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Sentosa Nuke Treaty is bluff, MAGA Dotard want WW3 nuke with Putin, everyone agreed except Xijinping! fucking waste time!

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http://time.com/5430388/donald-trump-nuclear-weapons-treaty-inf-withdrawal/

Trump Plans to Tear Up a 31-Year-Old Nuclear Weapons Treaty. Now What?








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President Donald Trump Says He Will Pull U.S. Out of Nuclear Treaty with Russia
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By W.J. Hennigan
8:38 PM EDT

President Donald Trump revealed Saturday the United States intends to withdraw from a 31-year-old nuclear weapons agreement with Russia, delivering a severe blow to the arms control regime that helped preserve peace since the Cold War.

“We’re going to terminate the agreement and we’re going to pull out,” Trump told reporters after a rally in Elko, Nevada, without indicating what the next steps might be.

The Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty, first signed by President Ronald Reagan and Soviet Union leader Mikhail Gorbachev in December 1987, was the first and only nuclear arms control agreement that ever eliminated an entire class of nuclear weapons. The treaty forced the superpowers to scrap more than 2,600 missiles with ranges 310 to 3,420 miles — weapons considered destabilizing to the European continent because of their capability to launch a nuclear strike from anywhere without early warning.

U.S. intelligence first recognized Moscow’s potential violation of the agreement several years ago when the missile, the Novator 9M729, was still in its test phase. The Obama Administration worked unsuccessfully to persuade the Kremlin to stand down the program through diplomatic talks.

The Trump Administration, in contrast, directly confronted the violation by funding development of its own missile. The research is allowed under the INF, and only breaches the deal if that missile is ever tested or deployed. Aggressively responding to violations of treaties, launching new nuclear weapons programs and reminding the world about the power of the U.S. nuclear arsenal is Trump’s way of deterring others from expanding, or seeking, arsenals.

“Russia has violated the agreement,” Trump said. “They’ve been violating it for many years. And I don’t know why President Obama didn’t negotiate or pull out. And we’re not going to let them violate a nuclear agreement and go out and do weapons, and we’re not allowed to.”

Russia, for its part, has repeatedly denied it ever violated the INF. The Kremlin has instead insisted that the U.S. is the one that’s in defiance of the agreement, saying certain interceptors on American missile defense systems have offensive capabilities. The U.S. has dismissed Russia’s allegation as false and a red herring.

Regardless, National Security Advisor John Bolton will deliver the president’s decision to walk away from the INF to Moscow on Sunday during the first-stop of his upcoming trip through Russia, Azerbaijan, Armenia and Georgia. Bolton would not comment, but a senior Administration official said: “The United States and our allies have attempted to bring Russia back into full and verifiable compliance with INF. Despite our objections, Russia continues to produce and field prohibited cruise missiles and has ignored calls for transparency.”

Arms control experts worry about the second- and third-order consequences of tearing up a long-standing nuclear treaty. Jeffrey Lewis, a nuclear weapons analyst with the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies in Monterey, Calif., said the U.S. has nothing to gain by walking away. “It’s a mistake,” he said. “Russia violated the treaty, but we’re going to take the blame for killing it? Why do Putin a favor?”

Lewis believes the U.S. will not deploy new missiles that would have been prohibited by INF, but Russia will. He says Moscow will step up the deployment of the Novator 9M729 or other formerly treaty-busting weapons.

The real risk will be borne by European allies, according to Kingston Reif, director for disarmament and threat reduction policy at the Arms Control Association, a think tank. “This removes all constraints on the production and fielding of Russia’s illegal missile, thereby increasing the threat to our allies in range of the missiles, leaves the United States holding the bag for the treaty’s demise, and creates another source of division between us.”

The whole basis for signing the INF three decades ago was the destabilizing nature of the weapons. The ballistic missiles, the Russian SS-20 and American Pershing II, could be driven on a mobile launcher into a remote area, blasted off and strike their targets in less than six minutes. The short timeline gave world leaders little time run for cover — let alone strategize about the right response.

Those facts haven’t changed. Europeans are not likely to want weapons like that on the continent. In a sign of those concerns, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization issued a statement earlier this year heralding the INF treaty as being “crucial to Euro-Atlantic security” and reducing the risk of conflict. “I don’t think the U.S. will try to ask anyone to deploy any INF systems on land – that would be a non-starter,” said Pavel Podvig, director of the Russian Nuclear Forces Project. “Russia will say that it was U.S. intent from the very beginning to pull out of the treaty and this is why it accused Russia of non-compliance … So, nothing good is coming out of this.”

Jon B. Wolfsthal, a nuclear weapons expert who worked on the National Security Council during the Obama Administration, said the INF withdrawal “poisons the well of nuclear stability” and will likely have a chilling effect on any possible nuclear arms deals between the U.S. and Russia in the future.

During the Cold War, a series of treaties between the U.S. and Soviet Union were designed to avoid miscalculation and keep communication channels open — even though Washington and Moscow were sworn adversaries. A number of those agreements have frayed in recent years but the last time that the U.S. unilaterally withdrew from a landmark nuclear arms control treaty was in 2002 when Washington left the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty and continued its expansion of ballistic missile defenses.

The effects of that decision was easily seen in March when Russian President Vladimir Putin unveiled his nation’s next generation of nuclear weapons, each engineered to slip behind America’s vast network of early warning and defense systems. In making the nationally televised speech to Russia’s Federal Assembly, Putin specifically stated the new arsenal serves as response to the U.S. government’s decision to abandon the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty.

However, the potential fallout from leaving the INF goes beyond Europe. Trump said China must also agree not to develop the missiles. This is a new development, considering China is not currently party to the INF. “We’ll have to develop those weapons — unless Russia comes to us, and China comes to us, and they all come to us and they say, ‘Let’s really get smart and let’s none of us develop those weapons.’ But if Russia is doing it and if China is doing it, and we’re adhering to the agreement, that’s unacceptable.”

If the U.S. decided to launch a nuclear strike on China, it has a range of ways to do so. In addition, the INF did not prohibit staunch allies, such as Japan or South Korea, from building ground-based missiles with the INF-busting range.

Navy Admiral Harry Harris, then-commander of U.S. Pacific Command, told the Senate Armed Services Committee in March that China was benefiting because of the United States’ adherence to the INF. “We are at a disadvantage with regard to China today in the sense that China has ground-based ballistic missiles that threaten our basing in the western Pacific and our ships,” he said.

Harris, who since retired and now serves as the American ambassador to South Korea, suggested the U.S. should start exploring ways to mitigate the threat: “We could do anything from one extreme — to pull out — to the other extreme — to do nothing — and I think we should look at ways to maximize our operational flexibility.”
 

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https://nypost.com/2018/10/20/trump-us-will-pull-out-of-nuke-treaty-with-russia/



Trump: US will pull out of nuke treaty with Russia


By Associated Press


October 20, 2018 | 4:30pm



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ELKO, Nevada — President Donald Trump says he will pull the United States from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty with Russia.
Trump says Moscow has violated the agreement, but provided no details.
The 1987 pact helps protect the security of the U.S. and its allies in Europe and the Far East. It prohibits the United States and Russia from possessing, producing or test-flying a ground-launched cruise missile with a range of 300 to 3,400 miles.
Trump made the announcement Saturday following a campaign stop in Elko, Nevada. National Security Adviser John Bolton was headed Saturday to Russia, Azerbaijan, Armenia and Georgia.
Said Trump: “We are going to terminate the agreement and then we are going to develop the weapons” unless Russia and China agree to a new deal.
 

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https://www.rt.com/usa/441841-trump-nuclear-deal-russia-pullout/



Trump vows to pull US out of ‘unacceptable’ nuclear missile deal with Russia
Published time: 20 Oct, 2018 20:34 Edited time: 21 Oct, 2018 06:48
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The US will pull out of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF) with Russia, AP reports President Donald Trump saying. He cited Russia’s alleged treaty violations, while at the same time vowing to “develop the weapons.”
"We are going to terminate the agreement and then we are going to develop the weapons" unless Russia and China agree to a new deal, Trump said on Saturday. Although Trump claims that Russia has violated the deal, he provided no evidence of that claim during his Saturday announcement.
Read more
What’s INF & why does it matter? Trump wants to kill pivotal nuclear treaty that calmed the Cold War
Trump made the announcement following a campaign stop in Elko, Nevada, just one day after the Guardian reported that National Security Adviser John Bolton was pushing the president to leave the treaty.
Russia has repeatedly said it will keep strictly observing the INF treaty as long as the US does. However, Russian President Vladimir Putin stated in October 2017 that any withdrawal from Washington would see an "immediate and mirror-like" response from Moscow.
Meanwhile the White House administration, which is pursuing a quite aggressive nuclear arsenal modernization strategy, has already authorized plans to develop a medium-range missile outlined in the Trump administration's Nuclear Posture Review. Speaking on Saturday, the President said the US will “have to develop those weapons,” also drawing Beijing into the nuclear brawl.
“Unless Russia comes to us and China comes to us and they all come to us and they say, ‘Let’s all of us get smart and let’s none of us develop those weapons,’” Trump said, “but if Russia’s doing it and if China’s doing it and we’re adhering to the agreement, that’s unacceptable. So we have a tremendous amount of money to play with our military.”

Futile dream of ‘unipolar world’
While the Kremlin has yet to offer an official reaction to Trump’s bold move, Russian lawmakers and a Foreign Ministry source condemned the US intention to jeopardize global security and draw Russia into a new arms race.
“This decision is in line with the US course to quit international agreements, which... make the concept of its own 'exclusivity' vulnerable,” a source in the Foreign Ministry told Sputnik, explaining that Moscow is not surprised by the White House decision to scrap the nuclear deal.
The main motive is the dream of a unipolar world. Will that come true? No.
Russian lawmakers, meanwhile, stressed that Trump aims to drag the US into a new arms race with Russia.
“It is obvious that the United States has no evidence proving Russia’s violations of the treaty’s provisions,” a member of the Russian parliament's upper house's defense committee, Frants Klintsevich, told Sputnik. The United States “wants to drag us, like the Soviet Union, into an arms race. It will not succeed.”
READ MORE: Itch for ‘better INF deal’? Trump’s treaty ‘withdrawal symptom’ destabilizes global order
“The US is returning the world to the Cold War,” Senator Aleksey Pushkov wrote on Twitter. “Russia will not allow nuclear superiority over itself. Only this can prevent possible nuclear aggression.”
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http://www.wfmz.com/news/politics/report-trump-to-pull-us-out-of-nuke-treaty-with-russia/814344366


Trump says US is ending decades-old nuclear arms treaty with Russia
President says Russia violated agreement

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  • CNN'S DEVAN COLE CONTRIBUTED TO THIS REPORT.

Posted: Oct 20, 2018 05:20 PM EDT

Updated: Oct 21, 2018 03:49 AM EDT







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(CNN) - President Donald Trump announced Saturday that the US is pulling out of the landmark Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty with Russia, a decades-old agreement that has drawn the ire of the President.
"Russia has violated the agreement. They've been violating it for many years," Trump told reporters before boarding Air Force One to leave Nevada following a campaign rally.
"And I don't know why President Obama didn't negotiate or pull out. And we're not going to let them violate a nuclear agreement and go out and do weapons and we're not allowed to," he said. "We're the ones that have stayed in the agreement and we've honored the agreement.
"But Russia has not, unfortunately, honored the agreement. So we're going to terminate the agreement. We're gonna pull out," he said of the agreement, which was signed in December 1987 by former President Ronald Reagan and former USSR President Mikhail Gorbachev.

What is the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty?

The treaty forced both countries to eliminate ground-launched ballistic and cruise missiles with ranges between approximately 300 and 3,400 miles. It offered a blanket of protection to the United States' European allies and marked a watershed agreement between two nations at the center of the arms race during the Cold War.
Former State Department spokesman Rear Adm. John Kirby, a CNN military and diplomatic analyst, explained that the treaty "wasn't designed to solve all of our problems with the Soviet Union," but was "designed to provide a measure of some strategic stability on the continent of Europe."
"I suspect our European allies right now are none too happy about hearing that President Trump intends to pull out of it," he said.

Why leave the agreement now?

The Trump Administration has said repeatedly that Russia has violated the treaty and has pointed to their predecessors in the Obama administration who accused Russia of violating the terms of the agreement.
In 2014, CNN reported that the US had accused Russia of violating the INF Treaty, citing cruise missile tests that dated to 2008. CNN reported in 2014 that the United States at the time informed its NATO allies of Russia's suspected breach.
However, it wasn't until recently that NATO officially confirmed Russia's activity constituted a likely violation.
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said earlier this month that the military alliance remained "concerned about Russia's lack of respect for its international commitments, including the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, the INF Treaty."
"This treaty abolishes a whole category of weapons and is a crucial element of our security," Stoltenberg said, speaking at a defense ministers' meeting. "Now this treaty is in danger because of Russia's actions."
He continued, "After years of denials, Russia recently acknowledged the existence of a new missile system, called 9M729. Russia has not provided any credible answers on this new missile. All allies agree that the most plausible assessment would be that Russia is in violation of the treaty. It is therefore urgent that Russia addresses these concerns in a substantial and transparent manner."
Moscow's failure to adhere to the agreement was also addressed in the most recent Nuclear Posture Review published by the Defense Department in February, which said Russia "continues to violate a series of arms control treaties and commitments."
"In a broader context, Russia is either rejecting or avoiding its obligations and commitments under numerous agreements and has rebuffed U.S. efforts to follow the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) with another round of negotiated reductions and to pursue reductions in non-strategic nuclear forces."

What does this mean for US security?

Pulling out of the treaty could provoke a similar arms race across Europe akin to the one that was occurring when the agreement was initially signed in the 1980s.
"I don't think we're at the stage right now that if we pull out of the INF Treaty, you've got to go sort of build a bunker in your backyard," Kirby said.
"I don't think we're at that stage at all," he said. "But I do think, if we pull out, we really do need to think about how we are going to, right now because we don't have the same capability as the Russians have with this particular missile. How are we going to try and counter that? How are we going to try and help deter use of it on the continent of Europe?"

How does China work in all of this?

Administration officials believe the treaty has put the US at a disadvantage because China does not face any constraints on developing intermediate-range nuclear missiles in the Pacific and it does not allow the US to develop new weapons.
Trump, speaking with reporters on Saturday, referenced China when explaining his reasoning for pulling out of the agreement.
"Unless Russia comes to us and China comes to us and they all come to us and say, 'Let's really get smart and let's none of us develop those weapons.' But if Russia's doing it and if China's doing it and we're adhering to the agreement, that's unacceptable," Trump said.
In 2017, the head of US Pacific Command, Adm. Harry Harris, told Congress that approximately 95% of China's missile force would violate the INF Treaty if they were part of the agreement.
"This fact is significant because the U.S. has no comparable capability due to our adherence to the Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty with Russia," Harris said in a statement to the Senate Armed Services Committee.
National security adviser John Bolton is expected to discuss the treaty with Russian officials on his trip to Moscow next week.
Kirby said he thinks the Russians will be OK with the decision.
"This gives Putin an excuse to just continue doing what he's doing, only doing it more blatantly," Kirby said.
CORRECTION: This story was updated to fix the spelling of Mikhail Gorbachev.
 

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https://www.rt.com/op-ed/441741-apocalypse-military-ww3-russia-us/



Apocalypse in 2019: Is Russia-US war possible?
Published time: 19 Oct, 2018 13:36 Edited time: 19 Oct, 2018 14:18
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Nearly half of US military troops believe America will be drawn into a major war next year and see Moscow and Beijing as main threats, according to a recent poll. But is there any basis for this anxiety among soldiers?
Almost a half of soldiers and commanders in the US Armed Forces (46%) believe that their country will be drawn into a large-scale armed conflict in 2019, reveals a new Military Times' poll of active-duty troops. They didn't clarify though what kind of war with Russia they expect. Neither have they presented any analysis of a potential strategic armed conflict between Moscow and Washington. US servicemen didn't consider the latest trends and changes in the way our countries will do combat in the near future. They have briefly mentioned cyberattacks, but only the ones that took place this year.
Read more
China on notice as America’s next big enemy, right after Russia
The US military didn't mention the three most important things that play a major part in any war: goals, methods/ways of achieving those goals, and means. Basically, they think that the war is imminent, but they don't know what kind of war it will be.
Even though tensions in the Russia-US relations have significantly heightened, neither Washington nor Moscow has ever said anything about being ready to use armed forces in order to achieve military and political goals. Seems like the bilateral relations are at their worst today, but there are no ideological, economic, or territorial disputes that could provoke a large-scale war within a year.
The existing and potential local armed conflicts, which political analysts enjoy listing (making sure they cover everything – from the Far East and all the way to the Western Hemisphere), will not cause a major war between Russia and the US either.
The current situation in Syria proves that point because we see how Moscow and Washington do everything they can to avoid stepping on each other's toes in that region. Besides, and this is true for both countries, neither Russian nor US experts are able to outline concrete military and political goals, which such a conflict would pursue, in a few brief statements.
READ MORE: Russia’s new nuclear security policy approved by Putin, govt to implement within three months
No one can point out specific economic and sociopolitical factors and reasons that could trigger a military conflict between the US and Russia.
It must also be said that a war can't be spontaneous and preparation for warfare takes time. Even if the two countries gear up for a large-scale war as fast as they can, it would take at least six months to get everything ready. And, given the high level of modern intelligence systems, it would be impossible to keep the potential adversary unaware of the preparation process under way.
Apart from all that, armed confrontation between Moscow and Washington cannot start with only peacetime combat-ready units going into battle. It would be an outrageously reckless venture for both sides.
Meanwhile, there is no intelligence data indicating that strategic deployment of troops has started in either of the two countries, which means that no one in Russia or the US is currently busy bringing the armed forces to combat readiness, or operatively deploying troops to theatres of war and in strategic space zones, strategically moving troops from inland areas towards the theatres of military operations, or deploying priority strategic reserve forces. It means that neither side is preparing for a large-scale military conflict.

It'd be more serious than just a shootout
However, if we do try to classify a hypothetical war between the US and Russia, it would most probably be a protracted nuclear world war. From the very beginning, this warfare would be characterized by a mutual unlimited use of all available mass destruction weapons, primarily strategic nuclear arsenals, which would entail a catastrophic aftermath not only for the two belligerent nations, but also for all the other countries of the world.
Both the West and the East know this perfectly well. Senior vice president of the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies James Andrew Lewis wrote in September that with the advent of nuclear weapons, major powers have sought to avoid direct military confrontation, and wars between big, heavily-armed states became expensive and risky.
According to Lewis, "the US finds itself now in a world where its soft power is diminished and its hard power less useful." Emerging powers see themselves as challenging the US for economic power, international influence, and regional leadership. Some have moved from challenge to conflict.
In this environment, says Lewis, Washington's opponents will exploit the opportunities created by information technology for damaging the US and advancing their national interests. He calls it a new kind of conflict whose core is information and the cognitive effect it produces.
As for the Military Times poll, we should remember that no such survey among military troops can be conducted without the approval of the top military and government officials. More often than not, the results of surveys like this are known beforehand; in other words, they will be what they are ordered to be.
It seems that in this case the order was to add fuel to the fire, but no more than that. At any rate, it would not be wise to treat the poll results as an indication of what the US administration intends to do with war and peace in the near future.

By Mikhail Khodarenok, military commentator for Gazeta.ru
Bio:
Mikhail Khodarenok is a retired colonel. He graduated from the Minsk Higher Engineering School of Anti-Aircraft Missile Defense (1976) and the Command Academy of the Air Defense Forces (1986).

Commanding officer of the S-75 AA missile battalion (1980-1983).
Deputy commanding officer of a SAM regiment (1986-1988).
Senior officer at the High Command of the Air Defense Forces (1988–1992).
Officer at the main operational directorate of the General Staff of the Armed Forces(1992–2000).
Graduated from the Military Academy of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation (1998).
Worked as an analyst at Nezavisimaya Gazeta (2000-2003) and editor-in-chief of Voyenno-Promyshlennyi Kuriyer (2010-2015).
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https://www.rt.com/news/441843-inf-nuclear-treaty-russia-us/



What’s INF & why does it matter? Trump wants to kill pivotal nuclear treaty that calmed the Cold War
Published time: 20 Oct, 2018 22:45 Edited time: 21 Oct, 2018 02:37
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US President Ronald Reagan and Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev sign the INF treaty, December 8, 1987 © Reuters
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Boldly accusing Russia of violating the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces treaty, Donald Trump has vowed to pull out of the “unacceptable” deal. Moscow however has its own view on who is in violation of the key Cold War era pact.
What is INF & why it matters?
The INF treaty signed in 1987 between the USSR and the United States eliminated nuclear and conventional ground-launched ballistic and cruise missiles with ranges of 500 to 5,500 kilometers. The historic accord marked the first time the superpowers had agreed to eliminate an entire category of nuclear arms and introduce on-site inspections for verification. The deal brought much-needed detente to an atmosphere of tense Cold War stand-off, and allowed Europe, which housed much of the American arsenal, to breathe a sigh of relief.
Read more
Trump vows to pull US out of ‘unacceptable’ nuclear missile deal with Russia
INF shortcomings
The deal didn’t affect aircraft- and sea-based missiles, an area where the US had a clear strategic advantage at the time, so it was widely seen as a gesture of good will by the USSR at a cost to its own national security. Another significant problem with the INF treaty was that other nuclear-armed nations were never party to it – including US allies France and the UK, as well as China.
Itch for ‘better INF deal’? Trump’s treaty ‘withdrawal symptom’ destabilizes global order
US claims & accusations
Despite Moscow’s compliance with the deal, Washington – citing its classified intelligence – keeps claiming that Russia has been secretly developing intermediate-range missiles, in particular those that can allegedly be fired from the tactical missile system Iskander-M, deployed along the country’s western borders.
READ MORE: US accuses Russia of non-compliance while funding mid-range missile R&D
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Xijinping is the only one with the silly idea that Chow Ang Moh still can live on this planet tomorrow, while Dotard, Putin, Kim Jong Nuke & Iran all agreed and even golden escalator has no problem. Businesses better be settled. One after another countries and culture must get totally wiped out using nuke. There is definitely no tomorrow for all, because planet is left will little resources and too much of over-population. The human ancestors way of elimination / carnage / genocide / cannibalism is the PERFECT WAY. Modern Civilization itself is the most wrong and toxic, nothing else had killed the planet than modern civilization stupidity.

Xi is the old fucker insisting of 世界人类命运共同体 World community of human destiny, 吃饱了撑着啦? Fucking idea only mean that whole while die together with Chow Ang Moh! Not even an ant will be left! 连蚂蚁都没法子一只!!



http://www.xinhuanet.com/politics/2018-08/21/c_1123302767.htm

习近平论构建人类命运共同体
2018-08-21 14:17:44 来源: 央视网

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据海关总署公布的数据,今年1-7月,我国货物贸易进出口总值16.72万亿元,同比增长8.6%。其中与“一带一路”沿线国家外贸进出口合计4.57万亿元,同比增长11.3%,增速高出我国同期外贸总体水平,成为拉动我国对外贸易的新动力。
近年来,我国外贸经济持续向好发展。中国连续多年对世界经济增长贡献率超过30%,成为世界经济增长的主要稳定器和动力源。“开放带来进步,封闭必然落后。”党的十八大以来,习近平主席在国际国内多个重要场合阐述中国坚持全方位对外开放的重要意义,从“一带一路”倡议到构建人类命运共同体,为完善全球治理建言献策,赢得了国际社会的广泛认同和赞誉。
  开放是一种胸怀——为中国“代言”
  改革开放是中国的基本国策

改革开放是中国的基本国策,也是今后推动中国发展的根本动力。
——2015年9月24日,习近平在华盛顿同美国总统奥巴马举行中美元首会晤时指出
  要拥有容纳天下百川的胸怀
大国要像居于江河下游那样,拥有容纳天下百川的胸怀。中国愿意以开放包容心态加强同外界对话和沟通,虚心倾听世界的声音。
——2014年3月28日,习近平在德国科尔伯基金会的演讲
  打开大门搞建设、办事业
我们的事业是向世界开放学习的事业。关起门来搞建设不可能成功。我们要坚持对外开放的基本国策不动摇,不封闭、不僵化,打开大门搞建设、办事业。
——2012年12月5日,习近平同在华工作的外国专家代表座谈时的讲话
  把国内发展与对外开放统一起来
我们要坚持从我国实际出发,坚定不移走自己的路,同时我们要树立世界眼光,更好把国内发展与对外开放统一起来,把中国发展与世界发展联系起来,把中国人民利益同各国人民共同利益结合起来,不断扩大同各国的互利合作,以更加积极的姿态参与国际事务,共同应对全球性挑战,努力为全球发展作出贡献。
——2013年1月28日,习近平在十八届中共中央政治局第三次集体学习时的讲话
  中国开放的大门不会关闭,只会越开越大!
过去40年中国经济发展是在开放条件下取得的,未来中国经济实现高质量发展也必须在更加开放条件下进行。
中国开放的大门不会关闭,只会越开越大!
——2018年4月10日,习近平在博鳌亚洲论坛2018年年会开幕式上的主旨演讲
  开放是一种姿态——向世界建言
  国际社会日益成为一个你中有我、我中有你的命运共同体

我们的事业是同世界各国合作共赢的事业。国际社会日益成为一个你中有我、我中有你的命运共同体。
——2012年12月5日,习近平同在华工作的外国专家代表座谈时的讲话
  让世界经济的大海退回到孤立的小湖泊、小河流不符合历史潮流
世界经济的大海,你要还是不要,都在那儿,是回避不了的。想人为切断各国经济的资金流、技术流、产品流、产业流、人员流,让世界经济的大海退回到一个一个孤立的小湖泊、小河流,是不可能的,也是不符合历史潮流的。
——2017年1月17日,习近平在世界经济论坛2017年年会开幕式上的主旨演讲
  秉持开放、融通、互利、共赢的合作观
我们要秉持开放、融通、互利、共赢的合作观,拒绝自私自利、短视封闭的狭隘政策,维护世界贸易组织规则,支持多边贸易体制,构建开放型世界经济。
——2018年6月10日,习近平在上海合作组织成员国元首理事会第十八次会议上的讲话
  建设各国共享的百花园
中国对外开放,不是要一家唱独角戏,而是要欢迎各方共同参与;不是要谋求势力范围,而是要支持各国共同发展;不是要营造自己的后花园,而是要建设各国共享的百花园。
——2016年9月3日,习近平在二十国集团工商峰会开幕式上的主旨演讲
  开放是具体政策——与各国共创美好未来
  加快实施自由贸易区战略

我们要加快实施自由贸易区战略,发挥自由贸易区对贸易投资的促进作用,更好帮助我国企业开拓国际市场,为我国经济发展注入新动力、增添新活力、拓展新空间。
——2014年12月5日,习近平在中共中央政治局第十九次集体学习时的讲话
  进一步放宽对外商投资的市场准入
中国将进一步放宽对外商投资的市场准入,同时也要健全外商投资监管体系,修订外商投资相关法律,依法保障外商投资企业合法权益。
——2015年9月22日,习近平接受《华尔街日报》书面采访时强调
  加大对“一带一路”建设资金支持
中国将加大对“一带一路”建设资金支持,向丝路基金新增资金1000亿元人民币,鼓励金融机构开展人民币海外基金业务,规模预计约3000亿元人民币。中国国家开发银行、进出口银行将分别提供2500亿元和1300亿元等值人民币专项贷款,用于支持“一带一路”基础设施建设、产能、金融合作。
——2017年5月14日,习近平在“一带一路”国际合作高峰论坛开幕式上的演讲
  开展人才与技术交流
我们将在未来5年内安排2500人次青年科学家来华从事短期科研工作,培训5000人次科学技术和管理人员,投入运行50家联合实验室。
——2017年5月14日,习近平在“一带一路”国际合作高峰论坛开幕式上的演讲
  打造开放型合作平台
我们要打造开放型合作平台,维护和发展开放型世界经济,共同创造有利于开放发展的环境,推动构建公正、合理、透明的国际经贸投资规则体系,促进生产要素有序流动、资源高效配置、市场深度融合。
——2017年5月14日,习近平在“一带一路”国际合作高峰论坛开幕式上的演讲
(整理/李珊珊)


Xi Jinping's Theory on Building a Community of Human Destiny
2018-08-21 14:17:44 Source: CCTV
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According to the data released by the General Administration of Customs, from January to July this year, the total value of China's import and export of goods trade was 16.72 trillion yuan, an increase of 8.6%. Among them, the foreign trade import and export of the countries along the “Belt and Road” totaled 4.57 trillion yuan, a year-on-year increase of 11.3%. The growth rate was higher than the overall level of foreign trade in China during the same period and became a new driving force for China's foreign trade.

In recent years, China's foreign trade economy has continued to develop. China has contributed more than 30% to world economic growth for many years and has become the main stabilizer and power source for world economic growth. "Openness brings progress, and closure must be backward." Since the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, President Xi Jinping has elaborated on the important significance of China's adherence to all-round opening up on many important occasions at home and abroad, from the "One Belt and One Road" initiative to the building of a community of human destiny. Advice and suggestions for improving global governance have won wide recognition and praise from the international community.

Openness is a kind of mind - "endorsement" for China

Reform and opening up is China's basic national policy

Reform and opening up is China's basic national policy and the fundamental driving force for China's development in the future.

-- On September 24, 2015, Xi Jinping pointed out during the first meeting between US and US President Barack Obama in Washington.

Have the heart to accommodate the world's hundreds of rivers

The big country has to be like the lower reaches of the river, and it has the mind to accommodate the world. China is willing to strengthen dialogue and communication with the outside world with an open and inclusive attitude and listen to the voice of the world with humility.

- On March 28, 2014, Xi Jinping gave a speech at the Coleber Foundation in Germany

Open the door to build and start a business

Our business is a business open to the world. It is impossible to close the door to build. We must adhere to the basic national policy of opening to the outside world, not to be closed, not rigid, to open the door to engage in construction and business.

—— On December 5, 2012, Xi Jinping’s speech with representatives of foreign experts working in China

Unify domestic development and opening up

We must adhere to the reality of our country and firmly adhere to our own path. At the same time, we must establish a global vision, better unite domestic development and opening up, link China's development with world development, and bring the interests of the Chinese people to the people of all countries. The common interests are combined to continuously expand mutually beneficial cooperation with other countries, participate in international affairs in a more active manner, jointly address global challenges, and strive to contribute to global development.

——On January 28, 2013, Xi Jinping’s speech at the third collective study of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee

The door to China's opening will not be closed, it will only grow bigger and bigger!

In the past 40 years, China's economic development has been achieved under open conditions. In the future, China's economy must achieve high-quality development under more open conditions.

The door to China's opening will not be closed, it will only grow bigger and bigger!

-- On April 10, 2018, Xi Jinping’s keynote speech at the opening ceremony of the 2018 Annual Meeting of the Boao Forum for Asia

Openness is a gesture - to the world

The international community is increasingly becoming a community of destiny in you and me.

Our business is a win-win business with all countries in the world. The international community is increasingly becoming a community of destiny in you and me.

—— On December 5, 2012, Xi Jinping’s speech with representatives of foreign experts working in China

Let the sea of the world economy return to isolated small lakes and small rivers that do not conform to the historical trend

The sea of the world economy, you still have to, not there, are there, can't avoid it. It is impossible to artificially cut off the capital flow, technology flow, product flow, industrial flow, and personnel flow of the national economy, and let the sea of the world economy return to an isolated small lake and small river. It is also inconsistent with the historical trend.

——The keynote speech of Xi Jinping at the opening ceremony of the 2017 Annual Conference of the World Economic Forum on January 17, 2017

Adhere to the concept of cooperation in openness, mutual benefit, mutual benefit and win-win

We must uphold the concept of openness, mutual benefit, and win-win cooperation, reject narrow policies of selfishness and short-sightedness, uphold the rules of the World Trade Organization, support the multilateral trading system, and build an open world economy.

-- Speech by Xi Jinping at the Eighteenth Meeting of the Council of Heads of State of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization on June 10, 2018

Building a hundred gardens shared by countries

China's opening up to the outside world is not to sing a one-man show, but to welcome all parties to participate; not to seek the sphere of influence, but to support the common development of all countries; not to create their own back garden, but to build a hundred gardens shared by all countries.

——September 3, 2016, Xi Jinping’s keynote speech at the opening ceremony of the G20 Business Summit

Openness is a specific policy – creating a better future with countries

Accelerate the implementation of the free trade zone strategy

We must speed up the implementation of the free trade zone strategy, give play to the role of free trade zones in promoting trade and investment, better help Chinese enterprises explore the international market, inject new impetus into China's economic development, add new vitality, and expand new space.

——On December 5, 2014, Xi Jinping’s speech at the 19th collective study of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee

Further relax market access for foreign investment

China will further relax market access for foreign investment, and at the same time, improve the foreign investment supervision system, revise foreign investment related laws, and protect the legitimate rights and interests of foreign-invested enterprises in accordance with the law.

- On September 22, 2015, Xi Jinping emphasized in a written interview with The Wall Street Journal

Increase funding support for the “Belt and Road” construction

China will increase its financial support for the “Belt and Road” construction, and increase the capital of the Silk Road Fund by 100 billion yuan to encourage financial institutions to carry out RMB overseas fund business, with an estimated size of 300 billion yuan. The China Development Bank and the Export-Import Bank will provide RMB 150 billion and 130 billion yuan worth of special RMB loans respectively to support the “Belt and Road” infrastructure construction, production capacity and financial cooperation.

—— On May 14, 2017, Xi Jinping gave a speech at the opening ceremony of the “Belt and Road” International Cooperation Summit Forum

Carry out talent and technology exchange

In the next five years, we will arrange 2,500 young scientists to come to China for short-term scientific research, train 5,000 people in science and technology and management personnel, and put into operation 50 joint laboratories.

—— On May 14, 2017, Xi Jinping gave a speech at the opening ceremony of the “Belt and Road” International Cooperation Summit Forum

Create an open cooperation platform

We must build an open cooperation platform, maintain and develop an open world economy, jointly create an environment conducive to open development, promote the establishment of a fair, rational and transparent international economic and trade investment rules system, promote the orderly flow of production factors, and efficiently allocate resources. The market is deeply integrated.

—— On May 14, 2017, Xi Jinping gave a speech at the opening ceremony of the “Belt and Road” International Cooperation Summit Forum

(Organization / Li Shanshan)
 
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