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Beer costs nearly $30: New York airports crack down on ‘exorbitant’ food and drink

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We all expect to pay a bit extra for a beer or a sandwich at the airport. But when a glass of Samuel Adams Summer Ale costs nearly $30, things really have gotten out of control.

That’s why New York officials have announced a crackdown on food and drink prices at the region’s airports, where vendors can’t charge more than “street prices” – what you’d pay locally outside the airport – plus 10%, reported by theguardian.com

Under the Port Authority’s latest rules, concession companies must identify “comparable concession locations” outside the airport to prove their prices fit the “street pricing” policy. A chain establishment like Dunkin’, for instance, must be compared with other branches in the metropolitan area.

Other airports have similar pricing measures in place. For real value, Lund salutes Portland international airport in Oregon, which requires vendors to charge no more than they do outside the airport. Baltimore/Washington international airport also claims to use street prices at its restaurants, while Philadelphia international airport says its prices are “comparable” to those of outside establishments.

“Nobody should have to fork over such an exorbitant amount for a beer,” said Kevin O’Toole, chairman of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which oversees the airports, in a press release. The new measures, he said, “make it crystal clear that all prices at concessions will be routinely monitored to ensure they are aligned with the regional marketplace”.

The 10% figure itself isn’t new, but officials have clarified the rules and stepped up monitoring after some egregious violations emerged – all thanks to a single tweet by a young Brooklynite.

Last July, Cooper Lund found himself with some time to kill at New York’s LaGuardia airport, which hosted 15.6 million travelers last year. He thought he’d grab a beer – until he saw the menu.

The vendor was charging $27.85 for Samuel Adams Summer Ale on draught, with other beers ranging from about $13 to $21. Instead of buying one, Lund tweeted a picture of the alarming price list.

“I was like, ‘That’s ridiculous,’” Lund tells the Guardian. “I didn’t tag anybody. I didn’t tag LaGuardia, I just sort of sent it for like the enjoyment of my followers, people that I know.”

About a month later, he got a call from a journalist at the New York outlet the City, and it blew up from there.

Not all the feedback was welcome. “Every time the story gets traction, I get a bunch of – I think of them as Angry Responsibility Dads who are like, ‘Well, if you don’t want it to cost that much, then you shouldn’t be paying for it,’” he says. But “it’s not like you can bring in your own stuff, man. TSA makes you pour that all out when you get in.”

There are other reasons for high airport prices, too. Staffing an establishment for long airport hours is expensive, as industry insiders told Eater in 2015. Rent is high and recruiting is difficult. “People don’t say, ‘I want to be a chef so I’m going to go to an airport and cook,” Adam Sappington, of the Country Cat at Portland international airport, told the site.

Lund, a 33-year-old systems administrator for a non-profit, never heard directly from the Port Authority, and its announcement last week of the tightened rules – which specifically mentions his tweet – came as a surprise.

The agency says the tweet prompted an investigation that found that “certain beer prices included an erroneously added surcharge on top of an inflated base price”, leading to 25 customers being charged “the totally indefensible amounts of $23 or $27 (depending on size) for a beer”.

The concessions operator in question, OTG, refunded the 25 customers identified in the review, according to the Port Authority. After Lund’s tweet, the company had tweeted that the Samuel Adams price had been posted incorrectly.

But many travelers won’t be so lucky. Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson airport, the US’s busiest travel hub according to a ranking last year, recently moved from a street pricing-plus-10% model to street pricing-plus-15%, an airport spokesperson told the Guardian. That means, for the 75.7 million people who passed through last year, a beer that would cost $7 on the street could run about $8.

Denver, also among the busiest airports in the country with 58.8 million travelers last year, allows 10% over street pricing, a representative said. And in the US’s second-most-populous city, passengers at Los Angeles international airport (48 million passengers in 2021) can be charged street price plus 18%, said a spokesperson. Chicago, the next-biggest city, allows street pricing plus 10% at O’Hare and Midway airports, according to its aviation department.

Atlanta pastor killed by man she was ministering, police say

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A man stabbed and killed a pastor who was ministering to him in his Georgia home, then put her body in a van and set it on fire, police said.

The Rev. Marita Harrell, 57, was a wife and mother of two and went into the ministry later in life. She was a senior pastor at Connections at Metropolitan United Methodist Church.

“I know the love Rivertown has for her, and the love she has for Rivertown,” Rev. Fleming Thompson Jr. wrote. “We are asked to be in prayer, especially for her husband and daughters.”

Harrell’s body was found in the burned van several miles from her home the day after she was killed.

Christopher Devonta Griggs, 27, is charged with murder. Griggs attacked Harrell on Wednesday in his DeKalb County home, police told media outlets.

The senior pastor of Rivertown United Methodist Church , where Harrell served from 2016 to 2018, wrote on Facebook his hearts and the hearts of his congregation were broken.

[Urgent] Cancelled the schedule for weeding work at Korean-American Center

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President Lee, “Thank you for your intention, but there are so many things, it is a n expert job”

From today (24th), the weeding works at the Korean- American Center of Greater Atlanta, scheduled for every Tuesday at 10:30 am, will be canceled at the request of the Korean-American Association of Greater Atlanta(KAAGA).

We, Global News Today want to say, “Thank you to everyone who participated.”

Simon Lee, President of KAAGA said, “Thank you very much for the weeding volunteers of the Korean-American Center. Thank you so much again. Last time I was weeding with volunteer students, comrades from the Korean-Vietnam Veterans Association of USA, acquaintances, and our executives, but there was a limit to even reaching the main entrance and front yard.”

He said, “So, I decided that it had to be a specialized company. Now, I am looking for a number of and companies, so I would like to thank you for caring for and serving the Korean-American Center.

The president Lee said, “Currently, we are preparing to have a specialized company manage it on a regular basis. please understand. As I said on the phone last time, it is not a solution with just a few people.”

He concluded by saying, “Thank you as always.”

KAAGA asked to introduce a sincere company known.

KAAGA Contact: (770) 813-8988

Landscaping companies say that it takes a lot of time because the flower beds or lawns in the Korean Center is not in a form that can be pushed with a machine.

I hope to find a company soon.

<By Eugene Lee>

Primary Election Ends Today – What’s Hot in Georgia?

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Georgia State Assemblyman Sam Park (Photo=Sam Park campaign web)

For Governor’s Republican primary, and each elections

incumbent lawmakers who even changed districts to win the election

How is going K- candidates? : Sam Park, Eugene Yu, and Soo Hong

Sam Park, Soo Hong went straight to the finals without primary

The primary election closes today, on the 24th. Unlike the existing early election today, you can only vote in your own constituency, and voters who do not know where their constituency is located can enter the link below and enter their name and date of birth, and the voting location will be automatically notified.

Link to Check Vote Place (click on blue text)

In voting, you can review each sample ballots in Korean or Chinese or Vietnamese in advance by bringing your ID (under a driver’s license or passport).

Voting categories are divided into Democrats, Republicans, and Nonpartisian Consolidated. If the candidate you want to vote for is Republican or Democrat, you can click on each of the two parties.

Voting hours today are from 7am to 7pm.

The primary focus of this primary election is on the Republican Party’s primary for governor, which is an intra-party primary, which determines the finalists to run in the November election. In the Republican Party, incumbent Governor Brian Kemp and former US Senator David Purdue are fighting fiercely.

For Georgia’s governor, Trump signed former Senator David Purdue against Kemp, but Purdue lags behind in polls and fundraising.

In the 7th District for U.S. Rep. Carolyn Bourdeaux is against Lucy Macbeth, who has moved from the 6th District, are competing against each other, attracting unprecedented attention. Both are in an incumbent.

Macbeth, who ran away from her district 6, which had become a Republican-dominated area following redistricting, and run for a fellow congressman in District 7, said she wanted to remain in Congress, fighting for gun safety on behalf of her son Jonathan, who died in a shooting 10 years ago.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor-Greene, a Republican candidate, is awaiting a decision from her supporters over the past controversy.

Trump-backed Firebrand was stripped of commission last year for racist comments, acceptance of conspiracy theories and past support for violence. Her group of voters tried to remove her from her vote, but failed, accusing her of helping her in her January 6 uprising at the U.S. Capitol.

Meanwhile, Eugene Yu (R), a Korean- American who runs in the 6th constituency in the U.S. House of Representatives, is expected to hold the fiercest primary in this district, where nine candidates including political newcomers Jake Evans and Rich McCormick compete.

The district was reorganized into a Republican stronghold due to redistricting, and Lucy Macbeth, the incumbent federal congressman in this district, is running in the seventh district, as mentioned earlier.

Candidate Eugen Yu seems to make easy campaign as it is near North Georgia premiere Outlet Mall (400), which is a popular destination for Korean- Americans, actually it is at a somewhat disadvantaged position as there are not many Koreans living there.

However there is another merit to him. At this district, since there are many young Politian appearing, many voters are interested Eugene Yu in his mid-60s, has a variety of experiences such as a policeman, soldier, firefighters, and businessman, which are gaining huge popularity from voters.  

Meanwhile, Jake Evans’ father, Randy Evans, recently donated $500,000 to the Trump Foundation to publicly support former President Trump, which has been criticized by candidates for publicly supporting the race as unprecedented.

Can you guess what happens in 9 candidates at this district?

Representative Sam Park(D), who is aiming for a fourth term, is running in the newly changed district 107, and will run directly to the main election in November without this primary election. Rep. Park’s opponent will face Republican candidate Hai Chao (67 years old).

Attorney Soo Hong (R) running for the district 103 constituency will hold a runoff with Democratic candidate Ernie Anaya in November. There are no rivals within the two candidates, so this election will not be held.

Meanwhile, Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger , Georgia’s top elections official, will run against Congressman Jody Hice, who promoted Trump’s allegation that widespread voting fraud or manipulation cost him in the 2020 election. U.S. Rep. Hice appears to be struggling with the halo.

American football legend Herschel Walker , backed by Trump and running for the U.S. Senate, is cruising as the Republican candidate despite some Republican leaders warning that Walker will not be elected in November over Democratic incumbent Senator Rafael Warnock.

Walker is accused of endangering his ex-wife’s life, exaggerating business records, and lying about graduating from the University of Georgia.

In addition, Judge Tracie H. Cason (District 2), and Judge Angela Duncan (District 11) who has a Korean grandmother, are running for re-election as Judge Gwinnett Superior Court.

Gwinnett Solicitor General Brian Whiteside hired dedicated Korean staff for the convenience of Koreans, and Lisamarie Bristol, candidate rebelled against the leadership of Whiteside, her superior.

<By Eugene Lee>

[Announcement] Join K-Green Scout for weeding at the Korean-American Community Center 

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Every Tuesday from the 24th at 10:30 am Korean- American Community Center

Bringing a shovel, sickle, and homi, providing community service hours

Lack of manpower, companies are reluctant to weed

A lot of weeds grew in the Korean- American Community Center of Greater Atlanta while the greenery was free. The reason is that these days, landscaping companies are reluctant to weed the Korean- American Community Center even if they pay over price due to a shortage of manpower.

Landscaping companies say that it takes a lot of time because the flower beds or lawns in the Korean- American Community Center are not in a form that can be pushed with a machine.

However, We can’t just look at the weeds growing luxuriantly, so I’m going to make a Green Scout (tentative name) with K News Atlanta and Global News Today.

Every Tuesday from 10:30 a.m. only for about an hour. (More than that is even better) You can bring a shovel, sickle, homi, etc. to the Korean- American Community Center.

For youth participants or those in need of community service hours, the Korean-American Association provides service hours.  

All participants are as a volunteer.

It’s the first day tomorrow(May 24th), and even if many people don’t come, I’m going to attend. “Well Begun is Half Done!” right? 

See you at the Korean-American Community Center on Tuesdays at 10:30 am. (Address: 5900 Brook Hollow Pkwy, Norcross, GA 30071)

**Listen to SOME WHERE OVER THE RAIN BOW + WHAT A WONDERFUL WORLD sung by an Israeli group.

<By Eugene Lee>

Beware of dangerous, invasive plant in GA

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Flowers and grass come late in the spring and into the summer, but not all of it is great for the environment.

Some of the weeds and grass that grow are not even welcomed in Georgia.


Severe Weather Team 2 Meteorologist Eboni Deon tells us about an invasive plant that has popped up in the area.

It is called Cogongrass. This weed is known as the seventh worst weed in the world, and it blooms from April to June in Georgia.

Cogongrass is easily spread by its seed and equipment used to move dirt, such as tractors. It is mostly found in pastures, old fields, and roadsides, but it can show up in your yard.

Lynne Womack, forest health coordinator for for Georgia Forestry Commission, said it can come into the area and out grow all of the native vegetation.

It was thought to be used for grazing because it’s such a lush grass that can be grown anywhere, but that was not the case.

“It turns out that the back of the leaf blades are really rough and it also has a high silica content…and nothing really likes to eat it. Not even goats,” said Womack.

It’s dangerous to the ecosystem because the dense root system will choke out the native vegetation, and Womack said it’s also flammable.

“It’s highly flammable. It has a lot of fuel in those grass blades and it will cause canopy fires,” said Womack.

Quran Clarke said he planted a number of plants and flowers in his yard that are easy to maintain and nice to look at.

“Elephant ears, caladiums, I’ve done cana lillies, and I just did double knockout rose bushes, Japanese Hollies…” said Clarke.

But once he found out about Cogongrass, he didn’t want them there.

“I really don’t want them there. I don’t want them sucking the life out of my plants and stuff cause they are competing for the same soil and nutrients,” said Clarke.

Womack said it’s helpful to know how to identify it and report it if you see it.

And when planting, native plants are best because they provide food for wildlife and pollinators.

You can help to maintain a healthy ecosystem. If you think you have spotted Cogongrass, inform The Georgia Forestry Commission to help eliminate the invasive weed.

US, S. Korea open to expanded military drills to deter North

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 U.S. President Joe Biden and South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol said after meeting Saturday that they will consider expanded joint military exercises to deter the nuclear threat from North Korea at a time when there’s little hope of real diplomacy on the matter, according to AP.

The announcement reflects a shift in direction by both leaders from their predecessors: Former U.S. President Donald Trump had considered scrapping the exercises and expressed affection for North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. And the last South Korean president, Moon Jae-in, remained committed to dialogue with Kim to the end of his term despite being repeatedly rebuffed by the North.

The Biden administration is calling on China to restrain North Korea from engaging in any missile or nuclear tests. Speaking on Air Force One, Sullivan said Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping could hold a phone call in the coming weeks.

While Biden has made clear that he sees China as the United States’ greatest economic and national security competitor, he says it is crucial to keep the lines of communication open so the two powers can cooperate on issues of mutual concern. North Korea is perhaps highest on that list.

White House officials said Biden won’t visit the Demilitarized Zone dividing the Korean Peninsula during the trip. Instead, Biden will visit the Air Operations Center’s Combat Operations Floor on Osan Air Base, south of Seoul, on Sunday.

Biden said cooperation between the U.S. and South Korea shows “our readiness to take on all threats together.”

North Korea, which has defended its nuclear weapons and missile development as a necessary deterrence against what it describes as U.S. threats, could well respond angrily to Saturday’s announcement. It has long described joint military exercises as rehearsals for an invasion, although the allies have portrayed the drills as defensive.

Biden and Yoon affirmed in remarks at a joint news conference that their shared goal is the complete denuclearization of North Korea. The U.S. and South Korea said in a joint statement that they were committed to a “rules-based international order” following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The statement likely sets the stage for how the U.S. and its allies will address any challenges with North Korea.

Yet Biden also reiterated his offer of vaccines to North Korea as the coronavirus spreads at a dangerously fast speed through that country, including an offer to route them through China if that was more acceptable to North Korea. Asked if he would be willing to meet Kim Jong Un, Biden said that would depend on whether the North Korean leader was “sincere” and “serious.”

“Yes, we’ve offered vaccines, not only to North Korea but China as well,” Biden said. “We’re prepared to do that immediately. We’ve gotten no response.”

The division of the Korean Peninsula after World War II has led to two radically different countries. In South Korea, Biden is touring factories for computer chips and next-generation autos in a democracy and engaging in talks for greater cooperation. But in the North, there is a deadly coronavirus outbreak in a largely unvaccinated autocracy that can best command the world’s attention by flexing its nuclear capabilities.

Speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One as Biden flew to South Korea, White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said the U.S. has coordinated with Seoul and Tokyo on how they’ll respond should the North conduct a nuclear test or missile strike while Biden is in the region or soon after. Sullivan also spoke with his Chinese counterpart Yang Jiechi earlier in the week and urged Beijing to use its influence to persuade the North to cease the tests.

As part of a five-day visit in Asia, Biden spent Saturday developing his relationship with Yoon, who assumed office little more than a week ago.

The U.S. president on Saturday laid a wreath at Seoul National Cemetery, wearing white gloves and a somber expression as he also burned incense and then signed a guest book. Biden then greeted Yoon at the People’s House for a nearly two-hour meeting followed by the news conference. The leaders capped the day with a dinner at the National Museum of Korea.

Yoon welcomed Biden with a toast, noting that the alliance “was forged in blood on the battlefield of the Korean War.” He said this partnership would go beyond security in Korea to include cutting edge technology and a global strategic partnership, then drew a laugh from Biden by quoting Irish poet William Butler Yeats.

Biden reciprocated with a toast for the alliance to “flourish for all the decades ahead.” Both men ended their toasts with the military motto, “We go together.”

During the talks, both leaders emphasized economic security and growing trade relations as two Korean industrial stalwarts — Samsung and Hyundai — are opening major plants in the U.S.

Yoon, a political neophyte with no foreign policy experience, came into the talks with Biden less than two weeks after taking office looking to demonstrate his competency on the world stage. The U.S. president on Saturday also spoke by telephone with Moon Jae-in, South Korea’s immediate past president. Biden thanked him for his close partnership, the White House said.

Biden faces growing disapproval within the U.S. over inflation near a 40-year high, but his administration sees one clear economic win in the contest with China for influence in the Pacific. Bloomberg Economics Analysis estimates that the U.S. economy will grow faster this year than China for the first time since 1976, a forecast that Biden highlighted at the news conference.

The U.S. has struggled to knit together a coalition of countries in Asia that can counterbalance China’s growing strength, abandoning the trade deal known as the Trans-Pacific Partnership after a political backlash at home.

Biden sidestepped a question about resurrecting the agreement, but spoke about the potential for closer ties in the region beyond traditional allies like South Korea and Japan.

“Things have changed,” he said. “There is a sense among the democracies in the Pacific that there’s a need to cooperate much more closely. Not just militarily, but in terms of economically and politically.”

Biden did not explicitly talk in his remarks about the need to counter China, but Beijing on Saturday offered its own counter-messaging.

“We hope that the U.S. will match its words with deeds and work with countries in the region to promote solidarity and cooperation in the Asia-Pacific, instead of plotting division and confrontation,” Chinese envoy for Korean affairs Liu Xiaoming, said on Twitter.

At the start of the administration, many White House officials thought Kim’s nuclear ambitions would prove to be perhaps the administration’s most vexing challenge and that the North Korean leader would aim to test Biden’s mettle early in his time in office.

Through the first 14 months of Biden’s administration, Pyongyang held off on missile tests even as it ignored efforts by the administration to reach out through back channels in hopes of restarting talks that could lead to the North’s denuclearization in return for sanctions relief.

But the quiet didn’t last. North Korea has tested missiles 16 separate times this year, including in March, when its first flight of an intercontinental ballistic missile since 2017 demonstrated a potential range including the entire U.S. mainland.

U.S. Southern Baptists release scathing report on sexual abuse

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For decades, complaints of sex abuse by pastors and staff in the largest U.S. Protestant denomination, the Southern Baptist Convention, were either ignored or covered up by top clergy, according to an internal report released on Sunday.

The nearly 300-page report details how complaints were kept as “closely guarded secrets” within the church to avoid liability, “to exclusion of all other considerations,” it said.

The scandal echoes the one faced by the Roman Catholic Church, which has been rocked by allegations of sexual abuse, when the Boston Globe newspaper revealed in 2002 that church hierarchy covered up sexual misconduct by its clergy for decades.

The U.S. Catholic Church has paid out an estimated $3.2 billion to settle clergy abuse cases, according to BishopAccountability.org, which tracks the issue, according to Reuters.

In 2019, the Houston Chronicle and the San Antonio Express-News reported that more than 700 victims had been abused by pastors, leaders and volunteers in Southern Baptist congregations.

“In service to this goal, survivors and others who reported abuse were ignored, disbelieved,” the report said, with church leaders covering up accusations and allowing accused clergy members to remain pastors or in other positions of authority.

Lawsuits against the church were denigrated as “opportunistic” and not having merit, it said.

The year-long investigation was initiated by the Southern Baptist Convention in June 2021, when a stream of complaints were raised at its annual meeting. The complaints focused on sexual abuse by pastors and volunteers and the lack of response by the religious body’s executive committee

“We are grieved by the findings of this investigation,” Rolland Slade, chairman of the church’s executive committee, said in a statement.

“We are committed to doing all we can to prevent future instances of sexual abuse in churches, to improve our response and our care, (and) to remove reporting roadblocks,” the statement read.

The Southern Baptist Church Convention claims more than 13 million members in the United States and more than 40 million worldwide.

Goldman Sachs employee fatally shot on N.Y. subway train in unprovoked attack

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A man died after he was shot on a New York City subway train Sunday, just one month after 10 people were shot and even more were injured on a subway train.

New York Police Chief of Department Kenneth Corey said at a news conference that police were called to the Canal Street train station at about 11:50 a.m. ET, responding to reports that a person had been shot, reported by CNBC.

Officers found a man with a gunshot wound to the torso, Corey said. The man was transported to Bellevue Hospital, where he died, he added.

New York City Transit President Richard Davey offered his condolences to the victim’s family.

“Obviously, we extend our heartfelt condolences to the victim’s family,” Davey said, “and for those who were on the train and experienced this tragic event.”

Enriquez had worked for the research division of Goldman Sachs since 2013, the company said in a statement.

He was later identified as Goldman Sachs employee Daniel Enriquez, 48, of Brooklyn.

Corey said the man had been seated in the last car of a Manhattan-bound Q train when the shooting happened. A person who had been pacing the car pulled out a gun and shot Enriquez with what appeared to be no provocation, witnesses told officials.

Police are reviewing security video. Corey said the person is described as “a dark-skinned male who was heavyset with a beard,” adding, “He was last seen wearing a dark-colored hooded sweatshirt, gray sweatpants and white sneakers.”

NYPD Commissioner Keechant Sewell shared surveillance photos of the suspect in a Monday morning tweet, saying “We need all eyes on this.”

Biden says he would be willing to use force to defend Taiwan

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According to Reuters, U.S. President Joe Biden said on Monday he would be willing to use force to defend Taiwan, capping a series of critical comments about China while in Asia that an aide said represented no change in U.S. policy toward the self-ruled island.

Biden’s remarks, made during his first visit to Japan since taking office, and as Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida looked on, appeared to be a departure from existing U.S. policy of so-called strategic ambiguity on Taiwan.

China considers the democratic island its territory, under its “one China” policy, and says it is the most sensitive and important issue in its relationship with Washington.

Despite the White House insistence that Monday’s comments did not represent a change of U.S. policy, Grant Newsham, a retired U.S. Marine Corps colonel and now a research fellow at the Japan Forum for Strategic Studies, said the meaning was clear.

“This statement deserves to be taken seriously,” Newsham said. “It is a clear enough statement that the U.S. will not sit by if China attacks Taiwan.”

While Washington is required by law to provide Taiwan with the means to defend itself, it has long followed a policy of “strategic ambiguity” on whether it would intervene militarily to protect Taiwan in the event of a Chinese attack.

When a reporter asked Biden during a joint news conference with the Japanese leader if the United States would defend Taiwan if it were attacked, the president answered: “Yes”.

“That’s the commitment we made,” he said.

“We agree with a one-China policy. We’ve signed on to it and all the intended agreements made from there. But the idea that, that it can be taken by force, just taken by force, is just not, is just not appropriate.”

Biden added it was his expectation that such an event would not happen or be attempted.

A White House official later said there was no change in policy towards Taiwan. China expressed its “strong dissatisfaction with and resolution opposition to the remarks”, a spokesman for it foreign ministry said.

Taiwan’s foreign ministry thanked Biden for his support.

Biden’s national security aides shifted in their seats and appeared to be studying Biden closely as he responded to the question on Taiwan. Several looked down as he made what appeared to be an unambiguous commitment to Taiwan’s defence.

Biden made a similar comment about defending Taiwan in October. At that time, a White House spokesperson said Biden was not announcing any change in U.S. policy and one analyst referred to the comment as a “gaffe”.