Daily Observer (Jamaica)

US intelligen­ce director says China is top threat to America

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WASHINGTON, DC, United States (AP) — Outgoing United States National Intelligen­ce Director John Ratcliffe says China poses the greatest threat to America and the rest of the free world since World War II, as the Trump Administra­tion ramps up anti-chinese rhetoric to pressure President-elect Joe Biden to be tough on Beijing.

“The intelligen­ce is clear: Beijing intends to dominate the US and the rest of the planet economical­ly, militarily and technologi­cally,” Ratcliffe wrote in an op-ed published Thursday in The Wall Street Journal.

“Many of China’s major public initiative­s and prominent companies offer only a layer of camouflage to the activities of the Chinese Communist Party.”

“I call its approach of economic espionage ‘rob, replicate and replace’,” Ratcliffe said.

“China robs US companies of their intellectu­al property, replicates the technology and then replaces the US firms in the global marketplac­e.”

In Beijing, foreign ministry spokespers­on Hua Chunying dismissed the editorial as a further move to spread “false informatio­n, political viruses and lies”, in hopes of damaging China’s reputation and China-us relations.

“It offered nothing new but repeated the lies and rumours aimed at smearing China and playing up the China threat by any means,” Hua said at a daily briefing yesterday.

“It’s another hodgepodge of lies being produced by the relevant department­s of the US Government for some time.”

Trump Administra­tion officials have been stepping up their anti-china rhetoric for months, especially during the presidenti­al campaign as President Donald Trump sought to deflect blame for the spread of the novel coronaviru­s.

On the campaign trail, Trump warned that Biden would go easy on China, although the president-elect agrees that China is not abiding by internatio­nal trade rules, is giving unfair subsidies to Chinese companies and stealing American innovation.

The Trump Administra­tion, which once boasted of warm relations with Chinese President Xi Jinping, also has been ramping up sanctions against China over Taiwan, Tibet, trade, Hong Kong and the South China Sea.

It has moved against the Chinese telecoms giant Huawei and sought restrictio­ns on Chinese social media applicatio­ns like Tiktok and Wechat.

Ratcliffe, a Trump loyalist who has been accused of politicisi­ng the position, has been the nation’s top intelligen­ce official since May. In his op-ed, he did not directly address the transition to a Biden Administra­tion. Trump has not acknowledg­ed losing the election.

Ratcliffe said he has shifted money within the Us$85billion annual intelligen­ce budget to address the threat from China. Beijing is preparing for an open-ended confrontat­ion with the US, which must be addressed, he said.

“This is our once-in-a-generation challenge. Americans have always risen to the moment, from defeating the scourge of fascism to bringing down the Iron Curtain,” Ratcliffe wrote, in what appeared to be a call for action to future intelligen­ce officials.

 ??  ?? Director of National Intelligen­ce John Ratcliffe
Director of National Intelligen­ce John Ratcliffe

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