Shops would be allowed to open two hours earlier on a Sunday under new laws set to go into state Parliament next month.
Key points:
The SA government is looking to allow shops to trade from 9am on Sundays
The bill would also shops outside the Adelaide CBD to open on Boxing Day
Reforming shop trading has been a Labor election promise
Consultation on the reforms has begun with Premier Peter Malinauskas describing the changes as “sensible”.
Under the proposal, shops will be allowed to trade from 9am on Sunday as opposed to the current laws which only allow them to open at 11am.
The bill would also also allow metropolitan shops outside the Adelaide CBD to operate on Boxing Day.
“It’s about getting the balance right. It’s supported by business, it’s supported by workers,” the Premier said.
The reforms tighten how exemptions are issued to allow trade on public holidays. The former Liberal government used those powers to allow stores to open in the suburbs on public holidays during the last term, including on Easter Monday.
“We don’t think a free-for-all in terms of the exemption regime that the former government sought to exploit is necessarily the right approach,” Mr Malinauskas said.
Currently only shops in Adelaide CBD are allowed to trade on Boxing Day.(ABC News: Nicola Gage)
The opposition is yet to consider the amendments put forward by the government.
“I do note that on recent public holidays, South Australian shoppers who have gone to the shops have been very disappointed to find out that under the new regime those shops have been closed,” said opposition spokesperson John Gardner.
For the bill to pass parliament’s Upper House, Labor needs the support of either the Greens, SA Best or the Liberals.
SDA secretary Josh Peak will ensure the interests of retail workers are heard.(abcnews)
The union representing SA retail workers welcomed the proposal but say shop trading hours should not be at the expense of workers and local businesses to the interests of interstate and overseas supermarket giants.
“For us, this consultation is about protecting retail workers’ right to be treated with respect, to have a fair roster and to have public holidays off,” Shop Distributive and Allied Employees Association secretary Josh Peak said.
“Our shop trading hours are one of the reasons we have one of the most diverse and most competitive supermarket sectors in Australia and this must be safeguarded.”
Drakes Supermarket director John-Paul Drake was supportive of an early start on Sundays.
“We have line-ups at 11am at every store every Sunday,” he said.
“More money goes into the economy, we’d employ more people and they are going to get more hours — so it’s a win-win for everyone.”
He preferred the proposed rules to deregulating shopping hours, which he said would be a “free-for-all” and benefit the “duopoly in this state” the most.
It’s August, so it’s time for a new version of Parallels Desktop. The latest release of the company’s popular virtualisation software – Parallels Desktop 18 – features support for the newest Macs and preliminary support for macOS Ventura.
Parallels Desktop 18 includes compatibility with ProMotion displays, and when used with an M1 Ultra based Mac Studio delivers up to 96% faster Windows 11 performance thanks to the ability to assign more RAM and CPU cores to a VM.
An interesting touch is that Bluetooth game controllers connected to the Mac are available in Windows with no additional setup.
And on the subject of games, frame rates up to 120fps are available on ProMotion displays. Desktop 17 topped out at around 59fps.
Improved USB 3.0 support allows the use of peripherals such as webcams, video capture devices, and specialized hardware such as the Elgato HD60 S game capture device and the SOCT Copernicus REVO optical coherence tomography device for ophthalmologists.
Changes to the Parallels Tools component of Desktop provide even wider compatibility with Windows 11 apps when running on Apple Silicon. For example, Counter-Strike: Global Offensive now runs (it wouldn’t in Parallels 17), and issues around re-saving files from certain Microsoft Office apps to shared folders have been fixed.
Parallels senior product manager Kurt Schmucker pointed out that Windows 11 for ARM provides a very high level of compatibility – 99.99% – with Intel-based applications, including AutoCAD and games.
“There are very few apps that don’t run,” he said.
Parallels Desktop 18 still comes in standard, Pro and Business editions.
New features of the Pro edition on Apple Silicon Macs include virtual machine control via the command line interface, the Network Conditioner for simulating less than perfect connections, full VM isolation, remote profiling with Visual Studio, and support for netboot with Linux.
The Business edition can now be activated via a corporate account and single sign-on, easier and better documented deployment of Windows 11 VMs, reactivation from the cloud, and the ability to manage analytics participation via Parallels’ My Account portal.
Parallels Desktop 18 initially runs on macOS Mojave, Big Sur, Catalina and Monterey, and will run on Ventura – complete with Stage Manager support – once that version of macOS is released to the public.
On Intel-based Macs, supported host OSes include Windows 11 back to XP (or Windows 2000 in conjunction with Boot Camp); macOS from Ventura back to Lion; and various Linux distros (Ubuntu, Fedora, CentOS, Debian, Mint, Red Hat, Suse and Kali).
A smaller range of host OSes is supported on Apple Silicon systems: Windows 11 and 10, macOS Ventura and Monterey, and Ubuntu, Fedora, Debian and Kali with ‘one-click’ installation, plus RHEL and CentOS via manual installation.
“We are proud of our engineering team that continues to be at the forefront of innovation to offer a remarkably more powerful and seamless Parallels Desktop for Mac experience to our users, that is integrated with the latest macOS Ventura, optimized for the latest Apple hardware, and offers valuable features to deliver even better productivity and performance,” said Corel chief technology and product officer Prashant Ketkar. (Parallels was acquired by Corel in 2019.)
“This is as simple and easy to use as it gets, and our users can rely on Parallels Desktop for Mac to focus on the job at hand.”
Parallels Desktop still includes licenses for Parallels Toolbox (a wide-ranging suite of more than 50 utilities) and Parallels Access (remote access).
The standard edition of Parallels Desktop costs $139 a year. A $179 perpetual license is available on special request for organizations with policies that prohibit the use of software on subscription, but not to individuals.
The Pro edition is $169 a year, and the Business edition costs $209 a year.
Upgrades from any previous version of Parallels Desktop to Desktop 18 Standard cost $99, but this converts a perpetual license into an annual subscription.
Upgrades from any previous version to Desktop 18 Pro cost $99 a year.
The Kookaburras sealed Australia’s final gold of the Birmingham games in a thumping 7-0 defeat of India.
Australia scored five first-half goals to all but seal the deal by the main break.
It’s the Kookaburra’s seventh-straight Commonwealth Games gold medal – they’ve won them all since Hockey entered the games in 1998.
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Kieran Govers opened the scoring mid-way through the first quarter with a blistering drag-flick that flew past Indian keeper PR Sreejesh.
Nathan Ephraums teamed up with Flynn Ogilvie for the second, Jeremey Hayward was unlucky to not make it three. Instead, a brilliant save from Sreejesh presented an easy clean-up opportunity for Jacob Anderson.
Flynn Ogilvie celebrates after scoring in the Kookaburra’s 7-0 over India to win Gold. Photo: Tim Clayton (Getty)
Tom Wickham was next to join the fun when he got one past Sreejesh from the top of the circle, and it was five when Anderson engaged Sreejesh right in front before punishing the ball against the backboards with the backstick.
At this point, even the normally straight-faced coach Colin Batch did a boogie in celebration.
Several brilliant saves from Sreejesh limited the Aussies to just two goals in the second half – to Flynn Ogilvie and a second to Nathan Ephraums.
Australia topped the medal tally with 67 gold medals.
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Commonwealth Games in pictures: Ozzy Osbourne and Tommy Iommi meet to close Birmingham 2022
Residents living upstream from Lismore say faults in the rain and river gauge network deprived them of potentially life-saving data as a catastrophic flood hit the New South Wales Northern Rivers in February.
Key points:
Crucial equipment failed because it was poorly located, while key rainfall data was missed or distorted due to a lack of maintenance
Flood hydrologist Duncan Dey says the whole gauge network needs to be reassessed
A report into the floods found information from the Bureau of Meteorology was “incorrect and out of date”
There are 27 rainfall and 19 stream level gauges in the Wilsons River catchment that provide data to the Bureau of Meteorology to help predict flood heights and develop forecasts.
Residents also monitor the data directly via the bureau’s website.
When the February flood hit, one rain gauge was already broken and a further two rain gauges and six stream gauges stopped transmitting data during the event.
ABC’s 7.30 can reveal that crucial equipment failed because it was poorly located, while key rainfall data was missed or distorted due to a lack of maintenance.
When the February floods hit the Northern Rivers, one rain gauge was already broken and two more stopped transmitting data.(abcnews)
The revelations follow the release of a NSW parliamentary report examining the flood response, which found information from the Bureau of Meteorology was “incorrect and out of date”, and called for the bureau to review its rain data infrastructure to ensure rain and flood gauges were appropriately placed, maintained and updated.
Local resident Annie Kia says the failures of the gauge network caused “much distress” among her upstream neighbours, who were among the first to witness the scale of the disaster firsthand.
“The upstream people knew that a catastrophe was hurtling toward Lismore in the night, and felt very frustrated that they could not get their message across,” she said.
‘People downstream really need to know’
The gauges near Nan Nicholson’s home stopped working as floodwaters rose.(ABC News: Ella Archibald-Binge)
Nan Nicholson’s property is nestled in the hinterland north of the town, flanked by two creeks that feed into the Wilsons River catchment.
“If it’s torrential rain up above, we know that Lismore is going to really cop it,” she said.
As a low pressure system moved south on the night of February 27, she was keeping a close eye on the local rain and stream gauge data, which she and her neighbors rely on for real-time information to decide when to evacuate.
The stream gauge said the nearby creek was “steady.”
However, that was in stark contrast to what was unfolding in her backyard: The creek was rapidly closing in on her home, and the hammering rain showed no signs of easing.
She could see the flood was shaping up to be far worse than initial predictions of a peak around the 2017 height of 11.59 meters.
Rocky Creek, one of the feeder creeks upstream from Lismore.(ABC News: Ella Archibald-Binge)
“You could watch it within the minute rising very, very rapidly, so I just didn’t believe [the data]and that really filled me with dread,” she said.
“I thought, ‘People downstream really, really need to know this, and they’re not getting that information’.”
Ms Nicholson and her husband made a narrow escape in the night.
By the time they left, the nearby river gauge was not transmitting any data at all.
The rain gauge failed a short time later.
“Because of our knowledge of the area, we felt prepared to some degree, but it would have helped a great deal to know that that river gauge … was telling the truth,” she said.
“It’s a basic government responsibility to deliver us the data that we need to make decisions about our survival.”
‘Whole network needs to be reassessed’
Duncan Dey says rainfall modeling “only works if you’ve got good data”.(ABC News: Ella Archibald-Binge)
Duncan Dey is a flood hydrologist and Byron Shire councilor who used to install and maintain rain and stream gauges.
I have identified key flaws in the gauging station near Ms Nicholson’s property.
He said a shed housing equipment that sends data to the weather bureau should have been located on higher ground.
“We know that the shed went underwater, and I’m stunned, actually, because it went underwater by three or four meters, which means that it was wrongly located in the first place,” he said.
“The whole network needs to be reassessed for whether the machinery shed is high enough above the flood levels.”
Duncan Dey and Annie Kia inspect a rain gauge. Mr Dey was surprised to find a tree growing over the top.(abcnews)
Mr Dey said he was also “shocked” to see a tree overhanging the top of the rain gauge.
“So it’s not actually measuring the right amount of rain. It’s completely non-standard,” he said.
“We now have computer modeling that works really well on taking rainfall, putting it into a catchment and working out what happens downstream — the modeling is fantastic, but it only works if you’ve got good data.”
A BOM spokesperson said the outages did not impact the bureau’s forecasts and warnings during the February flood, and that redundancy has been built into the observation system.
However, the bureau is reviewing its infrastructure across the catchment.
Council requests more gauges
Lismore City Council general manager John Walker says the gauges are maintained every three months, or more often if a fault occurs. (ABC North Coast: Bruce MacKenzie)
The state gauge network is jointly managed by local, state and federal governments, along with some private agencies.
Lismore City Council owns the gauges that malfunctioned in February.
General manager John Walker said all but two of the gauges have been fixed, with parts on order from overseas, while one was broken prior to the flood because a technician could not get access to the site due to ground conditions.
Mr Walker said all existing gauges were located above the 1974 flood levels and the equipment that had been repaired has been relocated to higher ground, above the 2022 flood height.
He said the gauges were maintained every three months, or more often if a fault occurs.
The council’s request for more gauges, he said, was being assessed by the NSW Planning and Environment Department, after it was initially rejected in February.
A spokesperson for the department said it was awaiting completion of the council’s flood plain management plan before it could review the funding application.
Resident Annie Kia is among many — including local councils and MPs — calling for a single agency to own and maintain the gauge network.
“It’s clear to me that the system is not fit for purpose,” she said.
“We need to have some government system that manages these creek and rain gauges, and it seems to me it would be better if it was one agency — as long as it’s one, competent agency.”
Senate passes sweeping bill lowering drug prices, promoting clean energy
Senate Democrats approved sweeping legislation on health care, climate and taxes along a party-line vote Sunday, delivering a major win for President Joe Biden and his agenda before the midterm elections. The Senate passed the Inflation Reduction Act, which includes record spending on clean energy initiatives, measures to reduce prescription drug prices and a tax overhaul to ensure large corporations pay income taxes. Every Democrat voted in support and every Republican against the measure. It heads to a vote in the Democratic-controlled House, where it’s likely to pass as early as Friday.
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Biden to visit flood-ravaged region in Kentucky
President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden are scheduled to travel to southeastern Kentucky on Monday to meet with families affected by flooding last month that ravaged the region. At least 37 people have died in what Gov. Andy Beshear called “one of the worst, most devastating flooding events in Kentucky’s history.” Houses were also swept away and school buildings ruined, with hundreds of residents losing their belongings and being displaced. The National Weather Service said Sunday that flooding remains a threat, warning of more thunderstorms through Thursday. Biden’s visit comes one day after he ended his isolation, following consecutive negative coronavirus tests Saturday and Sunday.
Gaza cease-fire continues after days of deadly violence
A cease-fire between Israel and Palestinian militants continues Monday after nearly three days of violence that killed dozens of Palestinians and disrupted the lives of hundreds of thousands of Israelis. The cease-fire, which took effect Sunday, was brokered by Egypt. Israeli strikes and militant rockets continued in the minutes leading up to the beginning of the truth, and Israel said it would “respond strongly” if the cease-fire was violated. Prior to the cease-fire, the flare-up was the worst fighting between Israel and Gaza militant groups since Israel and Hamas fought an 11-day war last year.
Senators press Biden to declare Russia a state sponsor of terrorism
Sens. Richard Blumenthal and Lindsey Graham are urging the Biden administration to declare Russia a state sponsor of terrorism over its invasion of Ukraine. Blumenthal, a Democrat from Connecticut, told CNN on Sunday that if President Joe Biden doesn’t get behind the designation, they would work toward getting Congress to pass a bill issuing one. Typically such designations are made by the State Department. Inclusion on the list would trigger four categories of sanctions. Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova threatened to break in diplomatic relations between the countries if the US made such a decision.
College football preseason coaches poll released
Dust off your favorite school’s jersey and fire up the fight song. College football is less than three weeks away, and the preseason USA TODAY Sports AFCA Coaches Poll will be released at noon ET Monday. While the names at the top may hold few surprises — perennial powerhouses like Alabama, Ohio State and defending national champion Georgia all return serious star power and have topped other preseason lists — the rankings always give fans something to talk about.
Fitbit has announced that it is shutting down the Fitbit Connect app. The company has confirmed that it is putting an end to the Fitbit Connect app and moving forward the users will not be able to transfer music from their computer to the Fitbit device. The company has confirmed that it will end the Fitbit Connect app on October 31. “On October 13, 2022 we’re removing the option to transfer playlists to your Fitbit watch through your computer. You can continue to play personal music stored on your watch and transfer music to your watch with the Deezer app and Pandora app. See below for details”, Fitbit said in a statement. The company also added that Fitbit users can listen to their music stored on the watch and can also use third party apps like Pandora and Deezer to transfer the music. Fitbit further adds that users can also take a 90-day free trial of Deezer and Pandora before subscribing to their paid services. the Fitbit IconFitbit Sense and Fitbit Versa users can download the Deezer playlists directly to their smartwatches. Users can store up to 300 songs on their Fitbit watches. To recall, Fitbit Connect is a companion app of Fitbit available on Mac and Windows. The app enables users to sync their fitness data between devices and also transfer music to Fitbit watches.
Karl Stefanovic has shocked viewers and Today co-host Allison Langdon as he stripped off during the breakfast program.
He returned to the show on Monday morning after a two-week break, making sure his presence did not go unnoticed.
The host was interviewing lawn bowls champion Aaron ‘Disco’ Wilson who famously ripped his shirt off while celebrating a win at the Commonwealth Games.
Joking around with the hosts, Aaron said he was happy to rip his gear off again.
Karl Stefanovic strips on Today on Monday morning. Source: Today
The morning show then took a racy turn as Karl started to slowly strip while Ginuwine’s pony played in the background.
“You go first then I’ll go,” Karl said.
“Show me yours I’ll show you mine,” Aaron replied.
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Karl then says “go on” as he slowly starts to remove his jacket.
“He’s doing it Disco,” Ally is heard saying.
Aaron then undoes his jacket and takes it off before Karl takes it one step further.
The host then unknotted his tie and removed it before he slowly started to unbutton his shirt.
“Tell me when it’s over,” Ally says in shock.
She then claims it’s “taking too long” before she screams when Karl rips his shirt open.
Karl then laughs and claps before he high-fives Ally.
Viewers praised the morning TV host on a video Today posted on Instagram with the caption: “Filing this video under ‘things I didn’t think I would see today’.”
“So good to have Karl back,” one fan wrote.
“Love Karl,” another said.
“We haven’t missed you,” a third jokingly commented.
It comes after fans were concerned about Karl’s recent absence from the breakfast program after Today posted a cryptic photo on its Instagram.
The photo featured presenters Brooke Boney, Tim Davies, Charles Croucher, Allison Langdon, Christine Ahern and Alex Cullen sitting in the Today studio.
While Karl didn’t join them on the couch, he was photoshopped into the snap, sitting on the coffee table.
“Squad in studio, don’t worry Karl we didn’t forget you,” the caption said.
Fans were curious as to why Karl had been seemingly absent from Today.
“Where is Karl? Is he coming back on the Today show?” one viewer questioned.
“Where is Karl what happened to him?” another said.
“Is Karl finished?” a third wondered.
Today’s publicist assured Yahoo Lifestyle the star hadn’t parted the show for good, saying: “Karl is on an annual leave enjoying a much-deserved holiday.”
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Veteran Aussie golfer Cameron Percy has made a staggering revelation, claiming countrymen Cameron Smith and Marc Leishman are “gone” from the PGA Tour to join the Saudi-backed LIV Golf Series.
Speaking ahead of the first of three FedEx Cup playoffs, Percy – a top-10 finisher at the Wyndham Championship – said the Australian duo were the latest players to sign with the financially lucrative rebel league.
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Aussie golfer Cameron Smith. (Getty)
The report comes amid a court hearing into whether three suspended players, who joined LIV Golf, should be granted a temporary restraining order.
Smith, who captured The Open Championship last month, was taken aback when probed about his name being thrown around as a potential defector to the rival tour – a claim he did not exactly deny.
“I just won the British Open and you’re asking about that. I think that’s pretty, not that good.”
Pressed further, Smith did not rule out a move, stating his team handled those affairs.
“I don’t know, mate. My team around me worries about all that stuff. I’m here to win golf tournaments.”
Now ranked world No.2, if Smith were to jump ship, he would be the highest-ranked player to leave the Tour for LIV.
Cameron Smith celebrates after winning the British Open. (Getty)
In addition to the bombshell revelation, Percy said the PGA Tour had known for some time that a subversive tour was going to challenge.
“I had a long conversation with Adam Scott and he was very interesting talking about it, just where it is,” he said.
“He said he met with these guys (LIV) in 2017 (and) they were ready (to) do all this. So, the Tour has known for a long time that this stuff’s in the works.”
Former world No.1 Scott previously endorsed LIV Golf, saying in April, “the schedule that they’re proposing is very appealing to probably most golfers” and he would “consider” making a move too.
But Percy voiced his criticism of players who had flawed to line their pockets, emphasizing the ethical issues surrounding how the league is financed.
“The more and more you look into it, some people don’t care, some people have got a conscience and do care,” he said.
“It really comes down to, you know, ‘they just executed 80 people this week, just chopped their heads off’. They’re not the nicest people in the world.
“Do you just look past that and go, ‘Oh well, I’m rich I don’t really care’. It’s a tough one, it really is.”
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The stars who’ve signed with Greg Norman’s LIV Golf tour
Sunshine Coast pet owners are on high alert after a series of deadly poisonings at a popular dog beach.
Key points:
At least five dogs have experienced poisoning symptoms after visiting a popular dog beach.
The dogs had to be euthanized, prompting a warning from vets and Sunshine Coast Council.
Police are now investigating and anyone with information is urged to come forward.
Sunshine Coast Council confirmed it has received reports from a local vet of five dogs experiencing poisoning symptoms soon after visiting the Point Cartwright and Buddina beach area.
The dogs had to be put down.
Billy the beagle was among the casualties.
Billy’s owners, Val and Peter Logan, said they took him for a walk on Sunday afternoon, near beach access 210.
“He came back from the beach quite happily,” Mr Logan said.
“But about half an hour later… he brought up quite a lot of food… kept vomiting to the point where we were really concerned.”
The couple raced to the emergency vet, where Billy was placed in “doggy ICU”.
But that evening the two-year-old pup died.
“He really was a beautiful dog… we were so lucky to have him,” Mrs Logan said.
Another dog to die was a staffy-cross known as Sophie that had been on an adoption trial through Silver Lining Pet Rescue.
Rescue dog Sophie died after a suspected poisoning incident at Buddina beach.(Supplied: Silver Lining Pet Rescue Inc.)
The rescue group’s Denise Bettany said the new owner was “absolutely heartbroken.”
The man had taken Sophie for a walk along the beach on Friday afternoon and she fell ill that night.
“He said he was very diligent in making sure she didn’t grab anything she shouldn’t have,” Ms Bettany said.
“Anything normal, like having a drink or something like that, he probably wouldn’t have taken any notice of.
“He’s just heartbroken…absolutely heartbroken.”
Craig Barrass said his daughter’s dog Pepper, a golden labrador, also died on Tuesday, despite the best efforts of emergency vets to save her.
“They had to make the decision to put her to sleep,” Mr Barrass said.
The family is planning to offer a reward to catch the culprit.
Pepper died after a suspected poisoning at Buddina beach.(Supplied: Craig Barrass)
Turf war over dog park
The suspected poisonings happened in the Point Cartwright area, which is popular with dog owners.
The reserve doubles as an off-leash area from 4pm until 8am.
Vivienne Williams is part of the La Balsa Bow Wows group and said her members were in shock.
Some had expressed concern communal drinking bowls might have been contaminated.
Ms Williams said there had been animosity between owners and a group of residents who wanted to ban dogs from the reserve.
The Point Cartwright reserve is very popular among dog walkers. (ABC Sunshine Coast: Jennifer Nichols)
She said in recent months chocolate had been left around the steps to the beaches and “we all know chocolate is deadly for dogs.”
“We’ve had people who have been photographed at close quarters by people.
“We’ve had people who have been abused… it’s an ongoing battle.”
Police are investigating
Sunshine Coast Council urged dog owners and vets to report incidents to police.
Council has also recommended owners keep their dogs in sight and contact their vet at the first sign of any symptoms “such as gastro, breathlessness or being listless”.
Police confirmed they had been notified of several incidents and were investigating.
Mr Barrass said he worried a child could be harmed if they came in contact with a poison.
“What if… a little one got there and put their hands in that water bowl and then put their hands into their mouth?” Mr Barrass said.
US President Joe Biden talks to reporters while boarding Air Force One on travel to Eastern Kentucky to visit families affected by devastation from recent flooding, as he departs from Delaware Air National Guard Base in New Castle, Delaware, US, August 8, 2022.
Kevin Lamarques | Reuters
WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden said Monday he is “not worried” about China’s military exercises around Taiwan, adding that while he is “concerned that they’re moving as much as they are,” he does not think they’re going to continue to increase the pressure.
The remarks came one day after Beijing concluded 72 hours of intense maneuvers and missile tests over and around Taiwan. The exercises involved dozens of Chinese fighter jets and warships to mimic a military blockade of the self-governing island that Beijing considers a province.
Biden’s relative calm reflected the deliberate American strategy of not responding to Chinese bellicosity with equally hot saber-rattling.
It also reflects a broader opinion within the Biden administration that Beijing does not intend to make good on its implicit threat to invade Taiwan, at least not in the near term.
Given this assessment, the United States has adopted an approach, for now, of heightened vigilance, but steadfastly refused to be drawn into a military game of chicken in the Pacific.
Last Thursday, the White House announced that Biden would keep a US naval aircraft carrier strike group in the South China Sea longer than originally planned, in response to Beijing’s increased aggression toward Taiwan.
At the same time, a Biden spokesman said the United States would postpone a previously scheduled intercontinental ballistic missile, or ICBM, test.
The decisions signaled Washington’s desire to maintain American military alertness in the region, while also denying Beijing the opportunity to point to the long-planned US missile test as evidence that America was responding to China’s own missile launches near Taiwan with military preparations of its own.
Beijing claimed its military exercises were conducted in retaliation for US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan last week.
The visit by the California Democrat, which the Biden White House publicly defended but privately opposed, marked the first time in 25 years that an American House speaker, a position second in line to the presidency, had visited Taiwan.
Asked Monday whether it was wise for Pelosi to have traveled to Taiwan given the tense US-China relationship, Biden gave the standard response his administration has used for weeks.
“That was her decision,” he said, before boarding Air Force One en route to Kentucky, where Biden and first lady Jill Biden will visit communities impacted by catastrophic flooding last week.