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Obama camp lashes Romney's China 'hypocrisy'W/LLL
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Sept 14, 2012


US President Barack Obama's campaign lashed Mitt Romney for "hypocrisy" on China Friday, claiming his tough talk was undermined by his business record of shipping US jobs to the Asian giant.

The Democratic counter-punch came a day after Romney hammered Obama's record on China, and renewed his promise to brand it a currency manipulator on his first day in office in remarks which drew a stern rebuke from Beijing.

Obama's campaign enlisted former Democratic governor Ted Strickland of vital swing state Ohio, which has seen thousands of manufacturing jobs migrate to developing economies abroad, to press the president's attack.

"Governor Romney's hypocrisy apparently knows no end. He claims that he'll crack down on China but he's never done that and I don't think he ever will," Strickland said, unloading criticism on Romney's past as a venture capitalist.

"The truth is, Mr Romney's made a fortune investing in firms that specialize in shipping jobs to China and other low wage countries.

"Romney's economic philosophy was simple, and hasn't changed: profits over people, even if that means Americans lose their jobs," Strickland said on a conference call with reporters.

The Obama campaign also debuted a new advertisement which will air in nine battleground states which plowed similar ground to Strickland and accuses Romney of investing some of his fortune in China.

Romney spokeswoman Andrea Saul however said that Obama's policies towards Beijing had deepened the misery of Americans stuck in the slow economic recovery.

"They've cost hundreds of thousands of jobs and left American manufacturing in decline. As president, Mitt Romney will take immediate action to stop China's cheating and protect American jobs here at home," she said.

Romney had launched his own attack on China on Thursday, branding Beijing a cheat because of its currency and trade policies.

"The cheating takes on a lot of different dimensions," Romney said.

"The president's had the chance year after year to label China a currency manipulator, but he hasn't done so. And I will label China the currency manipulator they are on the first day."

Romney's remarks were met with a stinging response in a commentary carried by China's official Xinhua news agency.

"It is advisable that politicians, including Romney, should abandon ... short-sighted China-bashing tricks and adopt at least a little bit of statesmanship on China-US ties," the commentary said.

The unnamed author also warned a trade war would likely break out if Romney took office and honored his threat to label China a currency manipulator, and also accused the former Massachusetts governor of hypocrisy.

"It is rather ironic that a considerable portion of this China-battering politician's wealth was actually obtained by doing business with Chinese companies before he entered politics."

Strickland seized on that comment to make a wider point about Romney's foreign policy credentials.

"If even the Chinese government is willing to publicly call out this hypocrisy, how can we expect them to take him seriously if he were president?"

China bashing is a regular feature of US election campaigns, but once in office, presidents have a habit of following decades-long US foreign policy orthodoxy of seeking cooperation with Beijing.

Top Chinese leaders have told Obama that they expect a measure of anti-Beijing rhetoric in the US election, US officials have said.

But the Xinhua commentary appeared to be a shot across Romney's bow and suggest a rocky period for Sino-US relations if he comes from behind to beat Obama in the election on November 6.

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Pentagon chief to visit China, Japan in Asia tour
Washington (AFP) Sept 13, 2012 - Defense Secretary Leon Panetta departs this weekend on a trip to China, Japan and New Zealand, officials said Thursday, as part of a US bid to shift towards the region despite crises in the Middle East.

But it was unclear if Panetta would meet Beijing's leader-in-waiting, whose whereabouts have been the subject of intense speculation.

Panetta's visit to China, his first as Pentagon chief, comes amid regional tensions fueled by territorial disputes and swirling rumors over the political fate of Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping, who has virtually disappeared from public view in the past two weeks.

Xi made his first public communication through state media on Thursday but has not been seen in public for 13 days.

Asked if Panetta was due to meet Xi, Pentagon spokesman George Little said: "This is not something I would comment on. This is for the Chinese to discuss, of course."

The US delegation looked forward "to meetings with top Chinese military leaders" but "the itinerary hasn't been locked in stone," Little told a news conference.

"We believe this will be a very productive and cordial visit, one that will advance our shared goals of a more transparent and even more viable relationship with the Chinese military," he added.

Panetta's trip marks his third to Asia in 11 months, underscoring President Barack Obama's bid to "rebalance" Washington's focus towards the region.

Despite the much-publicized tilt to the Asia-Pacific, the Obama administration has been forced to confront recurring turmoil in the Middle East, with a deadly attack on the US consulate in Libya on Tuesday by Islamist militants.

Panetta's trip to Asia coincides with mounting friction between China and its neighbors over territorial disputes.

In the potentially resource-rich East China Sea, Beijing and Tokyo have clashed over disputed islands. And in the South China Sea, the Philippines and Vietnam have accused China of a wave of intimidation against fishermen and rival nations' ships as Beijing exerts its claims to virtually all of the strategic waterway.

Before his visit to China, Panetta will fly to Japan, where China's more assertive stance is expected to top the agenda as well as US plans to deploy tilt-rotor Osprey aircraft at an American military base on Okinawa.

The plan to move 12 Osprey aircraft to the southern island has sparked major protests but US officials say they have no intention of scrapping the idea.

"We've been in close consultation with Japanese defense officials about the MV-22 Osprey aircraft," Little said.

Pentagon officials have sought to reassure their Japanese counterparts on the safety of the Osprey, briefing them on the circumstances of an April crash in Morocco that killed two US Marines.

The Osprey, which can take off like a helicopter and then rotate its motors down enabling it to fly like a turboprop plane, was plagued by crashes and technical problems in its early phase but US commanders insist the aircraft is safe.

Tens of thousands of people staged protests in Okinawa over the weekend, demanding the US scrap plans to move the aircraft to the southern island.

The Pentagon said that Japan had made no request to alter plans to deploy the aircraft.

"I'm unaware of any request to postpone the deployment or operation of the Osprey. I don't have a time line for when the Osprey will go fully operational, but, as I said, we believe the deployment remains on track," Little said.

After stops in Tokyo and Beijing, Panetta will head to New Zealand, the first US defense secretary to visit the country in more than 30 years, officials said.

Panetta's trip to New Zealand follows the signing of a cooperation agreement in June between the two defense ministries.



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Six China ships near isles disputed with Japan
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 14, 2012
Six Chinese ships sailed into waters around a disputed archipelago on Friday, with Beijing saying they were there for "law enforcement" around islands Japan nationalised earlier this week. The move - dubbed "unprecedented" by Tokyo - came as it was reported Japanese nationals had been physically attacked in China, marking the latest stage in a deteriorating row between Asia's two biggest e ... read more


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