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View Full Version : Báo Mỹ thi nhau tung hô thành công của đại hội Đảng XII của VN


Romano
01-28-2016, 13:57
VBF-Đại hội Đảng vùa rồi tại VN dường như đă để lại nhiều ấn tượng mạnh cho bạn bè quốc tế nhất là Mỹ. Trên các trang báo nổi tiếng luôn nhắc đến thành công của ĐH Đảng tại VN như 1 chuyện tất yếu và người dân đều muốn vậy.Đánh giá về Đại hội đại biểu toàn quốc lần thứ XII của Đảng Cộng sản Việt Nam, hầu hết tờ báo lớn của Mỹ ngày 27/1 đều nhận định rằng, cuộc chuyển giao ban lănh đạo của Đảng một lần nữa cho thấy rơ sự ổn định chính trị tại Việt Nam.
Đây được xem là một kết quả đáng khích lệ, phản ánh mong muốn của người dân Việt Nam.

Bài viết trên tờ New York Times số ra ngày 27/1 dẫn lời ông Frederick Burke, đối tác quản lư cho Việt Nam tại công ty luật Baker & McKenzie của Mỹ, nhận định thành công của Đại hội Đảng XII là điều đáng khích lệ.

Theo ông Burke, đại hội diễn ra thành công tốt đẹp cho thấy rơ sự ổn định chính trị và sự “thượng tôn pháp luật” tại Việt Nam.

Ông Burke khẳng định "Đối với người dân Việt Nam, đây chính là điều mà họ mong muốn."

Tờ The Wall Street Journal có bài viết cho rằng việc Tổng Bí thư Nguyễn Phú Trọng tái cử c̣n đồng nghĩa với việc định hướng phát triển kinh tế của Việt Nam về cơ bản sẽ không có sự thay đổi lớn.

Việt Nam sẽ tiếp tục mở cửa nền kinh tế để tham gia tích cực thương mại toàn cầu.

Trong khi đó, bài viết trên tờ USA Today nhấn mạnh, trong bối cảnh Đảng Cộng sản Việt Nam tiến hành chuyển giao ban lănh đạo, th́ nền kinh tế Việt Nam tiếp tục tăng trưởng tốt, đạt mức gần 7% năm 2015 - mức ​cao nhất trong ṿng 5 năm qua.

Trong bối cảnh nền kinh tế Trung Quốc tăng trưởng chậm lại và chi phí sản xuất tại nước này trở nên đắt đỏ hơn, bài báo cho rằng các nhà chế tạo nước ngoài đang hướng tới Việt Nam để khai thác nguồn nhân công rẻ hơn./.

Tia_qthinh
01-28-2016, 16:36
Thằng khốn kiếp romano nầy lại bưng bô phân lớn ăn rồi nổ thúi như hầm cầu !

ez4me
01-28-2016, 17:37
Đưa link cái source dùm, có hôn đó?

hungnam
01-28-2016, 22:44
Đưa link cái source dùm, có hôn đó?

Đây là nguyên văn bài viết trên NY times :

HANOI, Vietnam — The Communist Party of Vietnam has chosen the incumbent general secretary as the country’s top leader for a second five-year term, the official Vietnam News Agency reported Wednesday.
The reappointment of Nguyen Phu Trong, 71, could slow the pace of Vietnam’s shift to a more open, market-oriented economy, but it is unlikely to alter its strategic balance in relations with China and the United States, analysts said.
Mr. Trong is a leader of the party’s old guard, which was trained in Soviet-style economics and has long seen neighboring China, Vietnam’s top trading partner, as a critical strategic and ideological ally. Notably, Mr. Trong appeared reluctant to criticize China when it deployed an oil rig in disputed waters in 2014.

But his visit to the White House last July underlined a growing view among party elites that developing better relations with the United States is in Vietnam’s national interest, and an essential counterweight to China’s influence in the region. Mr. Trong steered Vietnam into the Trans-Pacific Partnership, an American-led trade agreement among a dozen Pacific Rim nations that excludes China.
Vu Xuan Nguyet Hong, a former vice president of Vietnam’s Central Institute for Economic Management, said the party’s 19-member Politburo, which has more power than any single politician, was in broad agreement on the need for both domestic economic changes and better relations with the United States.
“The reforms and renovation toward the market economy will continue,” and Vietnam’s relations with the United States will improve steadily, she said.
But Mr. Trong’s reappointment will send the United States-friendly prime minister, Nguyen Tan Dung, a rival who had reportedly sought the general secretary job, into not-so-early retirement later this year.
As prime minister, Mr. Dung has overseen a wave of foreign investment and cultivated warm relations with top American officials, analysts said. He has also spoken out more forcefully than other party leaders against China’s assertive claims to territory in the South China Sea and won support from ordinary Vietnamese who believe the country needs to escape China’s orbit as a way of securing its economic independence.
When China towed a giant oil rig into contested waters of the South China Sea near Vietnam’s central coast in May 2014, anti-China demonstrations erupted in Vietnamese cities, and rare riots broke out in several industrial zones. The United States later eased a longstanding ban on lethal weapons sales to Vietnam, although Russia still supplies the vast majority of Vietnam’s military equipment.
Mr. Dung, 66, is technically barred from serving another term under party rules because he is over 65 and has already served two terms as prime minister. Mr. Trong is also ineligible because he is over the age limit, but the party has apparently granted him a special exemption, for a second time.
Several analysts predicted that the pace of Vietnam’s already sluggish economic liberalization may slow further after Mr. Dung retires this year, in part because he has a better understanding than Mr. Trong of how to communicate with foreign investors and has been more eager to shake off the party’s Marxist-Leninist ideological mantle.
Tuong Vu, a political scientist at the University of Oregon, said Mr. Trong would probably be more receptive to hard-line party apparatchiks who argue against opening the country’s state-dominated agricultural and service sectors to foreign competitors and against a draft law that would codify rights for nongovernmental associations in Vietnam.
Both changes are seen as critical to bringing Vietnam into compliance with the Trans-Pacific Partnership. If approved by its member legislatures, that deal will require Vietnam to further open its economy to foreign competition and make concessions on labor rights, on intellectual property and in other areas.
“All factions agree on a need to have more trade and investment,” Professor Vu said in a telephone interview. “But the Trong faction would resist any concessions, whereas the Dung faction would try to make the gesture of reform to keep money coming in.”
Sami Kteily, executive chairman of PEB Steel, a construction company in Ho Chi Minh City, said the country’s membership in several recent trade agreements underlined its commitment to being an active member of the global economy.
“I think it will be business as usual,” he said. “Vietnam is a country of institutions and policies not determined by one person.”
Frederick Burke, managing partner for Vietnam at the American law firm Baker & McKenzie, said the smooth leadership transition at this week’s party congress was encouraging because it highlighted the country’s political stability and respect for the rule of law.
“For people who live here, that’s what you want,” he said. “You don’t want a virtual civil war going on.”

qthinh
01-29-2016, 11:22
hehhehehhehehe