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Obama doing 'insipid job', China paper says ahead of visit
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Nov 05, 2014


Portugal escorts Russian boat from its waters
Lisbon (AFP) Nov 05, 2014 - The Portugese Navy escorted a Russian oceanographic ship out of its waters Wednesday in response to the latest in a series of territorial incursions by a Russian vessel or plane.

Portugal identified the ship in the section of sea it has exclusive resource rights over and then guided the vessel back into international waters, Portugal's Defence Minister Jose Pedro Aguiar-Branco told Portugese press agency LUSA.

The incident comes just a week after Portuguese fighter jets intercepted on two separate occasions Russian military planes in international airspace that was under Portugal's jurisdiction.

Russia denied its planes had violated Portuguese airspace.

Russian military jets have significantly increased their activity over Europe since the crisis in Ukraine erupted last year.

NATO has intercepted Russian aircraft on more than 100 occasions so far this year, three times more than all of 2013, its new head Jens Stoltenberg said in October.

China's state-run media on Wednesday decried Barack Obama as a banal leader who has done an "insipid job", days ahead of a visit by the US president.

The editorial in the Global Times, which has close ties to China's ruling Communist Party, came as the Republicans took control of the US Senate from Obama's Democrats.

"Obama always utters 'Yes, we can,' which led to the high expectations people had for him," the Global Times wrote, referring to Obama's 2008 campaign-trail mantra.

"But he has done an insipid job, offering nearly nothing to his supporters."

"US society has grown tired of his banality," it added.

Although the US economy has improved gradually since the 2008 recession, the national mood is far from buoyant, with a CNN exit poll on Tuesday showing 54 percent of voters disapproved of how Obama was handling his job.

The US president will be in China from November 10 to 12 for a two-day Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit, followed by a state visit.

In a speech in Washington ahead of the trip, US Secretary of State John Kerry on Tuesday called the US-China relationship the "most consequential" in the world, warning that it needed to be "carefully managed".

He maintained that the US remains "deeply concerned" by mounting regional tensions -- Beijing has disputes with Japan and several of its South China Sea neighbours -- and that "we do not simply agree to disagree when it comes to maritime security".

Beijing's foreign ministry responded Wednesday that differences between China and the US are "natural" given the two countries' "different histories, cultures, social systems and economic development status".

"Both sides should respect each other, seek common ground, and handle these differences in a constructive way," said Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei.

The Global Times spared no criticism of Obama, particularly on foreign policy. In its editorial, the paper argued that Obama took "US troops out of Iraq and Afghanistan, but left no peace".

"Osama bin Laden was killed during his tenure, but the (Islamic State) has emerged from the Middle East," it wrote.

The newspaper noted the "many thorny problems" Obama has encountered during his six years in office, including the "limited tolerance and acceptance" he has received as the first African-American president.

It also observed that his tenure came "in the midst of a time when partisan politics is becoming more extreme".

Obama's "best performance is empty rhetoric", the paper said, and suggested that Western political systems were fundamentally flawed.

"Bush, who dared to do everything, and Obama, who dares to do nothing, come from different parties but have the same destiny," the paper wrote. "Is this their problem or the problem of the US system?"

"With China's rise, we gradually have the ability to have a clear understanding of the US," the paper concluded. "The country is too lazy to reform."


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