IPSE'S AUTHORS LAST 24h
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IPSEs IN THE LAST 24H
  • Volodymyr Zelenskiy
    Volodymyr Zelenskiy “There are prospects [for a new Ukrainian counteroffensive]. First and foremost we need to stabilise the situation at the line of contact. As you can see, it is not stable. I would say this: it's their turn now. They need to be stopped, and we will stop them. Then we need the appropriate staffing for the brigades so that they can take the next counteroffensive step.” 3 hours ago
  • Giorgi Revishvili
    Giorgi Revishvili “Despite the Georgian Dream having the majority to override the veto, it was important for the president to make the move. The president rightfully said how it [foreign agent's law] is a Russia law and contradicts all of European standards. There is also a fundamental shift in the political landscape with the younger generation becoming increasingly involved in politics. The youth is the driving force behind these protests.” 4 hours ago
  • Salome Zourabichvili
    Salome Zourabichvili “Today I set a veto … on the law, which is Russian in its essence and which contradicts our constitution.” 4 hours ago
  • Mohammed Jamjoom
    Mohammed Jamjoom “What we're seeing more and more of in the past few days is that there is a huge amount of disagreement amongst war cabinet members about the plan going forward for Gaza. And this echoes also the concerns by US government that has said repeatedly that Netanyahu needs to try to figure out a plan for a post-war Gaza scenario.” 4 hours ago
  • Benny Gantz
    Benny Gantz “If you choose to lead the nation to the abyss, we will withdraw from the government [by June 8], turn to the people, and form a government that can bring about a real victory. We did not claim dominance. We did not demand jobs. All we wanted was to serve our country and our people. For many months, the unity was indeed real and meaningful. It prevented serious mistakes, led to great achievements, and returned home over a hundred hostages. Together, we faced the hardships of the campaign, protected the nation with a good and strong spirit - and gave the fighters on the front a feeling of being backed by a shared destiny. But lately, something has gone wrong. Essential decisions were not made. A small minority has taken over the command bridge of the Israeli ship of state and is steering her toward the rocks. I came here today to tell the truth. And the truth is hard: while Israeli soldiers show supreme bravery on the front, some of the people who sent them into battle behave with cowardice and irresponsibility.” 8 hours ago
  • Volodymyr Zelenskiy
    Volodymyr Zelenskiy “Let's not forget about other fronts beyond the Kharkiv front: the Kramatorsk, Pokrovsk, and Kurakhove fronts, and the southern fronts; it's tough on all of those fronts, and our forces are fighting back with dignity. I am especially grateful to the soldiers who repelled the Russian assault on Chasiv Yar. Our forces destroyed more than 20 pieces of the occupiers' equipment. Good job!” 8 hours ago
  • António Guterres
    António Guterres “The only permanent way to end the cycle of violence and instability is through a two-state solution, Israel and Palestine living side-by-side in peace and security, with Jerusalem as capital of both states.” 10 hours ago
  • Vladimir Putin
    Vladimir Putin “Civilians are dying there [on border regions such as Belgorod]. It's obvious. They are shooting directly at the city center, at residential areas. And I said publicly that if this continues, we will be forced to create a security zone, a buffer zone. That is what we are doing.” 11 hours ago
  • John Holman
    John Holman “At present Ukraine is outmanned in terms of soldiers in parts of the front line even before the latest Russian attacks. Ukraine said that there were seven Russian soldiers to one Ukrainian soldier, so that's going to put fresh pressure on them.” 12 hours ago
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#Biden administration

Page with all the IPSEs stored in the archive with the tag #Biden administration linked to them.
The IPSEs are presented in chronological order based on when the IPSEs have been pronounced.

“This visit is important to Zelenskiy [Volodymyr Zelenskiy] because Trump brought him into the domestic political debate, there has been some concern there could be tensions between the Ukrainian leader and the Biden administration. But that didn't happen, because first of all, he resisted Trump's pressure, and secondly, Biden and his people in the State Department understand the importance of Ukraine. The visit alone will likely raise Zelenskiy's profile within his country.”

author
Professor of comparative politics at the University of Kyiv Mohyla Academy
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“The Biden administration had an opportunity to withdraw from the agreement. They could have reevaluated it and renegotiated it and taken a different path on Afghanistan. But the Biden administration chose to stick with it. So, yeah. This is why we are where we are now. Now, it is also true that the pullout was extremely abrupt. We pulled out 16,000 contractors all at once. These are contractors that helped maintain the equipment for the Afghans. They helped keep air assets in the air. So, we literally pulled the rug out from under the Afghans. And we sort of played into the Taliban strategy.”

author
Top White House adviser on Afghanistan in the Trump administration
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“This Trump-Biden withdrawal is a big mistake. Beijing and Moscow they are laughing. Tehran and Pyongyang have seen that the Administration is credulous when it comes to claims by devoted adversaries of the United States. It makes us look like we're suckers.”

author
Former US National Security Advisor from 2018 to 2019
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“I wouldn't have let my 10-year-old son get away from this kind of pathetic blame-shifting. He should be less focused on trying to blame this on someone else than to solving the problem of making sure that we protect and defend American security. It's worth noting this did not happen on our watch. The Taliban takeover of Kabul will likely be inevitable because the Biden administration refused to adopt a deterrence model - unlike what the Trump administration had done. They have to understand that there's an administration with a backbone and a seriousness to execute on the things that matter and protect and defend America. Were I still the secretary of State, with the commander in chief like President Trump, the Taliban would have understood that there were real costs to pay if there were plots against the United States of America. Qassem Soleimani learned that lesson and the Taliban would have learned it as well.”

author
Former US Secretary of State
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“Currently, the North Korea issue is invisible on the agenda of the Biden administration. As a result, the impatient Kim Jong-un said, in June [2021], that he was ready for both dialogue and confrontation with the U.S.; however this was all to no avail. In that respect, the North is now pressuring the South to do something. If the U.S. negligence of the North continues, the Kim Jong-un regime may opt for military action.”

author
Senior researcher at the state-run Korea Institute for National Unification
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“The key for Biden is not to seek China's compromise and concessions on key issues, because it is difficult to achieve that goal, but to push more countries into the track of following the US in its comprehensive strategic competition with China by intensifying disputes these countries have with China. Against this backdrop, the Biden administration is anticipated to consider naming an ambassador to China only after it has sorted out its alliances and partnerships and appointed ambassadors to those countries.”

author
Professor at the Institute of International Relations at the China Foreign Affairs University
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“The Biden administration wants to prioritize direct talks with China through higher-level officials, such as the deputy secretary of state, rather than through an ambassador. Currently the China-US relations are sensitive, complex and thorny. As an implementer of the country's policy rather than a decision-maker, the US ambassador's role in China is quite limited. It is better for the ambassador to wait for a higher level to 'set the tone' on more big issues before taking office.”

author
Specialist on US affairs at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
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“The Biden administration just stuck its finger in the eye of the United States Supreme Court and our Constitution with its illegal eviction ban. Joe Biden has no authority to tell people what they can or cannot do with their private property. Employers are begging people to come to work, there's zero excuse for this any more.”

author
Republican Candidate for US Senate in Pennsylvania
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“The competitive relationship between the United States and China has continued since the inauguration of President Biden, and the Biden administration emphasizes uniting with allies and responding to China's offensive. Japanese politicians also recognize that Japan should play an important role.”

author
Professor of global politics at Hosei University
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“The confluence of the surging Delta variant with 6.5 million families behind on rent and at risk of eviction when the moratorium expires demands immediate action. The public health necessity of extended protections for renters is obvious. If federal court cases made a broad extension impossible, the Biden administration should implement all possible alternatives, including a more limited moratorium on federally backed properties.”

author
Executive director of the National Low Income Housing Coalition
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“Deputy Secretary Sherman [Wendy Sherman] and I appreciated that the Republic of Korea-U.S. summit was held early after the Biden administration took office, and yielded significant achievements such as termination of the U.S. missile guidelines on South Korea and cooperation in vaccine supply chains. We have agreed to work closely together to continue our faithful implementation. We have shared the view that bilateral cooperation between South Korea and the United States is necessary for early resumption of dialogue with North Korea in order to make substantial progress toward the goal of complete denuclearization and establishment of lasting peace on the Korean Peninsula.”

author
South Korea's First Vice Foreign Minister
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“The Biden Administration inherited from me the strongest, safest, and most secure border in U.S history and in mere weeks they turned it into the single worst border crisis in U.S history. We went from having border security that was the envy of the world to a lawless border that is now pitied around the world.”

author
Former US president
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“While for now the uptick [in COVID-19 cases] hasn't had an impact, if it lasts too long there could be logistical problems [in the semiconductor industry]. That's why it's urgent. We hope the international community can help release vaccines as soon as possible to help control the outbreak. We have talked to the Biden administration and we work closely together. We expect them to help. The US government has been very supportive of Taiwan and that is under their consideration. We expect that pretty soon the White House will have a decision.”

author
Director-General of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office (TECO)
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“It's clear that the Biden administration is focused on strategic competition with China as a primary foreign policy objective, or as a primary frame for thinking about the challenges it faces in the world. It was very intentional that it opened its foreign policy approach in that way [first two leaders to visit the US - the Japanese Yoshihide Suga followed by the South Korean Moon Jae-in]. The US sees South Korea as a like-minded country, a democracy, a security ally… which basically means the US thinks South Korea has already made a choice,” Snyder explained. “Basically what they have been doing is to cooperate under the surface with the US but not necessarily publicly. They’re like a student that aces the written exam but is deeply afraid of class participation.”

author
Director of the US-Korea policy programme at the Council on Foreign Relations
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“Given the Biden administration's tough stance towards Saudi Arabia, Riyadh cannot afford to cut off any allies at the moment- be they big or small in significance. The visit [of Pakistan PM Imran Khan] represents each side's attempt to further a sustainable and mutually beneficial partnership. Pakistan-Saudi relations are synonymous to a marriage where divorce is not possible. Each side needs the other. For Pakistan, on the forefront is the Pakistani diaspora and the need for foreign direct investment. For Saudi Arabia, Pakistan is a source of oil exports [especially] in light of the China-Iran deal. If they [Saudi Arabia] push Pakistan away it will be to their own detriment.”

author
Research fellow at the Institute of Strategic Studies Islamabad
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“Since President Biden's administration took office on Jan. 20, we have seen that relations between Taiwan and the U.S. have not only continued uninterrupted but, as the U.S. has described, are rock solid.”

author
Taiwan’s foreign minister
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“North Korea has a pattern of testing its missiles in springtime to showcase its military presence to the world. This was coupled by the regime's necessity to find out how the Biden administration will react to this type of actions. If the response is not what the North was desiring, the country may opt to test higher-grade or strategic weapons.”

author
Senior researcher at the state-run Korea Institute for National Unification
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“With its return to testing different types of missiles, Pyongyang is flirting with the limits of what it can get away with under UN Security Council resolutions. The Moon government has doubled down on peace building engagement and the Biden administration is looking to complete a policy review before taking any major moves. Strategists in Tokyo worry that North Korea is taking provocative actions to undermine cooperation among Japan, South Korea and the United States. The three countries are trying to get on the same page about deterrence, sanctions and engagement.”

author
Professor at Ewha University in Seoul
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“America is back and US tough acts and remarks against China recently are just like an awkward moment for President Biden. The reason why he stumbled on the stairs of Air Force One is that he tried to run, not walk. Because he really cares about the people talking about his health, he needs to run faster than walk, to pretend he's still strong. His country is doing the same thing, to play tough to cover its weakness. Let's hope it won't stumble.”

author
Specialist on US affairs at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
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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.”

author
Researcher at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington
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