IPSE'S AUTHORS LAST 24h
Check all the Authors in the last 24h
IPSEs IN THE LAST 24H
  • Igor Grosu
    Igor Grosu “The plebiscite is a chance for Moldovans to show loudly and clearly that we are Europeans. ... We are not entering Europe, we are returning to it.” 1 hour ago
  • Maia Sandu
    Maia Sandu “Joining the EU is the best thing we can give this and future generations.” 1 hour ago
  • Igor Dodon
    Igor Dodon “We are categorically opposed to this referendum. We are not saying 'no' to talks with the EU and we are not opposed to the EU. We oppose Sandu using it as an instrument for her own interests and those of her party. We are therefore asking voters during the campaign not to take part in the referendum.” 1 hour ago
  • Ben Hodges
    Ben Hodges “Since the fall of Avdiivka in Ukraine's east on February 17 [2024], its forces have oozed forward, swallowing several villages, as Ukrainian forces have performed tactical retreats. Here we are in April [2024], and [the Russians] are oozing out. Why is that? I think it's because that's the best the Russians can do. They do not have the capability to knock Ukraine out of the war. Russia lacked the ability to equip large armoured formations that could move rapidly, with supporting artillery, engineers and logistics. I don't think it exists. That's why I feel fairly confident that the mission for [Ukrainian] general Oleksandr Syrskyi for the next several months is to stabilise this as much as he can to buy time for Ukraine to grow the size of the army, to rebuild the defence industry of Ukraine, as well as give us time to find more ammunition for them. I think of 2024 as a year of industrial competition. So the army has got to buy time.” 3 hours ago
  • Marwan Bishara
    Marwan Bishara “Once again, the US's veto demonstrated a policy of it's my way or the highway. Palestine could only be a country the way the United States sees it, or Israel sees it, only at the time that it's suitable to the United States and within the geopolitics and the global interest of the United States. The US is sacrificing the freedom of Palestinian people for egotistical and narrow interests of the United States and Israel.” 19 hours ago
  • Brad Setser
    Brad Setser “Tariffs are currently 7.5 percent on electric vehicle battery packs but 25 percent on the components of those packs. The lower rate should be raised. China had long steered its subsidies to companies that manufacture and source their products in China - and sometimes had required those companies to be Chinese-owned. In order to build up industrial sectors where China has a first-mover advantage and now a cost advantage you need to have an insulated market - and to use some of the tools that China has already used.” 23 hours ago
  • Lael Brainard
    Lael Brainard “China's policy-driven overcapacity poses a serious risk to the future of the American steel and aluminum industry. China cannot export its way to recovery. China is simply too big to play by its own rules.” 23 hours ago
View All IPSEs inserted in the Last 24h

Opinion

Page with all the IPSEs stored in the archive with Category Opinion.
The IPSEs are presented in chronological order based on when the IPSEs have been pronounced.

“To be effective in solving complex problems, interstate dispute, or war; you have diplomacy, you've got economics, you've got humanitarian support, and you have got the military. Canada has been active in diplomacy, by the way diplomacy obviously has failed because otherwise Putin wouldn't have attacked. Economic; the sanctions (are) valuable but they are not stopping the Russian battlegroups from grinding away and essentially killing Ukraine citizens. Humanitarian support is after the fact where you try to remediate the damage and the tragedy. We have done a good job at bringing refugees to Canada. I am told about 10,000 Ukrainians so far, some medical supplies. But on the military side we are lacking. For 5 years Canada did not allow Ukraine to acquire weapons from Canada. That was a conscious government decision because they were asking. And then when the push came to shove 3 days before the attack we send a couple boxes of weapons and then some old anti tank systems and then some other stuff and then now we've stopped again. As well we only have 600 troops in Europe right now and we are talking of a need of multiple thousands. So to demonstrate leadership we've got to do more. Not just in the first three areas I mentioned but also in the military side because if we don't deter Putin he may try something else.”

author
Retired Canadian lieutenant-general
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“It also breaks my heart. We are part of the NATO alliance and there is a difference between declaring a no fly zone and enforcing a no fly zone, and the reality is that a no fly zone enforced would be a severe escalation on the part of NATO including between powers that have nuclear capability, and that would result in a severe and horrific escalation of these hostilities.”

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Minister of National Defence of Canada
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“My pledge to you is that I will do my best to try to balance out these more controversial viewpoints with other people's perspectives, so we can maybe find a better point of view.”

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American podcaster
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“I consider that Mr Djokovic's ongoing presence in Australia may lead to an increase in anti-vaccination sentiment generated in the Australian community, potentially leading to an increase in civil unrest of the kind previously experienced in Australia with rallies and protests which may themselves be a source of community transmission... Mr Djokovic's conduct after receiving a positive Covid-19 result, his publicly stated views, as well as his unvaccinated status, I consider that his ongoing presence in Australia may encourage other people to disregard or act inconsistently with public health advice and policies in Australia.”

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Australian Minister for Immigration
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“The democracy emergency is closely linked to the climate crisis. Each is grounded in a big lie - that climate science is a hoax, that Trump won in 2020 - pushed by the same rightwing politicians and propaganda “news” outlets and embraced with cult-like devotion by Trump's followers. Left untreated, each threatens disaster. If Trump's forces do change enough electoral rules and personnel to guarantee victory in 2022 and beyond, there is zero chance the US government will take the strong climate action needed to avert global catastrophe.”

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Journalist and executive director of Covering Climate Now
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“The authorities are trying everything to calm things down, with a mix of promises and threats, but so far it's not working. There will be imitations of dialogue but essentially the regime will respond with force, because they have no other tools.”

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Almaty-based political analyst
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“In terms of scale, scope and timing, we are facing an invasion that is unprecedented in the last 30 years. These are not the Taliban of the 20th century … but the manifestation of the nexus between transnational terrorist networks and transnational criminal organisations.”

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President of Afghanistan
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“Next year, Beijing hopes to attract international visitors to China for the Winter Olympics in February. As I witnessed during the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, the CCP [Chinese Communist Party] went to great lengths to present to a worldwide audience its ability to execute a flawless sporting event. Starting a potentially protracted war over Taiwan ahead of the Winter Olympics would be ill-considered. Lastly, the CCP's National Party Congress is to be held in November next year, and but for an unlikely declaration of independence from Taiwan, Xi [Xi Jinping]would be unwise to risk his appointment to a third term by waging a highly unpredictable war over Taiwan.”

author
Senior analyst at Wikistrat, a crowdsourced consultancy, and a former diplomat with the US Overseas Private Investment Corp.
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“China's sanctions are an attack on transparency and freedom of expression - values at the heart of our democracy. We stand with Parliamentarians against these unacceptable actions, and we will continue to defend human rights around the world with our international partners.”

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Prime Minister of Canada
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“This [Yang Jiechi response with passion to the US criticism toward China] is not normally the Chinese manner on such occasions. It is a sign that something has changed. There is a new sense of confidence on the part of the Chinese. That they are - or can - win the argument. That they are at least the equals of America. That they speak from a position of strength and America from a position of weakness. That history is on their side. It feels like the diplomatic equivalent of moving from 'keeping a low profile' to 'striving for achievement,' or from being a relative spectator in the global system to becoming a major architect. The Americans have hitherto always thought of themselves as running the show; the shock visible in the body language of Blinken and Sullivan was the realization, conscious or unconscious, that this was no longer the case. The same was apparent in the Western media. The BBC, for example, invariably critical of China, reported it with an unfamiliar neutrality, as if stunned by the role reversal.”

author
Visiting professor at the Institute of Modern International Relations at Tsinghua University and a senior fellow at the China Institute of Fudan University
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“My sense is that the administration [Biden administration] is testing the question of whether it is possible to get real results from these dialogues.”

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Researcher at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington
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“I have many policy disagreements with the Biden Administration, but every single American should unite against Beijing's tyrants. Secretary [Antony] Blinken and National Security Adviser Sullivan were right to say 'it's never good to bet against America' and should continue to hold firm exposing Chairman Xi's [Xi Jinping] fraudulent lies.”

author
United States Senator for Nebraska - Member of the Republican Party
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“[Taiwan is considered as the top conflict hotspot] mainly because Beijing has defined Taiwan as a core interest and China is set on unification with Taiwan. And from our [the US] perspective, we're Taiwan's main security provider. And we're already seeing this escalation dynamic, and particularly in the last year or so, tend to be really heating up in the Taiwan Strait.”

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Political scientist at the RAND Corporation serving in the Office of the US Secretary of Defense from 2015 to 2018
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“We need to sit and talk with US President Biden’s team, to see what they think about those issues which were reached as pledges, not as an agreement. There are questions over issues such as the Ujmani lake and other political issues about which we need to see what the Biden administration’s position is. I am not prejudging because I am not one of those who think that new administration will just throw this agreement in the bin.”

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Acting president of Kosovo
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“The economy will always be the priority for the CCP [Chinese Communist Party], and Hong Kong is capable of attracting foreign investment. Besides, the city is still where CCP bigwigs own properties and launder money.”

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Researcher at Academia Sinica's Institute of Political Science
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“We need to be aligned with the other democracies — another 25% or more so that we can set the rules of the road instead of having China and others dictate outcomes because they are the only game in town.”

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President-elect of the United States
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“We have doubts about their abilities to perform their duties. If they are unable to uphold the Basic Law, and to support Hong Kong, of course they are not qualified to be legislators.”

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Chief Executive of Hong Kong
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“Good discussion on ongoing reforms and implementation of Economic and Investment Plan for the Western Balkans as well as work to finalise Negotiating Frameworks. Looking forward to North Macedonia advancing on EU path.”

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European Commissioner for Neighbourhood and Enlargement
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“Every part of our country is closely associated with the blood of the service personnel of the CPV [Chinese People's Volunteers], who bravely fought in the sacred war against the imperialist aggressors, not being afraid of death, and dedicating their invaluable youth and lives to it. Our Party, government and people will never forget their noble souls and lofty spirit forever.”

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Leader of North Korea
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“Our leaders and [China’s] leaders have to discuss the limits beyond which they will not push threats, and how to define that. You can say this is totally impossible, but if it is, we will slide into a situation similar to World War I.”

author
American politician, diplomat, and geopolitical consultant who served as United States Secretary of State and National Security Advisor under the presidential administrations of Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford
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“Our main goal is to ensure that all politicians undergo lustration. The old authorities led by [President] Sooronbai Jeenbekov are fully responsible for this political and economic crisis we are facing now. We will establish a new government of young professionals. We will call on all the Kyrgyz youth residing abroad to return home. The main problem we are having is the situation in which revolutions in Kyrgyzstan are carried out by young people, who sacrifice their lives for change, while old corrupted politicians remain in power.”

author
Businessman that some of the protesters would like to see as a new Kyrgyz prime minister
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“We did not have a rational discussion but an emotional and heated discussion during which the Kosovar side tried to take us back 13 centuries and present Serbia as a colonizer, who occupied not only Kosovo, but also Toplica [in southern Serbia], trying to divert us from the topic with irrational and historically incorrect information.”

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Head of the Serbian government office for Kosovo
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“We are in a process that we need to take 'step by step' and without explaining the procedures and details of what goes first and what goes second. After all, it is important that we reach a successful conclusion, and that is a comprehensive legally binding agreement.”

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Lead spokesperson for the external affairs of the EU
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“America’s partisan enmity has become so intense that any result in November will be contested; a country embroiled in a succession crisis is much less likely to intervene in a high-end great-power conflict. There may never be a better moment for China to strike than the week of Nov. 3.”

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Director of the Center for American Seapower at Hudson Institute
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“The essence is that in the heart of the regime of Aleksandar Vučić, not only is there no political will, but there is not a shred of enthusiasm for anything that the Treaty on the European Union defines in Article Two as basic democratic and liberal values ​​of the EU. What motivates the regime to maintain the facade of Europeanization is nothing but the mere fact that the EU members and the Union itself, and not Russia and China, are the largest trading partners, largest investors and largest donors of aid to Serbia. This has been shown during the COVID-19 pandemic. And the regime knows that without all these means, many of which are disappearing, similar to, say, in Hungary, in the pockets of structures and people close to the regime, it cannot be sustained.”

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Senior Researcher with the Austrian Institute for International Affairs and a lecturer at the University of Vienna
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“The China hawks in the US government are baiting China to fire the first shot and cause an accident, so that the Trump administration could distract the public from its failures. We cannot play into their hands, and we must respond to their provocations with calm and prudence. Meanwhile, we must seek dialogue with the US when the opportunity arises. Conversation is still better than confrontation. Only through high-level exchanges can we reduce our misunderstandings.”

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Professor of US studies at China Foreign Affairs University
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“I want to stress that Taiwan independence is a dead end. The historical trend of national unification and national restoration cannot be stopped by any person or force.”

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Spokesperson for China’s Taiwan Affairs Office
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“So we intervened against the Orthodox Serbs, Orthodox Christian Serbs in Kosovo and put essentially a Muslim drug mafia in charge of that country and called it a great success story for democracy. These people have never been our friends. They aren't ever going to be our friends. They are incurably hostile. I'm talking about the Sunni Islamists.”

author
Retired Army Colonel and Donald Trump's nominee to become the US ambassador to Germany
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“The Doklam affair [military standoff occurred between China and India as China attempted to extend a road on the Doklam plateau southwards] illustrated China's proclivity to miscalculate and overreach. India's refusal to bend while talking peace offers China's other neighbours an example of how to manage Chinese coercion. Doklam also raises a broader question: Had the US stood up to China in the South China Sea, would the seven artificial and now-militarised islands have been created? It is China's success in altering the status quo there - without incurring any international costs - that has emboldened its territorial revisionism in the East China Sea and the Himalayas.”

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New Delhi-based geostrategist and author
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“As we end today's wars, I have directed my national security team to make our presence and missions in the Asia Pacific a top priority. As a result, reductions in U.S. defence spending will not -I repeat, will not - come at the expense of the Asia Pacific. We'll seek more opportunities for cooperation with Beijing, including greater communication between our militaries to promote understanding and avoid miscalculation.”

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President of the United States
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“China was able to reunify itself many times since the fall of the Han Dynasty. This is because the idea of one China is deeply embedded in the minds of all Chinese people. For centuries, Chinese children, before they could read or write, were taught to recite the San Zi Jing through which the Confucianist idea of society being one big happy family is programmed into young minds. The three- character phrases are like strands of cultural DNA which are passed on from generation to generation. Thus, the political idea of one China is also a cultural idea. This distinguishes Chinese culture from other ancient cultures. For example, Jewish culture is as tenacious as Chinese culture but it does not put the same emphasis on political unity. Hindu culture is also an ancient culture. While Hindu culture encompasses political ideals, it does not programme into all Hindus the idea of one India the way Chinese culture does. For this reason, the idea of Taiwanese independence is emotionally unacceptable to many Chinese people because it goes against a long-held cultural ideal.”

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Minister for Trade and Industry - Singapore
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