"There is no limit to what a man can do or where he can go if he doesn't mind who gets the credit." - President Ronald Reagan.

Buy The Amazon Kindle Store Ebook Edition

Buy The Amazon Kindle Store Ebook Edition
Get the ebook edition here! (Click image.)

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Obama State Dept. Backstabs Japan



State Department Appeasing China At Japan's Expense

The Obama Administration is doing for our Asian allies what it did for our Middle East allies, appeasing bully regimes and back-stabbing our friends.

According to an article posted at News On Japan:
The U.S. and Japanese governments' split over how commercial airlines should operate in China's self-declared air-defense zone has put carriers at the center of an escalating political dispute. 
The U.S. State Department has urged airlines to notify Chinese authorities before flying through the zone, while Japan pressed its carriers to stop supplying such flight data. China created the zone over an area that includes islands in the East China Sea claimed by both the Asian nations. 
This is pure b.s.! China is trying to bully its neighbors and the Obama State Department is asking our airlines to kowtow to them by supplying flight information. Japan is correct in not having its airlines following suit.

The Obama Administration is nothing but a bunch of incompetent idiots and this is just another example of how they're screwing up. This is nothing but a policy of appeasement!

To read the full article, go here.

For even more, go here.

2 comments:

Gary said...

Backstabbing. So what else is new?

Did you see my article on Japan's new aircraft carrier???

Gary said...

To quote the article:

The vessel was named Izumo, the same name as the flagship of the Japanese fleet that invaded China in the 1930s. Tokyo likely intentionally chose the date of the vessel's debut — the 68th anniversary of the US dropping an atomic bomb on Hiroshima — to woo public support for the government's military ambitions by taking advantage of sentiments about the attack.

Search This Blog