -- Masked men in military uniforms opened fire on the United Nations base after following guards back from a patrol early Saturday, the U.N. mission said. No one at the U.N. was harmed in the shooting, which came two days after violent protests left up to 30 dead.
The six armed men in a civilian vehicle shot at the patrol as it entered the mission compound early Saturday and continued firing along the wall of the compound, the U.N. mission said. The U.N. guards returned fire, according to a statement released Saturday. ...

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Ivory Coast told to 'get ready for combat'

Ivory Coast leader Laurent Gbagbo's most feared supporter, Charles Ble Goude, has urged his followers to get ready for battle against the rival government of Alassane Ouattara.
Mr Ble Goude has been under United Nations sanctions since 2006 for "acts of violence by street militias, including beatings, rapes and extrajudicial killings".
He is best known as leader of the Young Patriot movement that led attacks on French interests and opposition supporters during a previous crisis in Ivory Coast in 2004.
He summoned his followers to a rally where he declared that "play time is over".
"We are going to defend the sovereignty of our country until the last drop of our sweat," he said.
"I urge all Ivorians to make themselves ready for this combat. We are going to totally liberate our country." ...
- AFP
 

Red Moon

Junior Member
Re: World News Thread

More trouble in Ivory Coast. Opposition protestors marching towards the state news broadcaster have been shot at by military persoal loyal to the incumbent presidet. Several were killed. One of their leaders, the so called "street general of Abidjan", has rallied supporters to "take back full sovereignty over the country". And people dressed in military uniform have attacked UN peacekeepers returning from a patrol.

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I wonder if he "has been under United Nations sanctions since 2006", for whatever, precisely because he was "leader of the Young Patriot movement that led attacks on French interests".
 
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