The relationship
between the U.S. and China has been strained for some time. President Trump has
criticized Beijing over a trade imbalance and the outbreak of the coronavirus
lead both to accuse the other of an improper response.
China’s
foreign minister, Wang Yi, said on Sunday that the United States should “give
up on its wishful thinking of changing China” and avoid bringing the two
countries to a “new Cold War.”
“China has no
intention to change, still replace, the United States,” he said, according to
the Washington Post. “It is time for the United States to give up it’s wishful
thinking of changing China and stopping 1.4 billion people in their historic
march toward modernization.”
Trump
recently said that he may completely end U.S. funding for the World Health
Organization over its cozy ties with Beijing.
The White
House has insisted that Beijing downplayed the virus’ threat in December, which
led to the subsequent outbreak. China has denied the charge and accused Trump
of shirking responsibility to the organization, according to the AFP.
The Post
pointed out that a spokesman for Wang implied that American troops planted the
virus in Wuhan.
Stuart
Varney, an anchor on FOX Business, said last week that he believes that the
Cold War between the two countries has already started. He pointed to China’s
move to impose national security legislation on Hong Kong.
Chris Patten,
the last British governor of Hong Kong prior to its handover to China, lamented
what he called “a new Chinese dictatorship.”
U.S.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has called the proposal “a death knell for the
high degree of autonomy” that Beijing promised the former British colony when
it was returned to China in 1997.
“We are
trying hard to come out of an economic disaster. But a knockdown fight with
China has been thrust upon us,” he said. “The takeover of Hong Kong is the
writing on the wall.”
No comments:
Post a Comment