本帖最后由 choi 于 7-30-2013 07:33 编辑
韩战谁胜,中缅油气管道谁赢. VOA Chinese, July 30, 2013
http://www.voachinese.com/content/obama-20130730/1712821.html
("今年7月是朝鲜战争停战六十周年。奥巴马总统说:这场战争是韩国胜。历来宣称是中朝一方获胜的中国媒体不服")
My comment:
(a) The report cites
Remarks by the President at 60th Anniversary of the Korean War Armistice. Office of the Press Secretary, White House, July 27, 2013 (National Korean War Veterans Memorial Washington, DC; 10:44 A.M. EDT).
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-pr ... orean-war-armistice
I'd like to quote you a few sentences. But the second half of the speech is quite moving, in my view. So you may want to read it, starting from the paragraph that talks about "baby booties." despite lack of such a definition in many online dictionaries, a "bootie" or "booty" is just a small boot. One may visit images.google.com to see what "baby booties" are.
(b) But he, President Obama, said it once before.
Remarks by the President Honoring Veterans Day in Seoul, South Korea. Office of the Press Secretary, White House, Nov 10, 2010 (US Army Garrison Yongsan, Seoul, South Korea; 10:53 AM KST)
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-pr ... y-seoul-south-korea
("Because the Korean War ended where it began geographically, some ended up using the phrase “Die for a Tie” to describe the sacrifices of those who fought here. But as we look around in this thriving democracy and its grateful, hopeful citizens, one thing is clear: This was no tie. This was victory. (Hoaa!) (Applause.) This was a victory then, and it is a victory today.")
(i) Veterans Day
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veterans_Day
is a federal holiday observed on Nov 11 every year (as opposed to moving the day to make a long weekend). The White House released it on Nov 10 in US, because when President Obama gave the speech in a US base, it was Nov 11 there in Korea.
(ii) Yongsan Garrison 龍山基地
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yongsan_Garrison
(located located within Yongsan-gu district 龍山區 in Seoul, South Korea, and is home to the headquarters for the US military presence in South Korea; The garrison previously served as headquarters for the Imperial Japanese Army from 1910 to 1945)
(c) Just now I went to news.google.com and found nothing in the Western media that talks about Myanmar pipelines.
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