Kamis, 08 Oktober 2020

Here's what could happen if China invaded Taiwan - The Straits Times

BEIJING (BLOOMBERG) - Xi Jinping's Chinese Communist Party has threatened to invade Taiwan for more than seven decades. Now fears are growing among analysts, officials and investors that it might actually follow through over the next few years, potentially triggering a war with the United States.

In September, People's Liberation Army aircraft repeatedly breached the median line in the Taiwan Strait, eliminating a de facto buffer zone that has kept peace for decades.

The party-run Global Times newspaper has given a picture of what could come, urging China's air force to patrol the skies over Taiwan and "achieve reunification through military means" if it fires any shots. Taiwan announced it would only shoot if attacked.

Despite the saber rattling, China and Taiwan have many reasons to avoid a war that could kill tens of thousands, devastate their economies and potentially lead to a nuclear conflict with the US and its allies.

The overwhelming consensus remains that Beijing will continue efforts to control Taiwan through military threats, diplomatic isolation and economic incentives. Equities in Taiwan have recently hit record highs.

But several forces may push them towards action: President Xi's desire to cement his legacy by gaining "lost" territory, falling support among Taiwan's public for any union with China, the rise of pro-independence forces in Taipei and the US' increasingly hostile relationship with Beijing on everything from Hong Kong to the coronavirus to cutting-edge technology.

"I am increasingly concerned that a major crisis is coming," said Mr Ian Easton, senior director at the Project 2049 Institute who wrote The Chinese Invasion Threat: Taiwan's Defence And American Strategy in Asia.

"It is possible to envision this ending in an all-out invasion attempt and superpower war. The next five to 10 years are going to be dangerous ones. This flash point is fundamentally unstable."

Taiwan will be among the most pressing security issues facing whoever wins the US presidential election on Nov 3. While Taipei has enjoyed a resurgence of bipartisan support in Washington and the Trump administration has made unprecedented overtures, President Donald Trump himself has expressed scepticism about Taiwan's strategic value. Democratic nominee Joe Biden has previously said Congress should decide whether the US should defend Taiwan in any attack.

Analysts such as Mr Easton have gamed out scenarios of a potential Chinese invasion of Taiwan for years, based on military exercises, arms purchases and strategy documents from the major players. Most of them foresee China going for a quick knockout, in which the PLA overwhelms the main island before the US can help out.

On paper, the military balance heavily favours Beijing. China spends about 25 times more on its military than Taiwan, according to estimates from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, and has a clear conventional edge on everything from missiles and fighter jets to warships and troop levels - not to mention its nuclear arsenal.

BEIJING'S STRATEGY

Beijing's optimistic version of events goes something like this: Prior to an invasion, cyber and electronic warfare units would target Taiwan's financial system and key infrastructure, as well as US satellites to reduce notice of impending ballistic missiles. Chinese vessels could also harass ships around Taiwan, restricting vital supplies of fuel and food.

Airstrikes would quickly aim to kill Taiwan's top political and military leaders, while also immobilising local defences. The Chinese military has described some drills as "decapitation" exercises, and satellite imagery shows its training grounds include full-scale replicas of targets such as the Presidential Office Building.

An invasion would follow, with PLA warships and submarines traversing some 130km across the Taiwan Strait. Outlying islands such as Kinmen and Pratas could be quickly subsumed before a fight for the Penghu archipelago, which sits just 50km from Taiwan and is home to bases for all three branches of its military. A PLA win here would provide it with a valuable staging point for a broader attack.

As Chinese ships speed across the strait, thousands of paratroopers would appear above Taiwan's coastlines, looking to penetrate defences, capture strategic buildings and establish beachheads through which the PLA could bring in tens of thousands of soldiers who would secure a decisive victory.

TAIWAN'S DEFENCES

In reality, any invasion is likely to be much riskier. Taiwan has prepared for one for decades, even if lately it has struggled to match China's growing military advantage.

Taiwan's main island has natural defences: Surrounded by rough seas with unpredictable weather, its rugged coastline offers few places with a wide beach suitable for a large ship that could bring in enough troops to subdue its 24 million people. The mountainous terrain is riddled with tunnels designed to keep key leaders alive, and could provide cover for insurgents if China established control.

Taiwan in 2018 unveiled a plan to boost asymmetric capabilities like mobile missile systems that could avoid detection, making it unlikely Beijing could quickly destroy all of its defensive weaponry.

With thousands of surface-to-air missiles and anti-aircraft guns, Taiwan could inflict heavy losses on the Chinese invasion force before it reached the main island.

Taiwan's military has fortified defences around key landing points and regularly conducts drills to repel Chinese forces arriving by sea and from the air.

In July outside of the western port of Taichung, Apache helicopters, F-16s and Taiwan's own domestically developed fighter jets sent plumes of seawater into the sky as they fired offshore while M60 tanks, artillery guns and missile batteries pummelled targets on the beach.

Chinese troops who make it ashore would face roughly 175,000 full-time soldiers and more than one million reservists ready to resist an occupation. Taiwan this week announced it would set up a defence mobilisation agency to ensure they were better prepared for combat, the Taipei Times reported.

Other options for Beijing, such as an indiscriminate bombing campaign that kills hundreds of thousands of civilians, would hurt the Communist Party's ultimate goal of showcasing Taiwan as a prosperous territory with loyal Chinese citizens, Mr Michael Beckley, who has advised the Pentagon and US intelligence communities, wrote in a 2017 paper.

"The PLA clearly would have its hands full just dealing with Taiwan's defenders," he wrote. "Consequently, the United States would only need to tip the scales of the battle to foil a Chinese invasion."

WILD CARD

The potential involvement of the US is a key wild card when assessing an invasion scenario. American naval power has long deterred China from any attack, even though the US scrapped its mutual defence treaty with Taiwan in 1979 as a condition for establishing diplomatic ties with Beijing.

The Taiwan Relations Act authorises American weapons sales to "maintain a sufficient self-defence capability".

Failing to intervene could hurt US prestige on scale similar to Britain's failed bid to regain control of the Suez Canal in 1956, Mr Ray Dalio, the billionaire founder of Bridgewater Associates, wrote on Sept 25.

That crisis accelerated the disintegration of the British Empire and signalled the pound's decline as a reserve currency in favour of the US dollar, he said.

"The more of a show the US makes of defending Taiwan, the greater the humiliation of a lost war," he said. "That is concerning because the United States has been making quite a show of defending Taiwan while destiny appears to be bringing that closer to a reality."

China's Anti-Secession Law is vague on what would actually trigger an armed conflict. Its state-run media have warned that any US military deployment to Taiwan would trigger a war - one of several apparent red lines, along with a move for Taipei's government to declare legal independence.

State broadcaster CCTV recently warned "the first battle would be the last battle".

Since the Communist Party's legitimacy is based in part on a pledge to "unify" China, its hold on the country's 1.4 billion people could weaken if it allowed Taiwan to become an independent country. And while any invasion even of outlying islands carries the risks of economic sanctions or a destabilising conflict, threats issued in state-run media allow Beijing to appeal to a domestic audience and deter Taiwan at the same time.

The PLA Air Force released a video in September showing H-6 bombers making a simulated strike on a runway that looked like one at Anderson Air Force Base on Guam, a key staging area for any US support for Taiwan.

The Global Times reported that China's intermediate ballistic missiles such as the DF-26 could take out American bases while its air defences shoot down incoming firepower.

US CONCERNS

This is a worry for US military planners. A University of Sydney study warned last year that America "no longer enjoys military primacy" over China and that US bases, airstrips and ports in the region "could be rendered useless by precision strikes in the opening hours of a conflict".

"Beijing's strategy isn't just based on undermining Taiwan's resistance, it's also a gamble on how the US will approach the cross-strait issue," Mr Daniel Russel, a former top State Department official under president Barack Obama, said in Taipei on Sept 8.

"The strongest driver of increased Chinese assertiveness is the conviction that the Western system, and the US in particular, is in decay."

In August, China fired four missiles into the South China Sea capable of destroying US bases and aircraft carriers. Since the DF-26 can be armed with both nuclear and conventional warheads, arms-control experts have worried that any signs China was mobilising to fire one could trigger a pre-emptive US strike against Chinese nuclear forces - potentially leading to an uncontrollable conflict.

Whether the world will ever get to that moment largely hinges on political leaders in Beijing and Washington.

Some in the US, like Mr Trump's former national security adviser John Bolton, wanted the administration to do much more to show it would come to Taiwan's aid.

Mr Richard Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations, argued last month that the US should explicitly state it would intervene to deter Mr Xi and reassure allies.

"Above all, Xi is motivated by a desire to maintain the CCP's dominance of China's political system," Mr Haass wrote in Foreign Affairs magazine on Sept 2 in a piece co-authored with Mr David Sacks.

"A failed bid to 'reunify' Taiwan with China would put that dominance in peril, and that is a risk Xi is unlikely to take."

China's military said in September that it would defeat Taiwan independence "at all cost."

Mr Ma Xiaoguang, a spokesman for China's Taiwan Affairs Office in Beijing, separately warned that Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen's pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party was "totally misjudging" the situation.

Taiwanese officials have also said China's military threat is rising, even though Defence Minister Yen De-fa told lawmakers on Sept 29 there's no sign the PLA is amassing troops for an invasion.

"We simply have to be prepared for the worst," said Mr Enoch Wu, a former officer in Taiwan's special forces who is now with the New Frontier Foundation affiliated with Ms Tsai's ruling party. "China is no longer 'biding its time' and no longer trying to win hearts and minds."

Ultimately, Mr Xi would need to order any attack. Last year, he said "peaceful reunification" would be best even though he wouldn't "renounce the use of force". He called Taiwan's integration with China "a must for the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation in the new era" - a key reason he's used to justify scrapping presidential term limits in becoming China's most powerful leader since Mao Zedong.

While an invasion carries enormous risks for the party, Mr Xi has shown he will take strong action on territorial disputes. He's ignored international condemnation in squashing Hong Kong's pro-democracy camp, militarising contested South China Sea land features and setting up re-education camps for more than a million Muslim Uighurs in Xinjiang.

That record worries analysts like Mr Easton, who wrote the book on China's invasion threat.

"Taiwan fighting by itself could make Beijing pay a terrible price, at least several hundreds of thousands in casualties," he said.

"But that may be a price Xi Jinping is willing to pay. We underestimate the CCP's capacity for radical decision making at our peril."

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2020-10-08 06:18:06Z
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Japan to allow residents to travel to 12 countries including Singapore next month: Media - The Straits Times

TOKYO (REUTERS, XINHUA) - Japan is planning to remove a ban on overseas travel to China and 11 other countries next month, the Yomiuri newspaper reported on Thursday (Oct 8).

The 11 other countries and regions include Taiwan, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, South Korea, Vietnam and Malaysia, the Yomiuri said.

The Japanese government, which currently bans travel to 159 countries and regions, will recommend that travellers refrain from unnecessary and non-urgent visits to those 12 countries, the newspaper said.

According to the Nikkei, Japan plans to permit Japanese and foreign national business travellers with residency status to re-enter the country without having to isolate for two weeks.

The two-week self-quarantine measure will be waived for returning business travellers who submit an action plan. The travellers will also have to refrain from using public transit.

A final decision on the easier re-entry procedure is to come sometime this month, the Nikkei reported on Wednesday (Oct 7).

Japan is easing the isolation restriction to make it easier for employees to travel and to encourage the resumption of economic activity.

The government has been reviewing its entry and exit restrictions. 

On Oct 1, it began allowing foreign nationals who plan to stay in Japan for three months or longer to enter the country. Japan eased entry restrictions into the country for foreigners, such as foreign medical professionals, teachers and others who are qualified for medium or long-term stays for three months or longer, as well as those travelling for business purposes for less than three months.

But entry is still being refused for tourists.

Before the new measure, an average of 2,000 foreign nationals were entering Japan each day.

On  Wednesday,  Japan and Australia agreed to promote negotiations for easing border restrictions that have been in place in response to the coronavirus pandemic, Japan's Foreign Ministry said.

Japan and South Korea resumed business travel between the two sides from Thursday (Oct 8).  Under the bilateral agreement, travellers on short-term business trips will not be required to observe 14-day self-isolation periods if they test negative for the coronavirus and submit travel itineraries, among other preventive measures.

Expatriates and other long-term residents will be allowed to enter on condition that they remain in isolation for two weeks.

Singapore and Japan have launched a "residence track" for business executives and professionals who are work pass holders, in addition to an earlier reciprocal green lane catering mainly for short-term business travellers.

The ""residence track" was to be done with the necessary public health safeguards in place, said Singapore's Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) Sept 25.

It comes in addition to the business track, or reciprocal green lane, which was launched on Sept 18 and is for short-term essential business and official travel between both countries.

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2020-10-08 08:00:17Z
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Rabu, 07 Oktober 2020

Harris says Trump's Covid-19 response is 'greatest failure' in US V-P debate with Pence - The Straits Times

WASHINGTON (BLOOMBERG, REUTERS) - Senator Kamala Harris tore into the Trump administration's handling of the coronavirus pandemic as her debate with Vice-President Mike Pence opened on Wednesday (Oct 7), calling it the greatest failure in the history of the US government.

"The American people have witnessed what is the greatest failure of any presidential administration in the history of our country," the California Democrat said. "This administration has forfeited their right to re-election."

Pence responded, at first, with grace, saying that it was a "privilege" to share the stage with Harris. But he endorsed the whole of President Donald Trump's response to the virus.

Since February, more than 7 million Americans have been infected, more than 212,000 have died and last week, the president himself contracted Covid-19.

"From the very first day, President Donald Trump has put the health of America first," Pence said.

Biden, he said, opposed Trump's early decision to limit flights from China - an ultimately unsuccessful effort to keep the virus out of the country. Pence said it bought time to gear up a more robust US response.

He said that Biden's plan to combat the virus "reads an awful lot like" what the Trump administration has already done.

Harris responded: "Whatever the vice-president is claiming the administration has done, it clearly hasn't worked."

Pence called that remark "a great disservice" to sacrifices Americans have made to combat the virus.

Asked by the moderator, USA Today's Susan Page, how the White House can expect Americans to engage in sound public health practices like wearing masks when Trump has not, Pence said that "President Trump and I trust the American people to make choices in the best interest of their health".

He accused Harris of "playing politics with people's lives" by saying she would only take a vaccine approved under the Trump administration if medical professionals advise it.

"If Donald Trump tells us to take it, I'm not taking it," she said.


US Vice-President Mike Pence and California Senator Kamala Harris during their vice-presidential debate in Salt Lake City on Oct 7, 2020. PHOTO: REUTERS

The matchup, in Salt Lake City, will be the only debate between Pence and the Democratic nominee to replace him.

Pence and Harris sat about 4m apart with a pair of plexiglass partitions between them as an extra precaution against coronavirus infection following Trump's diagnosis of Covid-19.

ON THE OFFENSIVE

Harris went on the offensive on several fronts, attacking the Trump administration’s effort to invalidate the Affordable Care Act healthcare law and assailing Trump for reportedly paying US$750 a year in federal income taxes as president.

“When I first heard about it, I literally said, ‘You mean US$750,000?’” Harris said, referring to a New York Times investigation.

“And it was like, ‘No – US$750.’” 

Pence sought to counter her attacks by turning the focus to the economy and tax policy, saying: “On Day One, Joe Biden’s going to raise your taxes.” 

The vice president also asserted that Biden would ban fracking and embrace the Green New Deal, a massive environmental proposal backed by liberal Democrats. 

Biden, however, has disavowed both of those positions.

READY TO ASSUME THE OFFICE 

The age of the two presidential candidates – either Trump, 74, or Biden, 77, would be the oldest president in US history - added weight to the debate, with both Pence, 61, and Harris, 55, seeking to show they were capable of assuming the office. 

Trump’s recent Covid-19 diagnosis has only made that issue more salient.

The two candidates also jockeyed for position in their respective parties; both are widely seen as future presidential candidates, whatever the outcome of November’s contest.

Biden leads Trump in national opinion polls and has an advantage of 12 percentage points in the latest Reuters/Ipsos survey of likely voters.

Polls show the race to be closer in some of the election battleground states that could determine the winner, although a Reuters/Ipsos poll on Wednesday showed Biden leading Trump in pivotal Florida.

Harris, who was on the biggest stage of her political career, is a US senator from California picked by Biden in August as his running mate.

The daughter of immigrants – her father from Jamaica and her mother from India – Harris is the first Black woman nominated by a major party for vice president as well as the first person of Asian descent.

Pence, a former conservative radio host who debated then-Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Kaine in 2016, is a former US congressman and Indiana governor who has steadfastly defended Trump during his tumultuous presidency. 

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2020-10-08 01:38:39Z
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Japan to remove travel ban for 12 countries including China and Singapore next month: Report - CNA

TOKYO: Japan is planning to remove a ban on overseas travel to China and 11 other countries next month, the Yomiuri newspaper reported on Thursday (Oct 8).

The 11 other countries and regions include Taiwan, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, South Korea, Vietnam and Malaysia, the Yomiuri said.

The Japanese government, which currently bans travel to 159 countries and regions, will recommend that travellers refrain from unnecessary and non-urgent visits to those 12 countries, the newspaper said. 

READ: COVID-19: Singapore, Japan launch 'residence track' for business travellers who are work pass holders

READ: Tokyo Olympics will go ahead 'with or without COVID': IOC vice president

Japan is on track to have 521 million doses of five different COVID-19 vaccines in 2021, compared with a population of 126 million.

The country will scale back a requirement of two weeks of self-quarantine for some business travellers, the Nikkei reported on Wednesday.

The new rules apply to returning Japanese and holders of long-term visas, some of whom will be exempted from quarantine requirements, depending on airport testing capacity, it added.

There will be a cap on the number of such exemptions, but no figure has been specified.

Such arrivals must submit an itinerary and a negative PCR test result on arrival, and will not be allowed to use public transport upon their return, the media outlet reported.

Japan has already eased two-way travel curbs with nations such as South Korea and Vietnam, while allowing entry from October for long-term residents from any country.​​​​​​​

BOOKMARK THIS: Our comprehensive coverage of the coronavirus outbreak and its developments

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2020-10-08 01:13:44Z
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'Symptom-free' Trump back in Oval Office, says catching COVID-19 was 'blessing from God' - CNA

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump on Wednesday (Oct 7) declared that catching the coronavirus was a "blessing from God" that exposed to him to experimental treatments he vowed would become free for all Americans, in his first video message since leaving hospital.

Trump, eager to revitalise his ailing re-election campaign, repeatedly stressed how well he felt so far in his recovery from COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus. It was unclear if he was still testing positive for the virus.

"I think this was a blessing from God that I caught it. This was a blessing in disguise," Trump said, adding that his use of the medication from Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc had allowed him to experience first-hand how effective it could be.

Trump, who has been widely criticised for a slow response to the pandemic that has killed more than 210,000 Americans and putting his own staff at risk by discouraging the use of masks in the White House and on the campaign trail, also cited similar medication from Eli Lilly and Co.

"I want to get for you what I got. And I'm going to make it free," Trump said.

His video message followed White House assurances that the 74-year-old president was back at the Oval Office on Wednesday, getting briefed about economic stimulus talks and Hurricane Delta, just two days after his discharge from Walter Reed military hospital.

A White House official said Trump entered the office from the Rose Garden to avoid walking through the White House hallways and possibly exposing others to the coronavirus.

Chief of staff Mark Meadows, who briefed Trump in personal protective gear, said the White House was keeping access to the Oval Office extremely limited.

Trump had been in his residence in the White House since his dramatic made-for-video return from Walter Reed in a helicopter on Monday night.

Trump, who faces Democrat Joe Biden in the November election, has had no COVID-19 symptoms for the past 24 hours, his doctor Sean Conley said in a statement.

READ: Trump calls off COVID-19 relief talks with Democrats

"He's now been fever-free for more than four days, symptom-free for over 24 hours, and has not needed, nor received, any supplemental oxygen since initial hospitalization," Conley said.

EAGER TO CAMPAIGN

Despite his illness, Trump has been looking for ways to get his election message out and cut into Biden's lead in battleground states, advisers said. His video message appeared to be a step in that direction.

A speech to senior voters is being contemplated for Thursday, they said.

Vice President Mike Pence's debate with Democratic vice presidential nominee Kamala Harris in Salt Lake City will take centre stage of the campaign on Wednesday evening.

Aides say Trump is impatient to get back on the campaign trail and insistent on going ahead with the next debate on Oct 15 in Miami, but Biden said on Tuesday he will not participate if Trump is not virus-free.

The new claim on free medications came the day after Trump abruptly ended talks with Democrats on a new round of stimulus for a pandemic-pounded economy, with both sides far apart on how much money to devote to a deal.

Both Biden and the top Democrat in the US Congress, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, accused Trump of abandoning needy Americans.

"The president turned his back on you," Biden said in a Twitter post.

READ: US women organise watch parties for historic VP debate

With layoffs in key industries mounting by the day and threatening the fragile recovery, Trump late on Tuesday urged Congress to quickly pass US$25 billion in funding for passenger airlines, US$135 billion for small businesses and provide US$1,200 stimulus checks for Americans.

But White House officials on Wednesday downplayed the likelihood of any kind of stimulus being passed before the election.

Trump's drive to get Judge Amy Coney Barrett confirmed to the vacant seat on the Supreme Court by the Republican-controlled Senate before the election also may be in doubt, since three Republican senators infected with the virus may not be able to vote.

COSTLY ABSENCE

A wave of infections at the White House among Trump's top lieutenants and press office aides has left the West Wing struggling to find its footing. ABC News said its count of cases related to the White House was now 23, including Trump and his wife, Melania.

A U.S. Marine is posted at the West Wing door, an indication that Trump is in the Oval Office at th
A U.S. Marine is posted at the West Wing door, an indication that President Donald Trump is in the Oval Office as he remains out of public view while fighting the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at the White House in Washington, U.S. October 7, 2020. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

With layoffs in key industries mounting by the day and threatening the fragile recovery, Trump late on Tuesday urged Congress to quickly pass US$25 billion in funding for passenger airlines, US$135 billion for small businesses and provide US$1,200 stimulus checks for Americans.

But White House officials on Wednesday downplayed the likelihood of any kind of stimulus being passed before the election.

READ: White House COVID-19 infections could have been prevented, says Fauci

Trump has depicted himself as a man who vanquished the disease and emerged stronger, telling Americans not to be afraid of COVID-19.

The latest Reuters/Ipsos poll, conducted Oct 2 to 6, found that 38 per cent of adults approved of Trump's handling of the coronavirus, while 56 per cent said they disapproved.

In a withering editorial, the New England Journal of accused America's leaders of an astonishing degree of failure over the COVID-19 crisis that "turned it into a tragedy".

Advisers say Trump wanted to be talking about other issues instead of the virus by this stage of the campaign, to put pressure on Biden. Opinion polls show Trump down double digits, and Biden with sizeable leads in many swing states.

BOOKMARK THIS: Our comprehensive coverage of the coronavirus outbreak and its developments

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2020-10-08 00:42:18Z
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WATCH LIVE: Mike Pence, Kamala Harris go head-to-head in US vice presidential debate - CNA

SALT LAKE CITY: Republican Mike Pence will face his Democrat rival Kamala Harris at 9am Singapore time on Thursday (Oct 8) in the only vice presidential debate before the US election on Nov 3. 

The debate between Pence, 61, and Harris, 55, comes about a week after US President Donald Trump and his rival Joe Biden went head-to-head in the first of three presidential debates.

Days after that debate, Trump was hospitalised for COVID-19. The coronavirus has spread through his inner circle, infecting dozens of top advisers, administrative staff members and senior officials.

The vice presidential debate normally does not attract as much attention as the presidential one. In 2016, the match-up between Tim Kaine and Pence drew 37 million, less than half of the viewers who watched Trump face off with Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton.

After Trump tested positive for COVID-19 last week, the two people who would be next in line for the presidency behind two septuagenarians have taken on outsized significance.

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2020-10-08 00:12:07Z
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Japan to remove travel ban for 12 countries including Singapore next month: Media - The Straits Times

TOKYO (REUTERS) - Japan is planning to remove a ban on overseas travel to China and 11 other countries next month, the Yomiuri newspaper reported on Thursday (Oct 8).

The 11 other countries and regions include Taiwan, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, South Korea, Vietnam and Malaysia, the Yomiuri said.

The Japanese government, which currently bans travel to 159 countries and regions, will recommend that travellers refrain from unnecessary and non-urgent visits to those 12 countries, the newspaper said.

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2020-10-08 00:57:31Z
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