Global Times

Playing HK card dangerous

▶ China won’t compromise on ‘core interests’ with US

- By Yang Sheng

The US is openly playing Hong Kong as a card to exert strategic pressure on China amid the trade negotiatio­ns and escalating contention between the two countries, said Chinese experts, as senior US officials, institutio­ns and foundation­s have increasing­ly lent support to prolonged riots in the special administra­tive region.

US President Donald Trump tweeted Wednesday that “Of course China wants to make a deal. Let them work humanely with Hong Kong first!”

He (President Xi Jinping) is also a good man in a “tough business,” he tweeted.

“I have ZERO doubt that if President Xi wants to quickly and humanely solve the Hong Kong problem, he can do it. Personal meeting?”

On June 10, the US State Department threatened to cancel Hong Kong’s separate customs territory status in response to the Hong Kong government starting legislatio­n of the extraditio­n law.

“The US is actually acknowledg­ing its interferen­ce in the Hong Kong turmoil and trying to use it as a bargaining chip to get some benefit from trade talks with China,” Diao Daming, a US studies expert and associate professor at Renmin University of China in Beijing,

told the Global Times on Thursday.

“This is not a surprise at all and this is a customary tactic of the Trump administra­tion when bullying other countries to accept an unreasonab­le deal.”

The US is also using its influence in Hong Kong to provoke China and it hopes China will solve the problem with force so that it can prove Beijing’s policy over Hong Kong is failing and Washington and its Western allies can launch sanctions against China, which would strategica­lly benefit the US, and this is what US policymake­rs believe, Diao said.

It won’t be effective as Hong Kong is a “core interest” of China for which it has no room to compromise, but the trade disputes between the two countries are negotiable, so the US is using a wrong tactic which won’t bring what it wants but might cause great losses to the US, Diao said.

Lü Xiang, an expert on the US at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing, said that using Hong Kong as a base to permeate the mainland is a longexisti­ng approach that the US has applied since the Cold War and now since internatio­nalization of the renminbi (RMB) is also threatenin­g US financial hegemony, damaging Hong Kong’s position as a financial center and offshore RMB market is also a strategic US goal.

Other senior US officials and politician­s have expressed support for the protests which are getting more and more violent and turning into riots in some cases since the protest against the extraditio­n bill issue started in June.

They even beautify riots with slogans like “human rights” and “democracy” and some of them, such as US Vice President Mike Pence, met mastermind­s behind the city’s turmoil.

Chinese experts on Hong Kong affair and internatio­nal studies blasted the role played by the US in the current turmoil in Hong Kong and urged the city to restore order through the rule of law in a press briefing on Thursday.

Held by the Informatio­n Office of the State Council, the briefing included seven mainland experts answering questions from Chinese and foreign media.

Zhao Kejin, deputy director of the School of Social Sciences of Tsinghua University in Beijing, said at the Thursday event that the problems Hong Kong is facing today “appear to be local issues, but in fact, it has very deep internatio­nal roots.”

Zhao said, “each time there is a largescale protest in Hong Kong, you can see Washington fanning the flames and related US organizati­ons in Hong Kong offering support.”

China and the US have been entangled in a trade war since 2018, which has expanded to other fronts, including high technology and the Taiwan question as the US now wants to contain China’s developmen­t in an all-round way, the analysts said.

Tian Feilong, a Hong Kong affairs expert and associate professor at Beihang University, said that “in the 1997 financial crisis, the central government spared no effort to support the financial market of Hong Kong, which made mainland and Hong Kong a financial community of common interests.”

If Hong Kong’s internatio­nal financial center status, guaranteed by the “one country, two systems,” is undermined, not only the Chinese mainland and Hong Kong will be hit, but the financial security of the US will also see an impact in the current age of globalizat­ion, Tian Feilong said.

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