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Xi's ‘Probe' of Diplomat Puts China Foreign Policy Team in Doubt

Xi's ‘Probe' of Diplomat Puts China Foreign Policy Team in Doubt

Bloomberg5 days ago
China's foreign-policy apparatus is again facing questions about succession after the reported questioning of a top figure who had been widely viewed as the nation's next foreign minister.
Just two years after the surprise ouster of Foreign Minister Qin Gang, senior diplomat Liu Jianchao has been detained for unclear reasons, according to a Wall Street Journal report. Liu has been heading the Communist Party's International Department, which conducts outreach to political parties and civic groups around the world and runs in parallel to the Foreign Ministry.
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Australian and Philippine forces launch largest military exercises near disputed South China Sea
Australian and Philippine forces launch largest military exercises near disputed South China Sea

Yahoo

time33 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Australian and Philippine forces launch largest military exercises near disputed South China Sea

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — Australia on Friday launched its largest military exercises with Philippine forces, involving more than 3,600 military personnel in live-fire drills, battle maneuvers and a beach assault at a Philippine town facing the disputed South China Sea, where the allies have raised alarm over Beijing's assertive actions. The exercises are called Alon, meaning wave in the Philippine language, and will showcase Australia's firepower. The drills will involve a guided-missile navy destroyer, F/A-18 supersonic fighter jets, a C-130 troop and cargo aircraft, Javelin anti-tank weapons and special forces sniper weapons. Military officials said defense forces from the United States, Canada, Japan, South Korea, New Zealand and Indonesia will join as observers. 'This exercise reflects Australia's commitment to working with partners to ensure we maintain a region where state sovereignty is protected, international law is followed and nations can make decisions free from coercion,' Vice Admiral Justin Jones of the Royal Australian Navy said in a statement. The combat exercises are 'an opportunity for us to practice how we collaborate and respond to shared security challenges and project force over great distances in the Indo-Pacific,' Jones said. The exercises will run until Aug. 29. Australia is the second country after the U.S. with a visiting forces agreement with the Philippines, allowing the deployment of large numbers of troops for combat exercises in each other's territory. The Philippines has signed a similar pact with Japan, which will take effect next month. It is in talks with several other Asian and Western countries including France and Canada for similar defense accords. China has deplored multinational war drills and alliances in or near the disputed South China Sea, saying the U.S. and its allies are 'ganging up' against it and militarizing the region. China claims most of the South China Sea, a busy global trade route, where it has had a spike of territorial faceoffs with the Philippines in recent years. Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan also lay claims to the resource-rich waters. On Monday, a Chinese navy ship collided with a Chinese coast guard ship while trying to drive away a smaller Philippine coast guard vessel in the Scarborough Shoal in the South China Sea. The Australian Embassy in Manila expressed concern over 'the dangerous and unprofessional conduct of Chinese vessels near Scarborough Shoal involving the Philippine Coast Guard' and said the incident 'highlights the need for de-escalation, restraint and respect for international law.' In response, the U.S. deployed two warships off the Scarborough on Wednesday in what it called a freedom of navigation operation to protest China's expansive claims, restrictions and its demand for entry notifications in the disputed waters. In February, a Chinese J-16 fighter jet released flares that passed within 30 meters (100 feet) of an Australian P-8 Poseidon military surveillance plane in daylight and in international air space, Australian defense officials said at the time. Solve the daily Crossword

Live Updates: Trump Backs Plan to Cede Land for Peace in Ukraine
Live Updates: Trump Backs Plan to Cede Land for Peace in Ukraine

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Live Updates: Trump Backs Plan to Cede Land for Peace in Ukraine

President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine in Rome last month. After the meeting in Anchorage on Friday, Mr. Zelensky spoke with President Trump on the phone, and made plans to travel to Washington this week. After President Trump and President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia ended inconclusive peace talks in Alaska, Ukraine was left in a position it knows all too well. It was scrambling to piece together what the two leaders had actually discussed, deciphering what they may have agreed on and striving to avoid being sidelined in peace talks. A call a few hours later from Mr. Trump filled in some of the gaps. President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine said the phone discussion, which included European leaders, had been 'long and substantive' and covered 'the main points' of the American leader's talks with Mr. Putin. Mr. Zelensky added that he would visit Mr. Trump in Washington on Monday 'to discuss all of the details regarding ending the killing and the war.' But even as Mr. Zelensky's statement suggested a potential path toward a peace deal after months of largely fruitless negotiations, a public statement by Mr. Trump later on Saturday morning raised questions about whether such an opening would be too heavily tilted toward Russia for Ukraine to accept. Mr. Trump called on social media for a direct peace agreement without securing a cease-fire first, claiming that Mr. Zelensky and European leaders had agreed on the point. His statement was a stark shift from the 'principles' agreed upon earlier in the week by Mr. Trump, Mr. Zelensky and his European allies, which called for refusing to discuss peace terms until a cease-fire was in place. Russia has long pushed for a direct peace deal that would address a broad range of issues and impose onerous demands on Ukraine, including territorial concessions. Avoiding a cease-fire would allow Russia to continue pressing its advantage on the battlefield in the meantime. An official briefed on the call between Mr. Trump and Mr. Zelensky said the Ukrainian leader's trip to Washington would aim to seek clarity from Mr. Trump. Kyiv does not understand why the American president suddenly dropped the demand that a cease-fire precede negotiations. In a statement, Mr. Zelensky seemed to tread carefully, trying not to openly contradict Mr. Trump. 'We need to achieve a real peace that will be lasting, not just another pause between Russian invasions,' Mr. Zelensky said. But he added that 'the killings must stop as soon as possible, and the fire must cease both on the battlefield and in the air, as well as against our port infrastructure,' suggesting that he was still prioritizing a cease-fire. Image Ukrainian soldiers in the Donetsk region in June. The Donbas, which is made up of the Donestk and Luhansk regions, is at the center of territorial disputes between Ukraine and Russia. Credit... Tyler Hicks/The New York Times In statements of their own, European leaders made no mention of having agreed to abandon their demand for a cease-fire. At the same time, the fact that the statements did not include a demand for a cease-fire, as in previous remarks, suggests at the very least an attempt not to antagonize Mr. Trump. Mr. Trump's move to aim for a direct peace deal could bring to failure a week of frantic diplomacy in which Kyiv, with European support, had lobbied the American administration to insist that a cease-fire should come first and that Ukraine should not be undercut in the negotiations. Mr. Trump's social media post caused a feeling of whiplash among some Ukrainians, who quickly reversed their early assessments of the Alaska summit. Oleksandr Merezhko, chairman of the foreign affairs committee in the Ukrainian Parliament, had initially expressed some relief, saying that 'the situation could have been worse' if Mr. Trump and Mr. Putin had struck a deal behind Ukraine's back. He said that a scenario in which 'Trump and Putin started together to pressure Ukraine into surrender' could not have been ruled out given Mr. Trump's history of deference to Mr. Putin. But after Mr. Trump's post on Truth Social, Mr. Merezhko changed his view. 'In fact, Putin and Trump are starting to force us into surrender,' he said. Mr. Trump also proposed security guarantees for Ukraine inspired by the collective defense agreement between NATO member countries, which states that any attack on a member is an attack against all, according to Giorgia Meloni, Italy's prime minister. Under such guarantees, Ukraine's NATO allies would be 'ready to take action' if Russia attacked again. But Mr. Merezhko and other Ukrainian allies said such a formulation was too vague. 'Which countries will agree to consider an attack against Ukraine as an attack against themselves?' Mr. Merezhko asked. 'I'd like to believe that we will find such countries, but I'm not sure.' Image Mr. Trump and President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage on Friday. Credit... Doug Mills/The New York Times Mr. Trump, in an interview with Fox News after the meeting with Mr. Putin, also addressed the idea of territorial swaps, saying they were among the points 'that we largely have agreed on.' Mr. Trump had said several times over the past week that territorial concessions would be part of a peace agreement, drawing pushback from Mr. Zelensky. Mr. Zelensky, however, has not entirely ruled out possible land swaps, telling reporters this week that this is 'a very complex issue that cannot be separated from security guarantees for Ukraine.' Mr. Merezhko, who like many Ukrainian officials was left on tenterhooks by the Alaska meeting, watched the post-meeting news conference live from Kyiv at around 2 a.m. local time. As both Mr. Trump and Mr. Putin offered only vague statements, Mr. Merezhko said it had become clear that no concrete deal had been reached. He noted that Mr. Putin had again said that any end to the fighting must address the 'root causes' of the war, which is Kremlin parlance for a range of issues that include the existence of Ukraine as a fully independent and sovereign nation aligned with the West. 'I think it's a failure because Putin was again talking about security concerns and used his usual rhetoric,' Mr. Merezhko said as the news conference came to an end. 'I don't see any changes.' Vadym Prystaiko, a former foreign affairs minister, said in a phone interview that the summit's brief duration — it lasted just a few hours and broke up ahead of schedule — indicated limited progress toward peace. He recalled that during cease-fire negotiations in the first Ukraine-Russia war, which started in 2014, he spent 16 hours in a room with Mr. Putin and Mr. Zelensky's predecessor, Petro Poroshenko. The cease-fire that was eventually agreed upon did not last, and fighting soon resumed. 'They didn't manage to sit enough hours to actually go through all the stuff that is needed to reach a deal,' Mr. Prystaiko said of Mr. Trump and Mr. Putin. In Kyiv, some emerged Saturday morning from a sleepless night following the news with the sense that the war was likely to continue unabated. After the Alaska summit wrapped up, the Ukrainian Air Force said that Russia had continued its assault on Ukraine, launching 85 drones and one ballistic missile overnight. These figures could not be independently verified. Image The aftermath of a Russian strike in Bilozerske, Donetsk region on Tuesday. Ukraine has demanded that a cease-fire precede a wider peace settlement, but Russia has refused to halt its attacks. Credit... Genya Savilov/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images Tetiana Chamlai, a 66-year-old retiree in Kyiv, said the situation with the war would change only if Ukraine was given more military support, to push Russian forces back enough to force Moscow to the negotiating table. 'That's the only way everything will stop,' she said. 'I personally do not see any other way out.' But Vice President JD Vance made clear this past week that the United States was 'done' funding Ukraine's defense against the Russian invasion. The Trump administration, however, is fine with Ukraine buying American weapons from U.S. companies, and Mr. Zelensky announced this week that Kyiv had secured $1.5 billion in European funding to purchase American arms. How long the Ukrainian Army can hold against relentless Russian assaults remains uncertain. Moscow's forces recently broke through a section of the Ukrainian defenses in the eastern Donbas region, and although their advance has been halted, the swift infiltration has underscored the strain on Ukraine's stretched lines. Balazs Jarabik, a former European Union diplomat in Kyiv who now works for R. Politik, a political analysis firm, said that Russia's upper hand on the battlefield had most likely played a role in Mr. Trump's agreeing to aim for a peace deal rather than a cease-fire. 'Kyiv and Europe must adapt to a new reality shaped by Washington and Moscow,' he said. Olha Konovalova contributed reporting.

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