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IPSEs IN THE LAST 24H
  • Karine Jean-Pierre
    Karine Jean-Pierre “Americans have the right to peacefully protest. Forcibly taking over a building is not peaceful.” 5 hours ago
  • Janet Yellen
    Janet Yellen “Treasury has consistently warned that companies will face significant consequences for providing material support for Russia's war, and the U.S. is imposing them today on almost 300 targets.” 5 hours ago
  • Catherine Russell
    Catherine Russell “Over 200 days of war have already killed or maimed tens of thousands of children in Gaza. For hundreds of thousands of children in the border city of Rafah, there is added fear of an escalated military operation that would bring catastrophe on top of catastrophe for children. Nearly all of the some 600,000 children now crammed into Rafah are either injured, sick, malnourished, traumatised or living with disabilities.” 5 hours ago
  • Eric Adams
    Eric Adams “We cannot allow what should be a lawful protest to turn into a violent spectacle that saves and serves no purpose. There's no place for acts of hate in our city. I want to continue to commend the professionalism of the police department and to thank Columbia University. It was a tough decision, we understood that. But with the very clear evidence of their observation and the clear evidence from our intelligence division, that they understood it was time to move and the action had to end and we brought it to a peaceful conclusion.” 14 hours ago
  • Sergei Shoigu
    Sergei Shoigu “To maintain the required pace of the offensive … it is necessary to increase the volume and quality of weapons and military equipment supplied to the troops, primarily weapons.” 14 hours ago
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#Yoshihide Suga

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

“Wednesday's vote is seen as a test of whether the party can move out of Abe's shadow. What's at stake is the state of democracy in Japan, and if or how the new leader is willing to listen to the people's voices and take them into political consideration. Prime minister Suga obviously had a problem with communicating with the people and did not provide accountability.”

author
Political science professor at the University of Tokyo
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“Today at the executive meeting, (party) president Suga [Yoshihide Suga] said he wants to focus his efforts on anti-coronavirus measures and will not run in the leadership election. Honestly, I'm surprised. It's truly regrettable. He did his best but after careful consideration, he made this decision.”

author
Japanese politician - Secretary-General of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP)
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“The result shows the public does not support the central government led by Mr Suga [Yoshihide Suga]. The LDP [Liberal Democratic Party] put a lot of effort into the Tokyo election this time, but it ended up with a poor outcome. This is a no to the LDP and a no to the Suga government.”

author
Political science professor at Nihon University
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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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“The US doesn't want ties between China and Japan to get better, and Japan is accommodating itself with the US on the latter's China policy. We don't want China-Japan relations to hit bottom, nor for Tokyo to tie itself completely with the US. Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said he wants stable ties with China, but where is his action?”

author
Expert with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
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“After Suga [Yoshihide Suga] took office, Japan's ties with China became increasingly problematic due to the long-standing dispute on the Diaoyu Islands and the interruption from the US. Under the serious epidemic situation and pressure on how to hold the Tokyo Olympics, Suga would not like to see another massive struggle with China only because of Xinjiang, an issue that Japan has no interest in.”

author
Chief expert at the Northeast Asian Strategic Studies Institute
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“The problem is that all politics are local, and both the Moon [Moon Jae-in, president of South Korea] and Suga [Yoshihide Suga, Prime Minister of Japan] administrations respond to popular sentiment. I suspect the U.S. will strongly stress the importance of focusing on the future rather than being tortured by the ghosts of history. I think the U.S. will likely try to mediate. There are some ideas of compromise floating around, and the U.S. will likely encourage a resolution that stresses the vital importance of that to both alliances.”

author
Senior fellow at the Atlantic Council
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“The larger mission for the Chinese foreign minister to visit Seoul and Tokyo is to stabilize and strengthen China's ties to these two neighbors amid the pandemic and in the wake of Biden winning the U.S. election. Beijing appears cautious in working with the Suga government in part because the prime minister is new, having just started his term. Beijing also remembers that Suga's predecessor Shinzo Abe developed a friendly relationship with U.S. President Donald Trump at both the personal and government level, which solidifies Japan's role as the cornerstone of America's strategic interest in East Asia. Beijing is not sure how much it can sway Tokyo's loyalty away from the forthcoming Biden administration. In contrast, Beijing has more to work with and to expect from Seoul. President Moon disagreed with President Trump on a host of issues from trade to Seoul's contribution to American defense cost-sharing on the Korean Peninsula. South Korean conservatives are not happy with the way Trump flattered (North Korean leader) Kim Jong-un. Both Beijing and Seoul share a common goal of denuclearization through diplomacy. Wang Yi is trying to seize on these issues to solidify and expand Beijing's ties to Seoul.”

author
Associate professor of modern Chinese history at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.
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“He [Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga] has demonstrated intent to improve relations with Beijing, but now he has little option as a new prime minister to show himself to be tough on Japan’s rivals. He is new and he is being watched carefully; he faces an election to remain leader of the party in one year’s time and he has to satisfy all the elements in the party that approved of Abe’s strong line on China. I feel that all of Japan’s territorial issues will come to the fore in the near future and that Suga has no choice but to adopt a nationalistic tone or he will fail in the next leadership election.”

author
Professor of East Asian studies at Tokyo’s Kokushikan University
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