First, I think his Taiwan policy is spot on. If we remove our dependency on Taiwanese chips then what use do we have for the place that has long, long been part of China? See other thread on China on how this actually fits well with Xi's plan and likely keeps him appeased with little impact to us.aggie93 said:
The tweet references 2 articles on Vivek's quotes in regards to Taiwan and Israel and how his statements are being interpreted by two countries that are strong allies. Then here is the analysis:Quote:
The thing that is most revealing about Vivek's pronouncements is that he hasn't spent any time actually understanding these issues. He just says what he thinks sounds good and he can sell.
How can you claim to want to prioritize America's interests if you don't understand how those interests would be affected by your proposals?
Does he understand the impact of publicly announcing he plans to abandon Taiwan once we are building enough of our own microchips? Does he understand the incentives that creates for Taiwan, China, and companies investing there? how that impacts deterrence capability in the near future?
Does he realize that we haven't provided Israel any economic aid in years? Does he know what we get in exchange for the current military aid? Has he considered the impact on his ability to secure more Abraham accords with such an announcement?
The answer to all of those things is clearly no. Now many voters don't care about FP specifics, but it's indicative of his approach across the board. It's a sales job without substance.
Can you help me understand the difference between billions of $$$ in economic aid vs billions of $$$ in military aid? Or is this like magical Ukraine military aid where we send them stuff that is obsolete or we are not going to use so it doesn't "cost" us anything. BTW...
Quote:
In March 2022, Congress approved the largest funding package for Israel in history. It included:
$1 billion in emergency Iron Dome funding.
$3.3 billion in security assistance.
$500 million in missile defense cooperation.
The Israel Relations Normalization Act to support and expand peace and normalization agreements between Israel and the UAE, Bahrain, Sudan, and Morocco.
$47.5 million for anti-tunneling technology.
$25 million to combat drone terrorism.
$4 million for U.S.-Israel healthcare cooperation.
$1 million for U.S.-Israel agriculture cooperation.
$6 million for U.S.-Israel energy cooperation.
$2 million for U.S.-Israel homeland security cooperation.
$2 million for U.S.-Israel international development cooperation.
$50 million for the Nita M. Lowey Middle East Partnership for Peace Act to foster economic cooperation and people-to-people peacebuilding programs between Israelis, Palestinians, and Americans.
$6 million for the Middle East Regional Cooperation program to facilitate research collaboration between Israel and other countries in the region.
$5 million for refugee resettlement in Israel.