China: US politicians pushing nations into ‘new Cold War’

Bloomberg

The US should give up its “wishful thinking” of changing China, foreign minister Wang Yi said, warning that some in America were pushing relations to a “new Cold War.”
“China has no intention to change the US, nor to replace the US It is also wishful thinking for the US to change China,” Wang said during his annual news briefing on the sidelines
of National People’s Congress (NPC) meetings. He also criticised the US for slowing its nuclear negotiations with North Korea and warned it not to cross Beijing’s “red line” on Taiwan.
The US-China relationship has worsened dramatically in the past few months as America became one of the world’s worst hit by the coronavirus pandemic, which was first discovered in the Chinese city of Wuhan. The world’s two biggest economies have clashed on a range of issues from trade to human rights, with Beijing’s latest move to tighten its grip on Hong Kong setting up another showdown between US President Donald Trump and China’s Xi Jinping.
“Some US political forces are taking hostage of China-US relations, attempting to push the ties to the brink of so-called ‘new Cold War,’” Wang said. “This is dangerous and will endanger global peace.”
Wang cautioned the US “not to challenge China’s red line” on Taiwan, after Secretary of State Michael Pompeo broke with tradition last week and congratulated the island’s President Tsai Ing-wen on her second-term inauguration. Beijing considers Taiwan a province.
“Reunification between the two sides of the Strait is an inevitable trend of history, no one and no force can stop it,” Wang said. China’s defense ministry blasted a US plan to sell torpedoes to Taiwan.
And he blamed Washington for the stall in historic negotiations between the US and North Korea, saying China hoped to see continued interaction between the two sides. The comments came after North Korean leader Kim Jong-un — who has faced questions about his health — made his first public statement in three weeks, ordering military leaders to increase the country’s “nuclear war deterrence.”
“We have seen some positive steps taken by the DPRK in the last few years towards de-escalation and denuclearisation,” Wang said. “Regrettably, these steps have not been reciprocated in a substantive way by the US side. This is the main reason for the ongoing stalemate in the DPRK-US dialogue.”
Tensions spiked last week after China announced the NPC would write sweeping legislation into Hong Kong law to criminalise the harshest criticism of China and the ruling party. The move drew swift condemnation from pro-democracy activists in Hong Kong, who defied virus-related social-distancing measures and rallied in the city center even as Wang spoke. Pompeo called the measure a “disastrous proposal” and indicated that it could lead the US to reconsider Hong Kong’s special trade status.
Tear gas is fired during a protest in Hong Kong on May 24. Wang repeated China’s stance that Hong Kong affairs were an internal matter and said the principle of non-interference must be upheld by all countries. He also argued that the coronavirus pandemic showed how the world was a “global village” and needed to work together, while repeatedly rejecting foreign criticism of China’s internal affairs.

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