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Showing posts with label relationship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label relationship. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

William Chose Kate Because Of Trust! Next: Summer Wedding



























The Royal Romance That Captivated A Nation: How Wills And Kate Kept Us Guessing For Eight Long Years



For the past eight years the nation has been kept on tenterhooks as just how serious Prince William was in his relationship with Kate Middleton.

But today it has finally been confirmed that she is the love of his life.

It has been such a long time coming, that poor Miss Middleton, 28, has earned the nickname 'Waity Katie', and her regular presence on his arm at the weddings of friends drew criticism that she has been hanging on for a proposal.

But her patience has finally paid off, and she can finally look forward to planning her dream wedding, set to take place next spring or summer.

The couple's long courtship developed after they became friends in 2001, when they met at St Andrews University.

It has been a far from easy ride for the bride-to-be, whose family, career and even fashion sense have come under close scrutiny over the past decade. Even her lack of blue blood has also been the focus of criticism.

Miss Middleton, who was studying history of art, had an early taste of the limelight of that lies ahead during their first year together, when William was spotted in the audience as she modelled in a charity fashion show.

The Prince, who read geography at the Scottish university, paid £200 to watch fellow students take to the runway where Miss Middleton, in a sheer black lace dress over a black bra and bikini bottoms, stole the show.

Though the pair would go on to live together during their second year, they did not start dating straight away. Miss Middleton dated fellow student Rupert Finch, while William was linked with close friend Jecca Craig.

It is not known exactly when William and Kate became an item but their romance was finally exposed after they were pictured on the ski slopes of Klosters together in March 2004.

William's statement on the same holiday was perhaps an indication of the wait Miss Middleton had coming. He said: 'I don't want to get married until I'm at least 28, or maybe 30.'

The following year, William was still non-committal about the relationship, and Miss Middleton was a noticeable absence at his father's wedding to Camilla Parker Bowles.

Just three months later, however, she was on his arm at the wedding of William's close friend Hugh van Cutsem - the first of many the pair attended together.

Shortly after, their families met for the first time at their graduation ceremony. Now that their studies were over, it would be the first of many occasions that would spark rumours of an engagement.

Instead they went on to enjoy a string of lavish holidays, taking in the Lewa Downs game reserve in Kenya, and another skiing trip to Klosters, where they were pictured kissing for the first time, before William began his Army training at Sandhurst.

Breaks in his training were also punctuated by luxury getaways in Mustique and Ibiza.

However in April 2007 the couple split. But it was not to last long as just two months later the pair were seen kissing and dancing together at an Army party.

By May the following year, it seemed that the relationship was firmly back on track when Kate attended the wedding of William's cousin, Peter Phillips, to Autumn Kelly, on her own, while her beau attended another wedding in Africa.

Meanwhile, Miss Middleton responded to public criticism over her lack of career - one of the factors that earned her the 'Waity Katie' nickname, with a job as an accessories buyer with Jigsaw, the fashion chain owned by friends of her family.

The couple went on to spend increasing amounts of time with each others' parents - they spent New Year together in 2008 at Birkhall, Prince Charles’s private residence on the Balmoral estate.

But still, there was no news of a Royal wedding, not even when William joined the Middleton family on a skiing holiday in Courcheval in March this year.

When asked by a member of the public about the prospect of a royal wedding, William said: 'You'll have to wait a while yet.'

But the rumour mill went into overdrive when Miss Middleton's parents were spotted enjoying a shooting weekend at Birkhall earlier this month - a clear sign that the family had been accepted into the Royal fold.

And last week Royal aides would not rule out the prospect of an invitation for Miss Middleton to spend Christmas Day on the Sandringham estate for the first time - though this now looks less likely given that William has volunteered to work at RAF Valley in Anglesey on Christmas Day.

Though given that Miss Middleton has a lifetime of Royal formality ahead of her, she may be relishing the fact that this is the last 'normal’ Christmas she has left.


THE GIRLS HE LEFT BEHIND

No less than three of William's old flames attended the wedding of his friend Harry Meade in Gloucestershire last month.

While it is unlikely that, after ten years, any of these girls are brokenhearted, the Prince has left a string of beauties in his wake.

Jecca Craig, whom he met as a teenager, was the first to be romantically linked with him. William was said to have been so besotted with the heiress that they staged a mock engagement ceremony when he spent his gap year in Kenya on her family's estate.

Rose Farquhar was William’s first serious girlfriend, and dated the prince shortly after he left Eton.

And during his first year at St Andrews University, he dallied with Olivia Hunt, but the relationship soon fizzled out.



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Sources: Daily Mail, InStyle Mag., Youtube, Google Maps

Sunday, January 3, 2010

China-U.S. Relations Facing Rough Patch Over Arms Deal...Obama Backlash




































U.S.-China Relations To Face Strains, Experts Say



The United States and China are headed for a rough patch in the early months of the new year as the White House appears set to sell a package of weapons to Taiwan and as President Obama plans to meet the Dalai Lama, U.S. officials and analysts said.

The Obama administration is expected to approve the sale of several billion dollars in Black Hawk helicopters and anti-missile batteries to Taiwan early this year, possibly accompanied by a plan gauging design and manufacturing capacity for diesel-powered submarines for the island, which China claims as its territory.

The President is also preparing to meet the spiritual leader of Tibet, who is considered a separatist by Beijing. Obama made headlines last year when the White House, in an effort to generate goodwill from China, declined to meet the Dalai Lama, marking the first time in more than a decade that a U.S. president did not meet the religious leader during his occasional visits to Washington.

The expected downturn with Beijing comes despite a concerted effort by the Obama administration for closer ties. U.S. officials have held more high-level meetings with their Chinese counterparts — including a summit in Beijing in November — in the first year of this administration compared with the inaugural years of the four previous presidencies since relations were normalized with Beijing in 1979, records show.

"I think it's going to be nasty," said David M. Lampton, director of China studies at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies and author of "The Three Faces of Chinese Power: Might, Money and Minds." That said, he added, "the U.S. and China need each other."


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Sensitive Time

The White House is hopeful, too, that the damage will be limited. "The U.S.-China relationship is now far broader and deeper than any one issue alone," said Ben Rhodes, a deputy national security adviser. "We will have disagreements . . . but we have demonstrated that we will work together on critical global and regional issues, such as economic recovery, nuclear proliferation and climate change, because doing so is in our mutual interest."

Still, the impending tension comes at a sensitive time. After hammering out a wobbly political deal with China on climate change in Copenhagen, the United States still needs China's help on three pressing International issues: Iran, North Korea and Restructuring its economy so that its people consume more and export less.

China recently backed a toughly worded statement on Iran by the International Atomic Energy Agency but continues to oppose enhanced sanctions, which the Obama administration has signaled it will pursue in 2010. The United States also seeks China's continued support in enforcing sanctions against North Korea and in pushing Pyongyang to return to nuclear disarmament talks.

Administration officials said they are sure China will react negatively to the arms sales and the meeting with the Dalai Lama. At a minimum, U.S. officials expect that President Hu Jintao will not attend a planned nuclear security summit scheduled for April. China could also halt the resumed U.S. dialogue with China's military, which had been one of the central goals of this White House's China policy. Any hopes for China's cooperation in Afghanistan are also in question.

One hint that China will limit the scope of its reaction came during Obama's meeting with Hu in November, analysts said. Hu used the formulation "sophisticated weapons" when speaking about any possible U.S. arms sale to Taiwan. U.S. officials took that to be a reference to a tranche of F-16 fighters that Taiwan has requested but that, according to U.S. sources, will not be on Taipei's shopping list this time.

"We hope that he Obama will not do that," said Zhou Wenzhong, China's ambassador to the United States, when asked about the possibility of the arms sales and the meeting with the Dalai Lama. "We have just had a very successful visit."

New Assertiveness

Still, U.S. officials and analysts have noticed a new assertiveness — what one senior U.S. official called a "sense of triumphalism" — on the part of officials and the public in China. This stems from a sense in Beijing that the global economic crisis proves the superiority of China's controlled economy and its authoritarian political system — and that the West, and in particular the United States, is in decline.

This triumphalism was on display during the recently concluded climate talks in Copenhagen. China only sent a deputy foreign minister to meetings set for the level of heads of state; its representatives publicly clashed with their American counterparts. And during the climax of the conference, China's security team tried to block Obama and the rest of his entourage from entering a meeting chaired by China's prime minister, Wen Jiabao.

That type of swagger is new for China and it could make for a stronger reaction from Beijing.

"If they really believe the United States is in decline and that China will soon emerge as a superpower, they may seek to take on the U.S. in ways that will cause real problems," said Bonnie S. Glaser, an expert on China with the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Complicating this picture is the view of some American analysts that the Obama administration — with its intensive outreach to Beijing — tried too hard in its first year to cultivate ties with China. Playing hard to get might have helped smooth out China's swagger, they suggest.

"Somehow the administration signaled to the Chinese that we need them more than they need us," Lampton said. "We're in the role of the supplicant."

The downturn would also occur at a time when China's long-established ally in the United States — the business community — is not as willing to argue on China's behalf as it was during rough patches in the past. China's government has made a series of moves to slow or reverse its market-oriented economic reforms over the last year that have prompted concern among many Western businesses.

Although China has accused Washington of protectionist measures — on Wednesday, the United States imposed new duties on Chinese steel-piping imports — it also has moved aggressively to shut its markets to goods manufactured by Western companies in China. Now groups such as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which traditionally backed ties with China, find themselves in the unusual position of organizing a public letter-writing campaign to pressure China to change its policies.

"If they continue on this particular path in a strong and inflexible way, there will be a significant political backlash not just in the United States," said a senior U.S. trade official. "China needs to be aware of that."




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Sources: Washington Post, MSNBC, Google Maps