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The Bizarre 'Xi Jinping Love' of the Biden family…Collusion with China…An Intense Time for Two

The following is from an article by Mr. Seki Hei published yesterday in the monthly magazine Hanada.
The report is a must-read not only for Japanese citizens but also for people around the world.
The Bizarre 'Xi Jinping Love' of the Biden family
Collusion with China

As of November 14, 2012, President Trump's side is still in court, pursuing election fraud allegations, with no resolution yet reached.
On the other hand, the birth of the "Biden administration" in January of next year has much to do because the world's leaders, including Japanese Prime Minister Suga, are sending congratulatory telegrams and phone calls to Mr. Biden one after another.
So, we need to seriously consider what will happen under the "Biden regime" in the next four years from January.
How will Mr. Biden deal with China when China's hegemonic policies significantly threaten Japan's security and other Asian countries?
It is a big question that we can't help but be especially concerned about his policy to China.
When considering Biden's stance on China, we do not know what he said during the presidential campaign because he did not talk about China.
One gets the sense that he did not talk much about China during the campaign but deliberately avoided the topic.
Even when he has occasionally referenced China and spoken harshly about it, it is still being determined whether he meant it in earnest or only for election purposes. Biden's stance on China remains uncharted territory.
One need only look at how Biden has interacted with China as a politician to find out.
In particular, how has he interacted with China in the eight years since he became vice president of the Obama administration in 2009?
An in-depth examination reveals Biden's cozy relationship with China, particularly the bizarre closeness between him and President Xi Jinping.
It is Biden's behavior toward Xi Jinping when they first met.
Biden's friendship with President Xi Jinping dates back nine years, in 2011.
In August of that year, Mr. Biden made his first visit to China as U.S. Vice President.
Biden arrived in Beijing on August 17 and stayed in China for six days until August 22.
Although it is a quiet position compared to the president, it is unusual for a U.S. vice president to stay in a particular foreign country for six days.
Vice President Biden's counterpart was Xi Jinping, then Vice President of the People's Republic of China.
This visit to China was also at the invitation of Vice President Xi Jinping, and Mr. Xi played host to Mr. Biden throughout his stay in China.
On the morning of March 18, the following day, when Mr. Biden arrived in Beijing, Mr. Xi first held a welcome ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.
After the ceremony, the two men held a summit meeting, and that evening, Xi hosted a dinner for Biden.
It was Biden's first meeting with Xi, and, according to Xinhua News Agency, Biden made the following statement during the session.
He said: "We fully understand that Taiwan and Tibet are China's core interests, and we do not support Taiwan's independence. We fully recognize that Tibet is a part of China.
Although Biden said this was the basic policy of the then pro-Obama China administration, one can see his strong feelings in Biden's language, which he stressed was "fully understood" and "fully acknowledged."
In other words, Mr. Biden tried to sell as much flattery as possible to Mr. Xi when they first met to get the "good relationship" started.
At the time, Xi's default position was to become the next supreme leader of the Communist Party at its congress in the fall of 2012, and Biden naturally took this into account when he tried to woo Xi.

The following is a continuation of Mr. Seki Hei's article titled "The Bizarre 'Xi Jinping Love' of the Bidens," published yesterday in the monthly magazine Hanada.
The article is a must-read not only for Japanese citizens but also for people around the world.
Mr. Seki Hei's article is 100% proof of my thesis's correctness that the Obama administration has allowed Xi's growing impudent and brutal behavior to continue.
All emphasis in the text except for the headline is mine.
An Intense Time for Two
On the third day of Biden's visit to China, on the morning of the 19th, Xi and Biden attended the "U.S.-China Entrepreneurs Roundtable" and had lunch together.
In the afternoon, President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao met with Mr. Biden, and Mr. Xi was also present at the meetings.
On the fourth day of his visit to China, Mr. Biden left Beijing to visit Chengdu, Sichuan province, on March 20 and has since stayed in and around Chengdu for three days and two nights, during which Mr. Xi has been in the company of Mr. Biden for almost the entire trip.
During his stay in Chengdu, Mr. Biden lectured at Sichuan University and attended an informal dinner at a restaurant in the city that Mr. Xi invited.
Accompanied by Mr. Xi, he was seen everywhere, including a tour of an ancient water conservancy facility called Dujiangyan on the city's outskirts.
The two "deputy" leaders shared a particularly intense time during these two nights and three days.
It is believed that Biden's unusually long stay of six days resulted in a relatively close personal relationship between the two men. An article signed by the editorial board member Hiroyuki Akita posted on the Nihon Keizai Shimbun website on August 25, 2011, tells an interesting story in this regard.
According to the article, a senior White House official who accompanied Biden to the meeting with Xi introduced the series of talks between Biden and Xi to reporters, saying, "We discussed a wide variety of topics without any notes at all," according to the article.
And when Mr. Biden stopped in Japan after he visited China, he met with then-Prime Minister Naoto Kan.
He went out of his way to promote the results of his visit to the Japanese side by saying, "This was an opportunity for me to deepen the dialogue between the U.S. and China and to deepen my relationship with Vice President Xi Jinping.
It is crucial to remember Biden's attitude toward China, especially his Xi Jinping attitude.
The friendship between Mr. Biden and Mr. Xi has continued since then.
From February 13-17, 2012, Xi and his wife visited the United States, this time as China's vice president.
As with Biden's first visit to China, the visit was unusually long, lasting only five days.
Of course, Mr. Biden, the U.S. Vice President, was treated with the most outstanding hospitality by his old friend, Xi.
When Xi and his wife arrived in the United States, Vice President Biden and his wife went out of their way to meet them at the airport, where Chinese Vice President Xi met them.
Even though the other party is the Chinese Vice President, it is unusual for an American Vice President to greet a foreign visitor at the airport.
Mr. Biden showed the utmost courtesy to Mr. Xi.
Later, Biden and his wife deepened their friendship by inviting Xi Jinping and his wife to a dinner party.
When Xi finished his itinerary in Washington and visited the West Coast of the United States, Biden naturally accompanied him and stayed with Xi throughout the visit.
The two men again shared an intense time.
In December 2013, when Biden made his second visit to China as vice president, Xi was already sitting in China's president's chair and was the most powerful man in the country.
A month before Biden visited China, a momentous event had occurred.
President Xi took an adventurous step that severely threatened Asian security.
Biden condones Xi Jinping's outburst.
On November 23, 2013, under the Xi Jinping administration, China set up an air defense identification zone for China over the East China Sea, taking the first step in the military adventure after the administration's formation.
Simply put, the airspace over the East China Sea, where, initially, aircraft of any country could fly freely, was selfishly established by China as its "air defense zone" and placed under the Chinese military's surveillance.
Such outrage is, of course, an infringement of the right of aircraft of other countries, including civilian aircraft, to fly freely, a threat and unforgivable.
For Japan, the problem was severe.
The airspace in which China's air defense identification zone has been established is next to Japan's, where Japanese aircraft fly frequently and in large numbers.
For Japan and the international community, measures against Xi Jinping's regime of outrage have become an urgent issue.
Ten days after establishing the Chinese air defense zone, Vice President Biden visited Tokyo, Japan, on December 3, the first stop on his Asian tour.
At that time, the Japanese Prime Minister was Abe Shinzo.
The visit of the Vice President of the United States, an ally of Japan, was supposed to be an opportunity for Japan and the United States to work together to halt China's outbursts.
Therefore, during his meeting with Vice President Biden, Abe first urged the U.S. to work together to urge China to withdraw its air defense identification zones.
However, as expected, or perhaps not surprisingly, Vice President Biden rejected Abe's proposal and refused to ask China to 'withdraw' it.
As the next best measure, Abe also proposed that the U.S. and Japan issue a joint statement opposing creating an air defense identification zone to rein in China, but Biden also rejected this.
Mr. Biden did not consider the dangers of establishing an air defense identification zone in China.
He ignored the pleas of the prime minister of the ally to protect China and the security of Japan.
As Vice President of the United States, Mr. Biden had expressed his opposition to China's air defense configuration.
Still, he did not ask China to "withdraw" the designation, condoning Mr. Xi's military adventures.
It is critical when U.S. ally Japan's security is at stake and whether the international community can contain the Xi Jinping regime's unruly behavior.
Biden has continued to take a pro-China, pro-Xi Jinping stance and has betrayed his ally Japan and the international community.
This article continues.

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