Photo Analysis - Hillary In China
By Joseph Ehrlich
5-4-12
 

EHRLICH: THIS PHOTO SHOWS A GREAT DEAL.

FIRST, WE HAVE XI JINPING THE MOABITE CHOICE TO REPLACE HU JINTAO.

SECOND, WE HAVE HILLARY IN CHINA SITTING WITH HIM SHOWING THAT HE IS NOT PARAMOUNT IN HER MIND OR THE FOCUS OF HER ATTENTION.

THIRD, SINCE HE IS THE MOST IMPORTANT PERSON FOR THE MOABITE INTRUSION, ONE WOULD THINK THAT HILLARY WOULD AT LEAST FEIGN A BODY POSTURE GIVING HIM A DEGREE OF RESPECT WHEN SITTING BEFORE THE WORLD.

FOURTH, BUT HER BODY LANGUAGE SHOWS SHE IS TURNED AWAY FROM HIM AND FOCUSED ON PEOPLE ELSEWHERE THAT ARE OF KEY IMPORTANCE TO HER MAKING HER OWN ASSESSMENT AS TO WHAT THE PERCEIVED INTERACTIONS MEAN.

FIFTH, SHE KNOWS HER JOB IS TO PROTECT THE VP AS THE MOABITE ASSET AND THAT IS WHAT SHE IS TRYING TO DO AND FOCUSED UPON. HE QUITE SIMILAR TO BORIS YELTSIN HAS ALREADY SIGNED ON THE DOTTED LINE AND WILL SALUTE ALL MOABITE DIRECTIVES, SO TO SOMEONE LIKE HILLARY HE DOESN'T REQUIRE EITHER MUCH ATTENTION OR RESPECT AND THIS PHOTO ALL TOO CLEARLY SHOWS IT.

Hillary Clinton dining with China's VP, Xi Jinping

COMPARE WITH THIS PHOTO WHERE HILLARY FIRST MEETS THE VP HER ATTENTION ON THE PRESS TAKING PHOTOS FOR WORLD DISTRIBUTION.

Hillary Clinton shaking hands with China's VP, Xi Jinping

CONCLUSION: XI JINPING IS THE MOABITE VERSION OF BORIS YELTSIN FOR CHINA. REMEMBER, YELTSIN LED TO PUTIN AND THAT IS OUR POINT. ONCE XI JINPING IS IN, THE MOABITES WILL MOVE FOR A STRONGER LEADER AND PERSONALITY TO REPRESENT THEIR INTERESTS AND CONTROL OF CHINA. JIANG ZEMIN IS OUT TO STOP IT. WE DETESTED YELTSIN AS A TRAITOR TO HIS COUNTRY AND WE REALLY DETEST ANYONE WHOM THE MOABITES CONTROL AS PART AND PARCEL OF THEIR SATANIC AGENDA TO DOMINATE THE WORLD.

===PHOTO TAKEN TODAY AND SHOWS THAT BOTH HILLARY AND GEITHNER ARE COMING ACROSS VERY WEAK...

Clinton, Geithner and Xi Jinping

=== DETAILS ON CHEN FROM THE INTERNET (GOOD MATERIAL)

Mr Chen entered the US Embassy in Beijing a few days before the US-China strategic and economic dialogue, led by Secretary of State Hilary Clinton and Vice Premier Wang Qishan.

Neither Beijing nor Washington could afford to let this indispensable dialogue be hijacked by Mr Chen's case at the time when both sides are gearing up for the upcoming leadership transition or the presidential campaign.

Thus it is ironic but revealing that Washington and Beijing found themselves in the same boat: They need to find a quick solution so that Mr Chen could exit the ongoing tangle between the two giants.

Leadership divisions The fact that a US team, led by Assistant Secretary of State Kurt Campbell, immediately went to Beijing to talk to a Chinese team, led by Vice Foreign Minister Cui Tiankai, indicates that both sides took the issue seriously and were determined to solve it through silent diplomacy.

Win-win deal unravelled

A win-win deal unravelled fast because of divisions among China's leaders. It turned out that a seemingly win-win deal was achieved after intensive negotiations behind closed door.

Mr Chen left the US Embassy on "his own decision", with a promise that he would be reunited with his family, that their safety would be guaranteed and that he would stay outside Shandong, his home province, as a "free man" and study law in a Chinese university.

But it was not to be. Immediately after Mr Chen checked in to the hospital in Beijing and met his wife and children, the situation evolved in a direction that could lead to a nightmare for both the CCP regime and the Obama administration.

First and foremost, the Chinese leaders are obviously not on the same page over this issue.

While President Hu Jintao and his associates tried to cut a deal, the other leaders' priority is to continue to silence Mr Chen and his friends with coercive measures that violate even Chinese laws.

Not long after Mr Chen stepped into the hospital, he and his family were isolated from the outside world and deprived of freedom. Facing mounting pressure and spin, Mr Chen allegedly changed his mind and asked to go to America with his family.

This has dramatically changed a win-win deal into a chaotic situation in which people with different interests and agendas are trying to direct the show.

For now the Chinese authorities have said Mr Chen could apply to study in the US - potentially opening a window for a resolution.

Big picture
Although it is hard to predict the final outcome of this evolving case, this is obviously not good news for the Obama administration, which is already being attacked by forces from both left and right.

China's leaders scrambling to handle Bo Xilai's downfall

Mr Chen's case comes with China's leaders scrambling to handle Bo Xilai's downfall While the human right groups are deeply frustrated, conservatives such as Mitt Romney wasted no time to label the case "a day of shame" for Mr Obama.

For Beijing, the unfolding events have further exposed leadership divisions and, more importantly, the nature of China's political system, in which policy is made behind closed doors, political participation is oppressed, and the rule of law is a façade under which human rights are violated.

But it is important not to be distracted by internal political plays in both Washington and Beijing and lose sight of the big picture.

China is at a crossroads of political reform; and the widespread concern and protests among the Chinese people over the Chen Guangcheng case demonstrate that this can be the turning point in the nation's political development.

It is in this regard that the Chen Guangcheng case can exert a far-reaching impact on China's transition towards democracy.

Dr Huang Jing is Director of the Centre on Asia and Globalisation at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy at the National University of Singapore. He is an expert on Chinese politics, foreign relations and security issues.

 

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