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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum
GLD 379.91+0.4%Nov 11 4:00 PM EST

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To: TobagoJack who wrote (190258)7/26/2022 7:25:50 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) of 217693
 
Re <<Dark Side of China>>

Decisions decisions

bloomberg.com


Pelosi’s Peers Say Don’t Cave to China Over Potential Taiwan Stop

Democrats, Republicans say China shouldn’t dictate Pelosi trip China has warned of repercussions if House speaker makes visit

Laura Litvan
27 July 2022, 03:31 GMT+8



Nancy PelosiPhotographer: Eric Lee/BloombergHouse Speaker Nancy Pelosi is getting bipartisan support for a possible trip to Taiwan, with some lawmakers from both parties arguing that it’s important that the top leader in the US Congress show no sign of giving in to pressure from China’s government.

“If we can allow the Chinese to dictate who can visit Taiwan and who cannot, then we have already ceded Taiwan to the Chinese,” said Senate Foreign Relations Chair Bob Menendez, a New Jersey Democrat who made his own trip to Taiwan in April. “If they can veto everyone in the world who wants to come to Taiwan, then Taiwan will be isolated. So I think she has an absolute right to visit and I think the support of Taiwan is important.”

Senator John Cornyn, a Texas Republican who visited Taiwan in late 2021, said that “it’s an important message that we’re not going to cave to the Chinese Communist party.”

The government in Beijing has escalated threats of repercussions since reports last week that Pelosi was planning a stop in Taiwan during a trip to Asia next month, which would come days after of an expected call between President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping. Taiwan, which China considers part of its territory, is a particularly sensitive issue.

Read More: Pelosi’s Taiwan Ambiguity Has China Fuming Ahead of Biden Call

Pelosi scrapped a reported trip to Taiwan in April after testing positive for Covid. She has refused to discuss her current travel plans, citing security concerns. She said last week that it was “important for us to show support for Taiwan.” A person familiar with the planning said no decision’s been made about a Taiwan stop. Biden last week suggested the visit is “not a good idea right now,” without giving details, but the administration has said the decision is Pelosi’s to make.

John Kirby, spokesman for Biden’s National Security Council, declined to discuss any security consultations with Pelosi’s staff, saying the speaker hasn’t announced any travel. He also criticized the “bellicosity” of statements from China’s Defense and Foreign ministries about Pelosi’s potential schedule.

“There’s no trip to speak to and rhetoric of that kind only escalates tensions in a completely unnecessary manner,” he told reporters at a briefing.

Some Republicans are using perceived reticence by Biden as a weapon against him. The Republicans on the House Oversight Committee tweeted Tuesday that “Biden is taking orders from Communist China on where members of Congress can travel.”

Republican Newt Gingrich, who was the last House speaker to stop in Taiwan when he led a delegation there in 1997, blasted the administration as being too timid and inviting bullying by China.

“And so I commend Nancy,” Gingrich said at a policy summit in Washington. “We have enormous disagreements on 98 or 99% of the things, but on this one, I think her instinct is right. I hope she sticks her guns.”

Some Democrats said switching course after veiled threats from the Chinese would be a mistake.

“Certainly our relationship with Taiwan is important and to have her go and strengthen that relationship is a good thing,” Senator Gary Peters, a Michigan Democrat, said. “We have to make sure our friends know that they’re our friends.”

Senate Intelligence Committee Chair Mark Warner said he’s sure Pelosi will only make a final decision after closely conferring with the administration, including the Department of Defense.

“I think it’s important to show support for Taiwan, but these are tenuous times,” the Virginia Democrat said. “I think the speaker will make the right choice at the end of the day.”

— With assistance by Billy House, Iain Marlow, Mark Niquette, and Akayla Gardner

(Updates with National Security Council spokesman in sixth, seventh paragraphs)
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