休士顿领事馆决定不关闭, operating normally and will continue to do so "until further notice."

兄弟,俺们是虽远必诛的泱泱大国啊,
这脸就不要了?
人家赶人了,可以赖着不走???
笑话,漂亮国最近对中国的所作所为,就要脸了么?
 
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反馈: jy
我不是说了嘛:
你不使用暴力, 那么中国就不撤,继续工作;
如果你使用暴力, 那就正中下怀,在全世界媒体面前, 给你美国一场好戏看看。
整个世界还没听说驱逐外交官赖着不走的,这骚操作跟老娘们脱裤子坐地泡一个水平,你以为是谁丢人?中国!!!连我都觉得臊得慌!
 
这是一招妙棋。 这下美国很难办了。

你怎么办吧, 你让人家走, 人家拒绝。

如果下一步, 你不采取行动, 那么你的威信将受到打击, 以后你再说什么没人听了;你采取行动吧, 你能采取什么行动呢?那一屋子人可都是外交官, 难道你还敢把人抓起来不成?如果强行突入领事馆, 那可就是国际大事件了, 弄不好引起中美全面战争都说不定。 你美国做好准备了吗?

所以中央这一招非常妙, 直接把美国摆在了一个非常尴尬的位置上。
那除非你永远不出来,你一出来就抓你,哪怕你是外交官身份,但属于被驱逐的外交官,逾期待在美国已经是不合法的了
 
不是有人给出主意, 断电断水,你不走也得走
还等不着米帝动用暴力驱赶
一样, 你美帝断水断电, 中国外交官坚守阵地呗。


那么各种桥段都会有。 我现在就可以免费给你几个方案:当地侨领带领华侨利用进入使馆办事的机会把食物和水带进去, 还有汽油,有了汽油就有了电。或者用无人机空投补给。

领馆方面可以邀请媒体进入, 介绍大家如何在艰苦环境下坚持为广大侨民和留学生提供服务。

这期间好人好事, 各种英雄事迹不断涌现:
有人生病坚持工作;
有人怀着孕依然上岗服务;
有人挣扎在生死边缘, 写好了遗书,用最后的力气写下了一封入党申请书。。。。
在领馆里停水停电的艰难时刻, 大家聚在一起, 成立了临时党支部,大家相互鼓劲,组织学习《习近平治国理政的思想》,经常一学习,就不知不觉的一整夜, 使馆人员在习近平思想的鼓舞下, 看着升起的太阳, 写下了一曲曲忠诚的赞歌。。。。。

各种事迹吧反正。

然后可以渲染一下美帝是如何的不人道, 面对生病的使馆工作人员, 不闻不问。。。。
利用给孕妇检查身体的时机企图策反,要把怀孕的领馆工作人员诱骗上去中国的飞机, 但是被机智勇敢的工作人员识破。。。。。

还有很多很多。 你小时候没看过书吗?
 
不是有人给出主意, 断电断水,你不走也得走
还等不着米帝动用暴力驱赶

断掉水电,外交官继续拄着,只是不去办公室了?
中国式拆迁?我承认今天不断刷新我的认知!太牛了!:good:
 
整个世界还没听说驱逐外交官赖着不走的,这骚操作跟老娘们脱裤子坐地泡一个水平,你以为是谁丢人?中国!!!连我都觉得臊得慌!
你的行为是你的立场决定的,你觉得臊的慌是因为你觉得美国限期关闭领事馆是正确的做法,而在你看来中国就应该乖乖滴听话就范。
所以你也别说这些立牌坊的话了,直接就说支持美国的决定不就得了?
 
都看英文报道原文没有?

until further notice, 啥意思,看懂了么?
 
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he head of the Chinese Consulate in Houston won’t commit to closing the office — a direct threat of defiance to the State Department’s demand that it be shut down by Friday.

In a wide-ranging interview with POLITICO, Cai Wei, the Chinese Consul General in Houston, said China is protesting the closure order and his office will remain open “until further notice.”

“Today we are still operating normally, so we will see what will happen tomorrow,” he said, declining to elaborate further.


Cai said Beijing has asked the U.S. to rescind its Tuesday order to close the consulate, which China argues runs afoul of international agreements governing diplomatic relations.

“We think that the demand from the U.S. side … is not according to the Vienna convention on consular affairs and also is not according to international practice or [diplomatic] norms, and it violates the China-U.S. consular treaty,” Cai said. “We prepared for the worst scenario but we’ve also launched a strong protest … so we urge the U.S. to abandon and revoke that wrong decision.”

Cai’s remarks came as the South China Morning Post reported that Beijing is likely to close a U.S. consulate in the southwestern city of Chengdu, which is strategically important for the U.S. given its interest in Tibet. But the head of the Houston consulate declined to comment on how Beijing should respond to the order to close his office.

Cai stressed that he is the head representative of the Chinese government in Houston, but China experts said he is unlikely to have the authority to decide on his own whether to keep the consulate open.

“I would be very surprised if the consulate itself can decide without listening to Beijing,” said Ho-Fung Hung, a professor of political economy and sociology who focuses on China at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. “They must be waiting for orders from Beijing with respect to what to do, and I wouldn’t be surprised if Beijing and the U.S. have been [talking] through the backchannels, discussing the situation.”

“Beijing might give instruction to the consulate at the last minute on what to do,” he added. The Chinese embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Experts said that a refusal to close the consulate would be unprecedented in the history of U.S.-China relations, noting that even the Russian government did not resist when the U.S. closed two of its diplomatic annexes in 2017.

“I interpret [Cai's] comments as more as describing a fluid situation as more than a threat,” said Carla Freeman, director of the Foreign Policy Institute at Hopkins. “Because [not closing the consulate] would be completely unprecedented.”

But if China does try to keep its consulate open, the experts said the U.S. could revoke visas for Cai and his staff, allowing federal agents to arrest and potentially deport them. It was unclear whether the closure demand included expulsion of Cai and his staff, but he told POLITICO that he had no immediate plans to leave the country.

Hours after Cai's comments, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo gave an aggressive speech decrying the Chinese government and justifying the consulate closure by calling it "a hub of spying and [intellectual property] theft." But Pompeo did not address the threat to keep the consulate open, and the State Department did not respond to a request for comment on what consequences it can impose if China refuses to close it.

Other U.S. officials have also accused the Chinese Consulate in Houston of being a part of a Communist Party espionage operation in the U.S. On Wednesday, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), a member of the Intelligence and Foreign Relations committees, tweeted that the office is the “central node of the Communist Party’s vast network of spies & influence operations in the United States.”

Cai rejected those claims, saying that the consulate’s activities comply with international agreements and do not differ from the actions of other nations, including the U.S. And he dismissed local news reports that consular staff were burning classified documents in the compound’s courtyard on Tuesday, after getting word of the State Department’s order.

“We have never done this,” he said, referring to espionage. “What we have done is very legal and follows the law and normal practice.”

Instead of espionage, he said the consulate has been engaged in "mask diplomacy." Cai, who was posted to Houston in August, said he has arranged for masks from China to be delivered to Houston and as far away as Georgia.

“We didn’t make any comments on what happened here" regarding the coronavirus pandemic, he said. "But we knew that some people needed assistance, and needed help, so that’s why we sent the masks."

The Consul General went on to decry the "double standard" of U.S. officials viewing Chinese mask donations as a "hidden agenda" to boost the image of China's ruling Communist Party, saying charity from other nations is not viewed so critically.

“We cannot have a double standard," he said. "China is a communist country whether you like it or not. Our government is the Chinese Communist Party, and we are very proud of this.”

If China does refuse to close the embassy Friday, Hung said a standoff between the two largest economies would likely be welcomed by President Donald Trump, who has stepped up his rhetoric against Beijing as his reelection effort falters.

Chinese President Xi Jinping, on the other hand, is facing pressure from elites at home to deescalate tensions with the U.S. to avoid the imposition of more financial sanctions and visa restrictions. Those penalties are already squeezing wealthy, connected members of the Communist Party who keep much of their wealth overseas, he said.

“Xi Jinping has been starting to face pressure from other elites and leaders over his very tough and aggressive approach to the U.S.,” Hung said. “He has the instincts to show that he is a tough guy, but at the same time I believe there are increasing numbers of Chinese elites that see their interests hurt by conflict with the U.S. over Hong Kong or other things.”

 
72小时,应该到明天(星期五)下午晚些时候吧?


In a wide-ranging interview with POLITICO, Cai Wei, the Chinese Consul General in Houston, said China is protesting the closure order and his office will remain open “until further notice.”

“Today we are still operating normally, so we will see what will happen tomorrow,” he said, declining to elaborate further.
 
further notice from BJ could be STAY

No.

In a wide-ranging interview with POLITICO, Cai Wei, the Chinese Consul General in Houston, said China is protesting the closure order and his office will remain open “until further notice.”

“Today we are still operating normally, so we will see what will happen tomorrow,” he said, declining to elaborate further.


1595558585029.png
 
No.

In a wide-ranging interview with POLITICO, Cai Wei, the Chinese Consul General in Houston, said China is protesting the closure order and his office will remain open “until further notice.”

“Today we are still operating normally, so we will see what will happen tomorrow,” he said, declining to elaborate further.


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what is ur point? Now the instruction is remaining open Until bj give different instruction?
 
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