Category: Rubrique

  • Uncertainty in Sino-American Rivalry

    {{The growing Sino-American rivalry has raised the question of whether their relationship will descend into a zero-sum contest for global primacy or continue to be a strategic mixture of collaboration and competition.}}

    Experts presume the latter is the most plausible for the next few decades, given their gaps in power, and domestic challenges. But it is still an open-ended question whether China will remain content with the status quo amid its growing power.

    “At most, China will become a cautious and timid revisionist. For the years to come, China will remain as a status-quo power, since this situation has served China well,” Cheng Xiaohe, international studies professor at Renmin University of China, told The Korea Herald via email.

    “China has no overwhelming reasons to reverse such a policy. Nonetheless, China will try to put its own mark on various international organizations in a gradualist, rather than revolutionary way.”

    Lee Choon-kun, security expert at the Korea Economic Research Institute, forecast heightened tension between the two for the next decade, during which new leader Xi Jinping is at the helm of the emerging global power.

    “Both the U.S. and China may take a strong stance (toward each other) and their conflict could be further heightened,” he said.

    “Now for the second term, President Barack Obama is given a free hand to adopt a more active foreign policy. As for Xi, nationalism could come into play as he seeks to address growing public grievances.”

    The two powers’ competition has been intensifying as the Asia-Pacific emerges as the center of power and wealth.

    China has been increasingly assertive in recent years, taking issue with what it sees as unfair aspects of the U.S.-led international order since the end of World War II.

    Its muscle flexing over territorial disputes in the East and South China Seas has also put its neighbors as well as U.S. allies on edge.

    Washington has repeatedly urged China to play by the rules, while striving to maintain its global preponderance amid the “rise of the rest” and reassure its allies and partners of its security commitments.

    The Obama administration has put forward its “rebalancing” policy as the U.S. shifts its policy focus toward the economically vibrant region from the volatile Middle East and financially strained Europe, after a decade of war in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    “The future of politics will be decided in Asia, not Afghanistan or Iraq, and the U.S. will be right at the center of the action,” U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said in an atticle in U.S.-based Foreign Policy magazine last November.

    China has been unnerved, apparently taking the move as part of Washington’s stepped-up efforts to hem it in or thwart what it terms a peaceful rise, despite Washington’s denials.

    Washington’s virtual exclusion of China from its Tran-Pacific Partnership scheme to forge a free-trade zone encompassing the Asia-Pacific region has further fanned a sense of antagonism between the established and emerging powers.

    Whatever their true intentions may be, their growing rivalry is expected to put Seoul in a difficult diplomatic position given that it should maintain its long-standing alliance with the U.S. without compromising the strategic ties with its largest trading partner China ― the strong patron and ally of nuclear-armed North Korea.

    {{Rising or Revival}}

    Westerners have said China is rising or emerging, which bears both positive and negative connotations.

    Liberalist theorists contend the rise of China, with its big market and massive human resources, means opportunities for the international community, and greater contributions to global prosperity, peace and security.

    Realists, however, caution against the likelihood of China’s pursuing a hegemonic power while translating its economic strength into a greater military might, which could hamper America’s global power projection.

    Whatever outsiders’ perspectives are, China likes to say it is pursuing a “revival of a strong nation” to avoid repeating its history of suffering foreign invasions in the 19th and early 20th centuries.

    The Opium War (1840-42) was China’s most traumatic confrontation with the West. It resulted in the unfair Nanking Treaty involving its relinquishing of Hong Kong to Britain.

    China’s defeat in the Sino-Japanese War (1894-95) and Imperial Japan’s invasions during World War II remain another historical trauma.

    Although China is proud of its newfound strength, it apparently wants to avoid any implicit call for it to take on more global responsibilities, as it is already swamped with a plethora of domestic challenges.

    Washington has urged Beijing to become a “responsible stakeholder” in the region and beyond as part of the Group of Two. Since it surpassed Japan as the world’s second-largest economy in 2010, the media have called China part of the G2.

    China’s nominal gross domestic product is expected to surpass that of the U.S. in around 2020. China now has the world’s largest foreign currency reserve, and holds $1.15 trillion worth of U.S. treasury bills.

    {{China as potential revisionist}}

    China-bashing has always been a dominant theme in U.S. presidential debates over foreign policy, apparently underscoring America’s growing concerns about China’s increasing military and economic clout.

    Candidates’ rhetoric was sharper than ever this year. President Obama labeled China as an “adversary” for the first time, contradicting his hitherto collaborative stance. His Republican rival Mitt Romney branded it a “currency manipulator.”

    Experts concur China may not pursue adventurism for the next decade during Xi’s presidency in the face of daunting challenges at home, although it may continue to raise its voice over what it views as unfair in the international order.

    China’s domestic conundrums include the massive gap between the rich coastal areas and the underdeveloped western regions, the more general gulf between the rich and poor, its opaque political system, corruption in officialdom, and demographic challenges stemming from its one-child policy.

    “Xi may try to reconcile two nations’ interests by adopting a pragmatic and cooperative policy toward the U.S.,” said Cheng Xiaohe of Renmin University.

    “As China tries to cope with the hot issues on its periphery, China will have no interest in any heightened confrontation with the U.S. even though the two nations might run into conflicts of interest from time to time.”

    To become a revisionist that could challenge the U.S., China still lacks both hard and soft power, experts noted. To top it off, China is the nation which has benefited most from the U.S.-led capitalist mechanism, they said.

    According to data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, America’s military expenditure was $711 billion in 2011 while that of China was at $143 billion. The United States’ nominal GDP was $14.5 trillion in 2010 while China’s was $5.9 trillion, according to the International Monetary Fund.

    For the U.S. as well, the best policy for now is to maintain the status quo as it struggles with a sluggish economic recovery, massive national debt, high unemployment and volatility in the Middle East.

    “I expect to see the U.S. to continue a policy of deep diplomatic engagement with China combined with a reweighting of its strategic interests in the direction of Asia,” said Scott Snyder, a senior fellow at the U.S.-based Council on Foreign Relations.

    “Every U.S. effort to enhance relations with other countries in Asia should not automatically be assumed to come at China’s expense.”

    However, China’s increasing assertiveness in maritime disputes with U.S. allies and partners including Vietnam and the Philippines poses a tough challenge to the U.S.

    Washington apparently believes Beijing’s “anti-access area-denial” capabilities could hamper its regional power projection and undermine what it calls the “global commons” it has long promoted to secure freedom of commerce and navigation.

    “Neighboring states apparently feel threatened (by China’s military influence), irrespective of China’s true intentions,” said Kim Heung-kyu, China expert at Sungshin Women’s University.

    “Through strategic communication between China and the U.S., and China and neighboring states, they continue to address their misunderstandings. China, for its part, should recognize how its bolstered military could threaten its neighbors.”

    Challenges for the U.S. that could hamper its “rebalancing” efforts include its financial constraints and Middle East conundrums including Iran’s nuclear programs and frayed ties with the geo-strategically crucial Pakistan.

    {{Growing Military Rivalry}}

    One of the most pressing concerns for the U.S. military is China’s anti-access/area-denial capabilities based on its military modernization in all domains including space and cyberspace, experts said.

    They noted America’s failure to counter it could constrain its regional power projection and cause its allies and partners to worry about its security commitments and consider leaning toward China.

    Mindful of this, the U.S. has been refocusing its military priorities on the Asia-Pacific despite its cuts in defense spending to tackle a fiscal deficit.

    “Unless the U.S. demonstrates its strength and will to defend (its allies and partners), they are likely to cooperate with the country that poses a potential threat to them ― what theorists call bandwagoning behavior,” said Kim Heung-kyu, China and security expert at Sungshin Women’s University.

    Washington plans to increase the portion of its battleships stationed in the region from the current 50 percent to 60 percent by 2020. The ships would include six aircraft carriers.

    “The U.S. maintains its lead in the state-of-the-art defense technologies and full-spectrum military capabilities, which can’t be matched by China,” said Michael Raska, research fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University.

    “Accordingly, the Chinese have been investing considerable resources and making progress in developing a diverse portfolio of asymmetric capabilities for air, sea and land operations that may offset select U.S. advantages.”

    To counter China’s perceived military threats, the U.S. is fleshing out its AirSea Battle concept featuring integrated aerial and naval operations across all domains such as air, sea, space and cyberspace.

    The concept involves three key phases ― a “Blinding Campaign” to deny the enemy’s situational awareness by neutralizing its intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance assets; a missile suppression campaign to disrupt the enemy’s air-defense networks and achieve air superiority; and lastly follow-on operations to seize the operational initiative.

    But the concept has been hindered by strategic ambiguity and uncertain operational consequences, Raska pointed out.

    “U.S. allies in the region question whether and to what extent the ASB foresees active allied participation in the envisioned ‘deep-strike missions’ targeting China’s surveillance systems and the long-range missiles dispersed across the mainland,” he said.

    This and other U.S. military efforts have been intensified as China has constantly modernized its military capabilities with high-tech weapons systems.

    Particularly, to expand its maritime defense, China has focused on developing sea-launched ballistic missiles and anti-ship ballistic missiles with diversified striking ranges and enhanced precision-strike capabilities. ASBMs are dubbed “aircraft carrier killers.”

    In September, China put into service the 67,500-ton Liaoning aircraft carrier, showing off its maritime ambitions to raise a blue-water navy. It has also unveiled its stealth J-20 fighter jets.

    But Raska said that converting available resources into increased military capabilities involves much more diverse, complicated efforts.

    “The conversion is bound to the organizational adaptability, efficiency, and effectiveness of a country’s defense planning and management to attain better efficiency gains, cost savings, innovation and competitiveness to maximize the operational performance of its armed forces,” he said.

    “Accordingly, China has to overcome existing structural, organizational, doctrinal and technological deficiencies in order to close the gap with the technologically superior and operationally experienced U.S. military.”

    {{Possibility of another Cold War rigidity}}

    As the Sino-American rivalry has loomed large, so has the specter of another Cold War.

    However, experts largely dismiss a pessimistic view of their rivalry, stressing that deepening economic interdependence in the “WTO era,” any serious conflict between them would cause economic damage for both.

    “As their economies were clearly separated during the Cold War, their hostile relationship did not inflict any serious economic damage on each other,” said Suh Jin-young, professor emeritus at Korea University.

    “Until about two decades ago, the U.S. was able to harass China through economic means without itself being hurt at all. But now, things have changed.”

    On top of the intricate web of economic ties, online communities could play a crucial role in forging transnational discourse against the two powers’ confrontational move given that it could bring about negative ramifications for the entire capitalist world.

    The so-called balance of nuclear terror based on fears of “mutually assured destruction” still continues on amid the nuclear powers’ competition, experts noted.

    Beyond the possibility of their military clashes, there are many transnational issues that call for their joint action. They include climate change, proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, terrorism and piracy off the Somali coast.

    {{What China lacks to be a great power}}

    China is nearing the status of a global power by many accounts. That, however, stems largely from hard, material power, experts noted, stressing that it should pay more heed to enhancing its “soft power.” Soft power ― a term coined by Joseph Nye of Harvard University ― is based on intangible influences such as values, ideals and norms.

    “China, affected by nationalism at home, showed off its military power in a manner that threatens its neighbors when territorial conflicts flared up, rather than trying to use multilateral cooperation channels to resolve them,” said Sohn Byoung-kwon, political science professor at Chung-Ang University.

    “To gain the due qualification for the global leadership equivalent to that of the U.S., it should first address its neighbors’ concerns. It is already a strong nation militarily and economically, but (not) in the realm of soft power.”

    Lee of the Korea Economic Research Institute stressed that China should first institutionalize the three “universal values” of democracy, freedom and peace to become a great power.

    “As they always mention peace, China claims to have that value. But in terms of the other two, it has a long way to go yet,” he said.

    “In addition to that, we talk about China’s total economic size to surpass the U.S. in the coming decade. But, in history, there were no great powers, in which their people were poor.”

    Above all, what China should not forget is that it is not rising in a vacuum, but with many other peers in the international community, experts said.

    For this reason, it should gain “recognition” from others to have the genuine global leadership.

    “Recognition is rarely given just because of its size or (hard, material) power. It comes along when it makes donations to enhance the public good, appeals to them with its own culture and charm,” said Kim of Sungshin Women’s University.

    Apparently aware of these concerns about soft power, China has launched what experts call a “charm offensive” to enhance its soft power in Southeast Asia, Central Asia, sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America through massive business investment, development assistance and other tools using its material power.

    Some disparage such Chinese soft-power efforts as part of a strategy to secure oil and other resources from the underdeveloped countries, in order to power its economy and feed its 1.3 billion people.

    But some positively compare this foreign policy to the United States’ Marshall Plan (1947-51), which helped reconstruct European economies after the end of World War II and stem communist expansion.

    Koreaherald

  • Insight into Ghana’s Enigmatic Former First Couple

    {{In Ghana, one of the 2012 election’s most interesting features has been the theatrical sideshow of Ghana’s best-known political family: the Rawlingses.}}

    Husband Jerry John Rawlings has spread his loyalties around, alternately offering support to the governing National Democratic Congress (NDC) and his wife’s breakaway National Democratic Party (NDP).

    Having overseen the establishment of the NDC decades ago, Rawlings fell out of favour with the party in 2009 when he became a fierce critic of its direction under then-President John Evans Atta Mills.

    Wife Nana Konadu also has a long history in politics, and as an NDC member she challenged the late President Mills to the NDC flag-bearership in the 2012 primary but lost badly.

    As early as September 17th she began publicly hinting that she might accept the NDP flagbearership, which she did at the NDP’s October 13th Congress, pledging to focus on women and youth as the keys to development.

    In short, both halves of this powerful couple have been at odds with the NDC in the lead up to the election.

    {{JJ and the NDC}}

    The NDC nevertheless invited Mr. Rawlings to speak at the party’s August 30th National Delegates Congress. There, he pledged to support President John Mahama’s reelection campaign so long as Mahama showed dedication to ridding the party of “babies with sharp teeth.”

    A classic Rawlingsism, this now-famous term refers to young party members who routinely attack other politicians with vitriolic language.

    These insults fly not just across party lines but also within the NDC, and Rawlings has more than once found himself the subject of this caustic scorn.

    In his October 13th speech to the NDP Congress, Rawlings articulated other grievances with the NDC, accusing it of becoming a haven for inferior politicians who, through nefarious dealings, beat more qualified NDC candidates during primaries.

    Once in office, Rawlings said, these MPs pursue their own personal agenda, adding in an October 24th lecture on corruption that they often award valuable government contracts to friends and fellow party loyalists.

    During these speeches, Rawlings heavily criticized the Mills administration, which he said had done too little to combat and punish corruption.

    Midway through his corruption speech, however, he praised Mahama for blocking the sale of Merchant Bank, which he said was a holdover from the corrupt dealings of the Mills era.

    At the NDP Congress, he predicted that the NDC’s politicking and corruption would lead to a revolution within the party and inevitably cause it to lose a significant number of seats in Parliament, adding that he does not personally wish failure for the NDC.

    JJ’s October 12th meeting with opposition candidate Akufo-Addo caused some observers to wonder if this meeting, in conjunction with his support for the NDP, indicated a desire on JJ’s part to hurt the NDC by supporting its opponents.

    However, the two men kept their discussion focused on the issue of security for voters of the losing party. They have not met publicly since and Rawlings has not endorsed Akufo-Addo.

    {{Konadu and the NDP}}

    Having failed to issue a manifesto or articulate a very specific agenda, the NDP seems more concerned with shaking things up in the NDC camp than offering the nation a new guiding vision.

    Not only did Konadu and other NDC members break away to form the NDP and take NDC icon JJ Rawlings as their spokesman, they even borrowed the NDC’s party colours.

    Furthermore, during his speech at the NDP Congress, JJ all but called the NDP a tool to push the NDC towards greater accountability.

    He said that the governing party had lost the moral high ground that it had won under his own stewardship and that before breaking away, his wife had tried to steer it right from within.

    He even admitted that once the necessary changes take place within the NDC, he expects the two parties to join ranks again.

    On October 18th, the Electoral Commission (EC) disqualified Konadu’s candidacy on the grounds that certain forms submitted by the NDP were incomplete, a ruling that Konadu pledged to fight.

    During a speech a week later, JJ said, “even if it doesn’t work this time, [the NDP] has the ingredients, the qualities, the integrity that others will come back to… and that’s why for me, I see this party as the party of the future.”

    Read these words carefully: the NDP is the party of the future because it is governed by values that others should return to, but not necessarily because it will literally lead the nation.

    November 6th was an interesting day for the Rawlingses: hours before JJ announced that he would campaign for the NDC, Konadu, her court battle ongoing, appeared on Adom FM urging voters to reject NDC candidates for failing to deliver on a 2008 campaign promise to reduce poverty and corruption.

    She also urged NDP Parliamentary candidates to stay in the race so that they can make their mark on the Parliamentary front.

    {{What does it all mean?}}

    If JJ is to be taken at his word, his renewed support for the NDC indicates that he has been convinced of President Mahama’s intentions to confront corruption, to discourage the unruly flinging of insults, especially against Rawlings, or both.

    His frustrations, as he said all along, were with Atta Mills as well as the impertinent and self-interested elements within the party, not with Mahama himself.

    While Konadu maintains that her goal is to change the country’s direction, critics will surely continue to paint Konadu as bitter, self-centered, and power hungry in light of her ongoing attacks against the NDC.

    Is her gripe really that she remains disillusioned with the NDC because of its performance since the 2008 election? Has Mahama really restored JJ’s faith in the party?

    If so, what did he do to guarantee that party members will tone down their rhetoric, especially against the former president?

    Given the Rawlingses’ enigmatic nature, the public may never learn what motivated this unusual election season drama. And for all we know, the last act may be yet to come.

    {{Myjoyonline}}

  • Obama Wins Second Term

    {{United States Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney has admitted defeat in the U.S elections.

    ‘I have called Obama to congratulate him upon his victory…I wish them well, his supporters, family and our country… we can t risk political bickering,” Romney said.}}

    President Barack Obama rolled to re-election Tuesday night, vanquishing former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney despite a weak economy that plagued his first term and put a crimp in the middle class dreams of millions.

    In victory, he confidently promised better days ahead.

    “This is a time of great challenges for America and I pray that the President is successful in guiding our nation. I wish all of them well, particularly the president, the first lady and their daughters,” he said.

    Romney explained, “I ran for office because I’m concerned for America,” and added, “Like so many of you, Paul and I have left everything on the field. We have given our all to this campaign.”

  • Americans Vote

    {{American Citizens are voting for the next US president. Here Residents of Rosslyn, a neighborhood in Arlington, Virginia stand in long lines to vote. }}

  • Russian Defence Minister Fired

    {{Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday fired defence minister Anatoly Serdyukov over a corruption scandal, the most dramatic change to the government since he returned to the Kremlin for a third term.}}

    Putin replaced Serdyukov, who had been implementing an unpopular but Kremlin-backed military reform, with Moscow region governor and long-standing ally Sergei Shoigu, his spokesperson said.

    Serdykov was relieved of his duties so that a thorough investigation can proceed into a suspected US$100m property scam at a defence ministry holding company, Putin’s spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said.

    “This is in connection with the situation at the defence ministry. It has been done to create all the necessary conditions for the investigation,” Peskov said.

  • Election Of US President

    {{Presidents in the United States are chosen not by the popular vote, but through a system called the Electoral College.}}

    Each of the 50 states and Washington DC has a set number of Electoral College votes that go to the candidate who wins a plurality of the popular vote there.

    The winner of the majority of the Electoral College’s 538 votes becomes the next president.

    The number of electors in each state is determined by the number of officeholders that state has in the House of Representatives – proportional to the state’s population – added to the number of senators from that state.

    Each state has two senators, irrespective of population.

    For example, California has the largest population of any state, 37 million people. It sends 53 members to the House of Representatives and two to the Senate; thus it has 55 electors.

    The least populous state, Wyoming, with its 568,000 people, has only 3 electoral votes.

    This indirect system of electing the president is enshrined in the US Constitution. It was instituted more than 200 years ago because the framers of the Constitution wanted elders to provide a check to the popular vote.

    Consequently, the electoral system does not always reflect the will of the people. In 2000, Democrat Al Gore received more votes than Republican George W Bush, but Bush won in the Electoral College: 271 to Gore’s 266. Bush became the next president.

    In all but two states, the candidate who wins the popular vote takes all that state’s electoral votes. Nebraska and Maine use proportional representation, allocating one electoral vote to the winner of each congressional district and two more to the winner of the statewide vote.

    In 2008, Nebraska actually split its electors for the first time, giving four electoral votes to Republican John McCain and one to Democrat Barack Obama.

    The process of selecting electors varies from state to state, but generally, electors are party loyalists chosen at the state party conventions.

    The electors will meet on December 17 in their individual states to hold a ceremonial vote. Then the 113th US Congress will meet on January 3, 2013, to officially count up the electoral votes.

    Each elector casts one vote for president and one for vice president. Twenty-seven states and Washington DC require electors to vote the way the people of that state vote.

    In the unlikely event that the Electoral College ties 269-269, the House of Representatives would decide the next president and the Senate would vote for vice president.

    But after 56 presidential elections, the Electoral College has only tied once. In 1800, the House of Representatives voted to make Thomas Jefferson the next president.

  • Cameroon opposition to Protest Against Biya’s ‘life Rule’

    {{Leading Cameroon opposition party, the Social Democratic Front (SDF), says it will stage a protest march Tuesday, against President Paul Biya’s ‘life presidency’.}}

    On the same day, the ruling Cameroon People’s Democratic Movement (CPDM) will be holding countrywide celebrations to mark President Biya’s 30-year stay in power.

    Mr Jean Michel Nintcheu, who heads the SDF in the Littoral Region, said in a statement on Sunday that the “peaceful protest” in Douala will be against “30 years of obscurantism, regression and permanent misery”.

    “There’s a pressing need for change in the management of state affairs,” the statement said.

    “Together, let us resolutely make the courageous choice of fighting off what is unacceptable in our country: Life presidency at the helm of the state.”

    On November 6 every year, droves of government officials and administrators of state corporations, return to their regions of origin for the lavish anniversary celebrations, grounding almost all activities in their places of work.

    The 79-year-old Biya scooped 78 per cent in presidential elections in October last year and currently serves a sixth term of office, which could be stretched further when the tenure ends in 2018.

    Presidential term limits were scrapped in 2008.

    President Biya’s equally elderly challenger and chairman of SDF John Fru Ndi, whose share of the 2011 vote slipped to a disappointing 10 per cent, has seen his support wane over the years.

    Critics say the opposition in Cameroon was chronically divided and posed no real threat to the Biya regime.

    Mr Fru Ndi joined other opposition leaders in rejecting the results of last year’s presidential vote and called for a peaceful demonstration.

    But the call seemed to have fallen on deaf ears.

    President Biya is one of several African leaders who have been ruling their countries for a long time.

  • ‘Green Party’ Group Starts Registration Process

    {{For quite sometime there has been not much activity about the ‘Green party’ political pressure group.}}

    However, it is reported that the group has started the process to register into a political party to be able to function as a legal entity in Rwanda.

    The Political party Leader Frank Habineza said the goal is to prepare for the 2013 parliamentary Elections.

    Habineza said his party objectives are promotion of participatory democracy, programs of a green economy, sustainable development, respect for diversity, environmental protection, freedom of association and religion, freedom of expression and of the press among others.

    It was noted that Frank Habineza is also President of the Federation of Political Parties “Green Parties” on the African continent.

  • China’s Communist Party Prepares For Handover

    {{China’s political elite are expected to oust disgraced figure Bo Xilai and jostle for leadership roles in their last formal meeting which opened Thursday ahead of next week’s landmark power handover.}}

    The Communist Party’s Central Committee convened behind closed doors, state media said, with 500 senior members to debate key issues ahead of a congress which will open on Nov. 8 to usher in leaders for the next decade.

    The congress, which groups around 2,000 party members, is set to name Vice President Xi Jinping to succeed outgoing President Hu Jintao, while Vice Premier Li Keqiang is expected to replace outgoing Premier Wen Jiabao.

    Little else is known about who will fill a supporting cast to run the world’s second-largest economy, and observers say candidates are still vying for top jobs in a game of intrigue played out beyond the view of the media.

    Xinhua said the plenum of the 17th Communist Party Central Committee, which began Thursday and could last up to four days, will finalize several reports to be tabled at next week’s congress including an amendment to the Communist Party charter which it did not detail.

    Former Communist Party star Bo was stripped of his parliament seat and lost legal immunity last week, paving the way for him to face charges of abuse of power, taking bribes and improper sexual relations.

    A scandal surrounding him and his administration in the southwestern city of Chongqing, which has seen his wife convicted for the murder of a British businessman, has plagued the sensitive leadership transition.

    The party announced in September that he would be expelled but his formal ouster is a final piece of housekeeping the leaders are expected to conclude before the congress starts, analysts say.

    Observers say the scandal has split the top leadership, with reformers using it as ammunition to advance their push for democratic reform, while conservatives scrambled to shore up the image of a ruling party mired in corruption allegations.

  • US Vice President Wants White House 2016

    {{US Vice President Joe Biden is joking about running for president in 2016.

    During a visit to a Sarasota, Fla., restaurant on Wednesday, Biden took a customer’s cellphone and engaged the man on the other end — apparently the customer’s brother — in a lengthy discussion of the health care overhaul law.}}

    After a while, Biden told the man, who seemed to be a Republican, that he wasn’t going to argue with him to get his vote. Then Biden said: “After it’s all over, when your insurance rates go down, then you’ll vote for me in 2016.”

    Biden’s campaign declined to comment on his remark or clarify his plans for 2016.

    The exchange followed a political rally in which Biden slammed a GOP ad on the auto industry as “flagrantly dishonest.”