[FLASH]http://cdn-07.liveleak.com/liveleak/14/media14/2007/Nov/26/LiveLeak-dot-com-123964-Chinas_rebuke.wmv[/FLASH]China denied US Kitty Hawk port entry in Hong Kong.



HMMMM INTERESTINGPentagon Makes Official Protest to China
Associated Press
By LOLITA C. BALDOR
November 28, 2007
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Pentagon formally protested China's refusal to permit U.S. Navy ships to enter the port of Hong Kong on two occasions last week.
"We are expressing officially our displeasure with the incident," Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell told reporters Wednesday. He said a Chinese military officer who is Beijing's defense attache in Washington was called to the Pentagon to accept the protest from a Pentagon Asia policy official. Morrell called it "a formal protest, an official protest, complaint," for refusing port entry for two U.S. Navy minesweepers and, later, for the USS Kitty Hawk and its accompanying battle group.
Also, the Chinese foreign minister met with President Bush on Wednesday and blamed the incident on "a misunderstanding."
Morrell said that it is not yet clear whether the Chinese military officer will indeed heed the summons to come to the Pentagon. Morrell said the summons constituted the official protest, but he did not release the wording.
China Refused Two Small U.S. Vessels Passage From Storm
Navy officials have said they are most troubled by China's refusal to let the two Navy minesweepers enter Hong Kong harbor to escape an approaching storm and receive fuel. The minesweepers, the Patriot and the Guardian, were instead refueled at sea and returned safely to their home port in Japan.
In addition, the Chinese also refused to allow the Kitty Hawk, a U.S. aircraft carrier, to make a planned Thanksgiving port visit to Hong Kong.
The USS Kitty Hawk, which has its home port near Tokyo, was forced to return early to Japan when Chinese authorities at the last minute barred the warship and its escort vessels from entering Hong Kong harbor. Hundreds of families of sailors aboard the Kitty Hawk had flown from Japan to spend Thanksgiving weekend in Hong Kong, but had to return home after China refused the port entry.
Later Chinese officials said the Kitty Hawk could enter the port, but by then the carrier had left the area and did not return.
On Wednesday, Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and former chief of the Navy, said China's refusal to let the minesweepers dock went against international rules.
"That's an international rule that people who go to sea and responsible nations who are seagoing nations understand, that you always provide safe harbor, then you figure out, if you want to figure out some of the details .... China chose not to do that," Mullen told a political science class at Yale University. "That's perplexing to me. I don't understand that."
Adm. Timothy Keating, commander of U.S. Pacific Command, called the refusal distressing and irritating but later said it should not be viewed as "calamitous."
"It's not, in our view, conduct that is indicative of a country that understands its obligations as a responsible nation," he said Tuesday. He added that he hopes it does not indicate a lasting blockage of port visits.
China's foreign minister, in the meeting with Bush, blamed "a misunderstanding" for the refusal to allow a flotilla of U.S. warships to make a port call in Hong Kong for a Thanksgiving holiday visit.
Bush raised the issue with Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi when he visited the Oval Office for talks about North Korea, Iran and other issues. The incident added an unusual twist to China-U.S. relations, strained in recent months by disputes over trade and Iran's nuclear program.
"Foreign Minister Yang assured the president that it was a misunderstanding," White House press secretary Dana Perino said. She said she could not explain the nature of the misunderstanding.
Li Junhua, a senior diplomat in China's U.N. Mission, said that before the final approval was given to the Kitty Hawk, "it took time to finalize everything." Asked if the refusal had anything to do with the U.S. giving the Dalai Lama an award last month, Li said the Chinese government "sent its clear-cut view with regard to the visit by Dalai Lama to Washington. However, with regard to the vessel port call, I think it's up to the government of each country to go through its formality and it's case by case. I hope there's no linkage with the routine port call with any kind of issues, not only for China but for any other countries."
China's foreign minister issued a strong protest to the U.S. ambassador after the award was given, and the Chinese government said the move gravely undermined relations between the two countries. China reviles the Dalai Lama as a Tibetan separatist.
The Kitty Hawk and members of its strike group, including a nuclear submarine, were scheduled to dock in Hong Kong for a four-day visit. At the same time hundreds of sailors' families had flown to the city to spend the holiday with loved ones, dozens of Americans living in Hong Kong had prepared turkey dinners for those without relatives.
Hong Kong has long been a favored port of call for the U.S. military but Beijing's approval has been required since July 1, 1997, when Britain handed the former colony back to China. Hong Kong's Marine Department, which handles logistic arrangements for ships docking in Hong Kong's deep-water port, said it had not received the documentation it normally would receive from other agencies clearing the arrival of foreign military ships.
Associated Press writers Deb Riechmann in Washington, Cara Rubinsky in New Haven, Conn., and Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations, contributed to this story.
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jZZKrQszTnCrVHedQoazSUulMrvAD8T6V0580
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Whats more interesting is that after China denied port visitation; the Kitty
Hawk group departed waters off Hong Kong for its homeport in Yokosuka,
Japan. Of course, the Chinese tried to reverse course and grant the group
entry, however, at that time, the decision had been made to say fuck em,
lets go home. And what route did they take ???
Right through the gotdamn Strait of Taiwan between China and Taiwan.
HooMuthafukinRah
QueEx
China has some very real problems and they will get worse as the govt tries to implement capitalistic reforms but keep a communist government eventually a new strongman will emerge and when he does thats ballgame. China has to assume world leadership now because we have been humbled in Iraq and Afghanistan, we have lost our position as leader but China is not ready to lead. What happens next is anybody's guess.
Good for whom ???
QueEx
`
My Take: Its a test to see how the U.S./Obama will react.
My View: Don't back down. Be flexible; but be VERY, VERY firm. Don't start it; but be prepared to deliver it.
QueEx
`

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