Miscellaneous News

FriedButter

Brigadier
Registered Member
Reminds me of when France wanted to join BRICS. Then got rejected. Now France wants China to join G7? Lol

No, it has nothing to do with China joining the G7.

This is the Eunuchs last ditch effort on demanding Chinese unconditional surrender trade concessions before they start their own Eunuch economic war against China.

Macron, who is hosting the G7 summit in Evian-les-Bains, France, next week, has sought to engage with Beijing in a last-ditch attempt at a cooperative approach before the European Union decides whether to toughen its trade policy towards China, French officials say.
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FriedButter

Brigadier
Registered Member
If you want to know how China is feeling here is yesterday’s article. This phone meeting was reported 3 days ago.

Either China cancelled the meetings which forced the French into a last ditch diplomatic plea. Or China cancelled the meetings even after Macron set up a meeting.

The Eunuchs will decide their economic fate next week.

Beijing appears to be trying to send a warning to the EU’s national leaders ahead of a European Council summit in Brussels next week. Leaders at the summit will consider a tougher China policy, though the agenda says only that they will discuss “competitiveness and global economic challenges”.

China cancels high-level meetings with EU​

China abruptly cancelled two important diplomatic meetings with the EU this month as tensions between the two trading superpowers build over soaring Chinese exports to the bloc.

Chinese officials cancelled the two dialogues in Beijing — a ministerial-level discussion on digital issues and another involving the deputy secretary-general of the EU’s diplomatic service, Olof Skoog — people familiar with the matter said.

“Two dialogues planned for this month were cancelled by the Chinese side at short notice,” said one person familiar with the matter.

No reason was given, they said. But such tactics are often used by both sides to signal unhappiness with each other’s policies. The EU last year refused to hold a flagship economic meeting with Beijing ahead of a leaders’ summit in July because of a lack of progress on numerous trade disputes.

This year, Beijing has mounted a campaign to deter Brussels from adopting new measures designed to curb Chinese exports, which surged 16.4 per cent between January and May compared with a year earlier, with state media raising the spectre of a “trade war”.

Beijing is furiously lobbying against the EU’s proposed Industrial Accelerator Act, which would bar some Chinese products from public procurement contracts and limit takeovers of European companies.

The European Commission has also recently outlined an update to its cyber security act to exclude Chinese companies such as Huawei from telecommunications networks and solar energy systems.

Adding to Beijing’s concerns, the EU has blocked public funding for imported inverters used to control solar panel installations and other energy technology, a product dominated by China.

The Commission last month called the rising trade deficit, now €1bn a day, “unsustainable” and has threatened fresh tariffs on Chinese goods to protect the bloc’s rapidly eroding industrial base, with sectors such as the car industry under particular pressure.

It has also opened three anti-dumping investigations in June.

“Beijing does not want a trade war with the EU, yet it will take resolute countermeasures should the EU further target Chinese companies or products,” said a commentary in Xinhua, China’s state news agency.

“The EU should not and cannot afford to fight a ‘trade war with China’,” said the Global Times, a Communist Party nationalist mouthpiece.

Beijing appears to be trying to send a warning to the EU’s national leaders ahead of a European Council summit in Brussels next week. Leaders at the summit will consider a tougher China policy, though the agenda says only that they will discuss “competitiveness and global economic challenges”.

Bart De Wever, Belgian prime minister, ridiculed the approach in a speech on Tuesday. “They have called it geoeconomic imbalances, just not to name China by name, because we are so afraid that we don’t even dare to do that,” he said.

EU officials say Beijing is lobbying the bloc’s member states directly to try to prevent them forming a joint approach.
The Global Times said Chinese commerce minister Wang Wentao was also expected to visit Europe in late June for talks.

At the same time, Beijing is passing laws that are making the operating environment in China, which companies say is already difficult, even more fraught.

Beijing in April enacted new rules, known as orders 834 and 835, to protect China’s supply chain security and counter foreign attempts to exercise extraterritorial control over Chinese companies, for example through sanctions.

Beijing has also passed a new outbound direct investment law that includes countermeasures for foreign restrictions it says discriminate against Chinese companies. It is also closely regulating Chinese investments offshore, particularly those involving transfers of technology or data.

The Commission said the cancelled meetings were “in the process of being rescheduled”.

“Engagement and dialogue between the EU and China is ongoing at multiple levels,” it said, citing a June 9 meeting in Brussels between Ditte Juul Jørgensen, director-general for trade, and China’s vice-minister of commerce Ling Ji.

Jørgensen and Ling had exchanged views and engaged in “in-depth discussions, including to help prepare other upcoming EU-China meetings”, the Commission said.
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Thecore

Junior Member
Registered Member

when Japan joined the G7, it was effectively the Asian blood boy for the rest of the white western nations. in fact the entire yen carry trade was Japan giving free money to americans and Atlanticist fund managers, Now, these same white western nations need China to bail them out.
China should agree to join the G7. But only on the condition that Japan gets kicked out for China to take its place. After-all we don't want too much undue Asian influence on a traditionally western institution, do we? ;)
 

BlackWindMnt

Major
Registered Member
View attachment 176542

As I a said before, the EU is weird, how a diplomat from a country with a PPP GDP 93 Billions can decide for economies 20X her country size? I am for equality but common on man.
Sir, don't you mean common on woman.

Joking aside you don't give this sort of position to some uneducated and inexperienced person. Not in a era of high geopolitical competition with actual competent rivals(China, US, Russia etc).
 

tokenanalyst

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Now do the same for Von Der Leyen or whatever.
She is even more crazier
G7 implies they are China's equals, G2 implies America is China's equal. China has no equal, there is only G1.
Also China, as far I remember never liked the idea of being part of power blocks that exclude other developing countries. For China their relation the global south or the third world what was called in cold war was and is as important or even more important that their relation with Western powers. Just as a principle. I don´t know if the policy has changed.
 

supercat

Colonel
If you want to know how China is feeling here is yesterday’s article. This phone meeting was reported 3 days ago.

Either China cancelled the meetings which forced the French into a last ditch diplomatic plea. Or China cancelled the meetings even after Macron set up a meeting.

The Eunuchs will decide their economic fate next week.



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