Recently an Argentine airline pilot captured video showing hundreds of Chinese fishing vessels illegally operating inside Argentina's Exclusive Economic Zone.
Same happening in Korean waters, commie chinese are a scourge on the planet. And to think the South Korean DPK party supports the commie chinese, it is disgraceful.
Korean Person
1 month ago
the South Korean DPK party supports the commie chinese, it is disgraceful.
You got it wrong, it’s not the DPK that supports the “Commie Chinese.”
It’s the PPP that supports them.
Don’t you remember Park Guen-hye aggressively pushing for closer relationship with the PRC which resulted in her being invited to attend a PRC military parade, which she did.
Given her overwhelming popularity in China, she might have gained a higher support rating had she run for president in China, a joke goes.
Actually, Chinese people actually like her father. Chinese didn’t harbor grudges against Park’s father for being anti-Communist. In fact, according to Jin Jingyi, a Korea expert at Peking University, many Chinese have fond memories of him.
Korean Person
1 month ago
And there’s more
The prominence accorded South Korean President Park Geun-hye during China’s commemoration of the 70th anniversary of Japan’s defeat in World War II offered telling evidence of Northeast Asia’s ongoing political transformation.
However, President Park made a very different calculation, in part reflecting her close personal and political relationship with Xi Jinping. This was her fourth visit to China as president of the Republic of Korea (ROK), and the sixth time the two leaders have engaged in extensive bilateral discussions, including in state visits to each other’s capitals.
At a time when upheaval in the Chinese stock market and a slowing economy within China have led many analysts to question the management skills of those overseeing the country’s development, President Park doubled down on Korea’s “China wager.” She was accompanied by the largest ever delegation of Korean corporate leaders on any of her foreign travels. The ROK already trades more with China than it does with the United States and Japan combined, a trend that could readily accelerate with the recent signing of a China-ROK free trade agreement. Park’s vote of confidence in China’s future will not go unnoticed by senior Chinese policy makers.
South Korea’s capability to deal directly with China on high priority items on the U.S. policy agenda represents an important accomplishment, all the while the U.S. and Korea reaffirm the singular importance of their bilateral alliance. At a time of widespread disquiet about China’s longer-term power ambitions in Asia and the Pacific, the breakthroughs between Seoul and Beijing represent a contrary and much more encouraging trend.
Same happening in Korean waters, commie chinese are a scourge on the planet. And to think the South Korean DPK party supports the commie chinese, it is disgraceful.
the South Korean DPK party supports the commie chinese, it is disgraceful.
@Flyingsword
You got it wrong, it’s not the DPK that supports the “Commie Chinese.”
It’s the PPP that supports them.
Don’t you remember Park Guen-hye aggressively pushing for closer relationship with the PRC which resulted in her being invited to attend a PRC military parade, which she did.
The reason why China likes Park Geun-hye – The Korea Times
Given her overwhelming popularity in China, she might have gained a higher support rating had she run for president in China, a joke goes.
Actually, Chinese people actually like her father. Chinese didn’t harbor grudges against Park’s father for being anti-Communist. In fact, according to Jin Jingyi, a Korea expert at Peking University, many Chinese have fond memories of him.
And there’s more
The prominence accorded South Korean President Park Geun-hye during China’s commemoration of the 70th anniversary of Japan’s defeat in World War II offered telling evidence of Northeast Asia’s ongoing political transformation.
However, President Park made a very different calculation, in part reflecting her close personal and political relationship with Xi Jinping. This was her fourth visit to China as president of the Republic of Korea (ROK), and the sixth time the two leaders have engaged in extensive bilateral discussions, including in state visits to each other’s capitals.
At a time when upheaval in the Chinese stock market and a slowing economy within China have led many analysts to question the management skills of those overseeing the country’s development, President Park doubled down on Korea’s “China wager.” She was accompanied by the largest ever delegation of Korean corporate leaders on any of her foreign travels. The ROK already trades more with China than it does with the United States and Japan combined, a trend that could readily accelerate with the recent signing of a China-ROK free trade agreement. Park’s vote of confidence in China’s future will not go unnoticed by senior Chinese policy makers.
South Korea’s capability to deal directly with China on high priority items on the U.S. policy agenda represents an important accomplishment, all the while the U.S. and Korea reaffirm the singular importance of their bilateral alliance. At a time of widespread disquiet about China’s longer-term power ambitions in Asia and the Pacific, the breakthroughs between Seoul and Beijing represent a contrary and much more encouraging trend.
Park in Beijing: The political transformation of Northeast Asia
No wonder China wants to fund the Korean right.
KP, gas light harder big boy.
@Flyingsword
Isn’t gaslighting an extreme-right wing Trump thing?