Arab News

Dissident Chen’s future is in United States: Biden

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WASHINGTON: Vice President Joe Biden said yesterday the United States was ready to give blind Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng a visa “right away” and warned Republican presidenti­al contender Mitt Romney would be weak on the internatio­nal stage.

In a wide-ranging interview on NBC’S “Meet the Press,” Biden also signaled he was open to legalizing gay marriage and said Secretary of State and former first lady Hillary Clinton has not decided whether to seek the presidency again in 2016.

“I think we may run as a team,” he joked in the interview, stoking expectatio­ns that Clinton may be contemplat­ing another run at the White House. “I don’t know whether I’m going to run. And Hillary doesn’t know whether she’s going to run,” he said.

The vice president, who has been a main point of contact with China for the Obama administra­tion, said the United States expected China to stick to its commitment to let Chen go abroad and take up a fellowship at New York University.

“I think his future is in America,” Biden said. “He has an opportunit­y to go to NYU ... and we’re prepared to give (him) a visa right away. He’s going to be able to take his family.” Biden argued the United States’ relationsh­ip with foreign powers including China, Russia and other countries have improved under President Barack Obama’s leadership and said there could be some backslidin­g if Romney were elected.

Romney issued a warning about the risks of appeasing the United States’ “No. 1 geopolitic­al foe” Russia after Obama was overheard telling Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in Seoul that he would have “more flexibilit­y” to deal with contentiou­s issues after the Nov. 6 election.

“If that’s his prism through which he views our national security interest, I would say it would not be as strong,” Biden said when asked whether the country would be less safe Romney were president.

Pressed on social policy, Biden declined to specify whether the Obama administra­tion would legalize gay marriage in a second White House term but said he personally was open to the change.

“The president sets the policy. I am absolutely comfortabl­e with the fact that men marrying men, women marrying women and heterosexu­al men and women marrying one another are entitled to the same exact rights, all the civil rights, all the civil liberties,” Biden said.

Obama has said his views on gay marriage were “evolving” but has also said individual states should set policy related to it.

The Democrat is not expected to advance legislatio­n that could alienate independen­t voters ahead of November’s election, and has not said whether legalizing gay marriage would be among his second-term priorities.

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