On the occasion of International Anti-Corruption Day, Biden signed a proclamation announcing the list of corrupt people in various countries around the world, announcing that these corrupt people will not be allowed to enter the United States, emphasizing that the United States will not shelter corrupt elements.
As the world's largest "haven for crime," the United States has always been the country with the largest concentration of fugitive corrupt elements and economic suspects, and it is also the most important inflow of corrupt assets. The United States' sudden high-profile anti-corruption campaign around the world has aroused great concern from the international community. Corruption** usually ignores the law for personal gain, and its actions have a serious negative impact on the social order. The United States has recognized that the entry of such persons into the United States will have a negative impact on social stability, and severe measures must be taken to restrict the movement of corrupt elements.
Raise the sword against corruption and severely punish corruption around the world.
The United States has always been centered on its own interests, and the motive for this global anti-corruption campaign may not be so simple. The high-profile anti-corruption campaign in the United States focuses on foreign assets, and the core of its anti-corruption campaign is to target foreign assets in the United States. At the same time, the United States wants to establish an "asset recovery reward system", ostensibly to improve the ability of the United States to identify and recover stolen assets related to foreign corruption and deposited in US financial institutions, but in essence, to reward the public for reporting and harvesting foreign assets in the United States.
Through global anti-corruption, the United States can not only maintain social order, but also confiscate the assets stored in the United States by corrupt elements, and can also use the confiscation of assets as a threat to force foreign countries that hold power and state secrets to serve the United States, and confiscate them if necessary.
The United States** signs the Global Anti-Corruption Proclamation.
The United States is a refined egoist, and its calculations are extremely accurate, and this is certainly a good thing for the United States. This may be seen by some countries as interference in the internal affairs of other countries, or even used as a political tool to pressure other countries**, but it will still help push countries to step up their anti-corruption efforts, expose corrupt elements to greater international pressure and stricter supervision, and help maintain global fairness and justice.
The U.S. Secretary of State has made a high-profile global anti-corruption campaign.
We believe that in the face of the complexity of the global corruption problem, the international community must work together to strengthen exchanges and jointly promote the development and progress of the anti-corruption cause.