![]() ![]() I'm not sure that bridges are really considered that impressive any more." "I don't think the West would be impressed by hotels. Why? This is more than a lot of developing countries do. "The West would be least inclined to be impressed by hotels and roads and bridges." It might be a gesture that might bring a response. How often do we expect people to go on talking about bridges and roads and hotels?"īut they feel that it would be nice if the West, which has led the move to sanctions and pretty relentlessly criticizes them, would occasionally acknowledge that they have done something that benefitted the people. You can't go on talking about them again and again. And you can't go on talking about the roads when the roads are empty of the expected new traffic. But they've stopped talking about it, because you can't go on talking about the hotels when the hotels are empty. So what does the regime mean by saying nobody talks about it? People talked about it a lot. A lot of the ASEAN countries talk about the ceasefire agreements, and they also talk about the so-called economic boom - but they've stopped talking about that now, although two or three years ago they were talking about the hotels, the cars and the roads and so on. "Well, wouldn't you have thought that the ASEAN countries acknowledge it more than enough? To make up for whoever it is who do not. Members of the regime often say that you may disagree with much of what we do, but there is never any acknowledgement of the good things we do. ![]() From Our Correspondent: Hirohito and the WarĪ conversation with biographer Herbert Bixįrom Our Correspondent: A Rough Road Aheadīad news for the Philippines - and some others ![]()
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