just when you thought it couldn’t get any more inane

Getting worse by the minute.

>   
>   (email exchange)
>   
>   On Thu, May 27, 2010 at 7:51 PM, wrote:
>   
>   Does anyone know of some way to talk to her?
>   This is embarrassing.
>   

Clinton spotlights US debt as diplomatic threat

Clinton says debt, deficit threaten U.S int’l position

U.S. committed to tough political steps on budget

Clinton urges new “national security” budget (Adds quotes, updates throughout)

By Andrew Quinn

May 27 (Reuters) — The United States’ huge national debt — now topping $13 trillion — is becoming a major threat to U.S. security and leadership in the world, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Thursday.

“The United States must be strong at home in order to be strong abroad,” Clinton said in remarks on the Obama administration’s new national security doctrine, which was made public on Thursday.

“We cannot sustain this level of deficit financing and debt without losing our influence, without being constrained in the tough decisions we have to make,” Clinton said, adding that it was time to “make the national security case about reducing the deficit and getting the debt under control.”

The new Obama security strategy joins diplomatic engagement with economic discipline and military power to boost America’s standing, and pledges expanded partnerships with rising powers like India and China to share the global burden.

Clinton emphasized controlling the budget deficit, saying it was “personally painful” for her to see the yawning U.S. spending gap after her husband, former President Bill Clinton, ended his second term in 2001 with budget surpluses.

“That was not just an exercise in budgeteering. It was linked to a very clear understanding of what the United States needed to do to get positioned to lead for the foreseeable future, far into the 21st century,” she said.

Clinton said that as a Democratic U.S. senator from New York during the administration of former President George W. Bush, she had voted against “tax cuts that were never sustainable, wars that were never paid for” — but without success.

“Now we’re paying the piper,” she said.

Clinton in February blamed “outrageous” advice from Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan in part for the grim U.S. deficit picture.

POLITICALLY TOUGH

President Barack Obama, who pushed through his own huge stimulus spending plan last year amid the global financial crisis, was committed to taking the politically difficult steps needed to put government finances back in order, Clinton said.

“We are in a much stronger economic position than we were. And that matters. That matters when we go to China. That matters when we try to influence Russia. That matters when we talk to our allies in Europe,” Clinton said.

Obama has formed an 18-member bipartisan commission to study ways to reduce the U.S. deficit projected at about $1.5 trillion this year and bring long-term debt to manageable levels. It aims to find $229 billion in savings in 2015 to bring the deficit down to 3 percent of the overall economy from about 10 percent now.

The U.S. debt this week topped $13 trillion, according to USDebtClock.org, a website that tracks real-time growth in U.S. debt. That amounts to about 90 percent of annual gross domestic product, a level that could start impacting the economy.

Big budget deficits and rising U.S. debt are becoming major issues in the run-up to November’s congressional elections, and the European debt crisis that has unnerved financial markets has fueled these voter concerns.

While arguing for tighter overall economic discipline, Clinton said it was no time for the United States to roll back spending on international diplomatic and development programs, particularly as civilian agencies take up more of the work in Iraq and Afghanistan formerly done by the military.

“In order for us to meet the obligations that are now being asked of our civilian personnel, it costs money,” Clinton said, adding that it was time to look at an overall “national security budget” that would encompass funding for diplomatic, development and military operations.

“You cannot look at a defense budget, a State Department budget and a USAID (U.S. Agency for International Development) budget without defense overwhelming the combined efforts of the other two and without us falling back into the old stovepipes that I think are no longer relevant for the challenges of today,” Clinton said.

Clinton thanks China for buying US Treasury Securities


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US, China Agree to Broaden Strategic Dialogue, Clinton Says

by Indira A.R. Lakshmanan and Eugene Tang

Feb 22 (Bloomberg) — Clinton thanked China for its continued purchases of U.S. Treasury notes, demand for which is needed to pay for Obama’s $787 billion stimulus plan.

No it isn’t. It will be a very different world when our leaders somehow come to realize how the monetary system works.

Yang said China, the world’s largest holder of Treasuries, will invest its almost $2 trillion in foreign-currency reserves based on the principles of ensuring liquidity and protecting value.

‘Appreciate Greatly’

“I appreciate greatly the Chinese government’s continuing confidence in U.S. Treasuries,” Clinton said. “I think that’s a well-grounded confidence.”

At an earlier meeting, State Councilor Dai Bingguo told Clinton that she looked “younger and more beautiful” than she appears on television.

Chuckling heartily, Clinton said, “Well, we will get along very well.”

Glad to see the US not saying anything negative about China’s new export subsidies announced last week.


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Clinton in Japan


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Isn’t this sweet???

Clinton, in Japan, talks of ‘harmony’ in US policy

by Arshad Mohammed

Feb 17 (Reuters) — U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton spoke on Tuesday of promoting “balance and harmony” in U.S. foreign policy as she visited Japan, drawing an implicit contrast to the administration of former President George W. Bush.

Clinton began her first full day in Asia with a visit to Tokyo’s Meiji shrine, where she took part in a purification ceremony at the Shinto shrine dedicated to Emperor Meiji, considered the father of modern Japan.

Yes, a US democrat honoring emperors and royalty.

Making her first trip as secretary of state, Clinton plans to consult Japanese officials on how to deal with the global financial crisis,

If she has any ideas why hasn’t she told us?

North Korea’s nuclear programs and the war in Afghanistan, a legacy of the Bush administration.

“I started this morning at the Meiji shrine and was talking to the head priest there who told me about the importance of balance and harmony,” Clinton told about 200 U.S. diplomats and their families at the U.S. embassy.

“It’s not only a good concept for religious shrines, it’s a good concept for America’s role in the world,” she added, without citing Bush by name or the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, which polarized global opinion. “We need to be looking to create more balance, more harmony.”

Reads like she’s broadening her religious beliefs???

“We’re going to be listening but we’re also going to be asking for more partnerships to come together to try to work with us to handle the problems that none of us can handle alone,” Clinton added, referring partly to the global financial crisis.

Partnerships to do what? No secrets, please!

Japan has been especially hit hard by the economic slowdown. Its economy shrank in the final quarter of 2008 at the fastest rate since the first oil crisis in 1974, and economists bet on another big contraction in January-March.

“These are hard times economically for the Japanese people, just as it is in many places around the world,” Clinton said. “I am absolutely confident we will navigate our way through these difficulties.”

The blind leading the blind, but this time holding hands?

China next…


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Clinton trying to get Asians to increase demand


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A once in a lifetime opportunity to increase the US standard of living squandered.

Increasing domestic demand unilaterally and letting the rest of the world grow via net exports to the US is in our best interest.

Clinton begins Asia trip, calls for Global Economic Cooperation

by Indira A.R. Lakshmanan

Feb 16 (Bloomberg) — Secretary of State Hillary Clinton kicked off the start of a weeklong trip to East Asia by calling for more cooperation from the region in alleviating the worldwide recession.


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Clinton to China


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This should be an interesting exchange:

China Needs US Guarantees for Treasuries, Yu Says

by Belinda Cao and Judy Chen

Feb 11 (Bloomberg) — In talks with Clinton, China will ask for a guarantee that the U.S. will support the dollar’s exchange rate and make sure China’s dollar-denominated assets are safe,” said He in Beijing. “That would be one of the prerequisites for more purchases.


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