US condemns China over ‘Orwellian’ airline demands
WASHINGTON: The White House on Saturday sharply criticised China’s efforts to force foreign airlines to change how they refer to Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau, labeling China’s latest effort to police language describing the politically sensitive territories as ‘Orwellian nonsense’.
Amid an escalating fight over China’s trade surplus with the United States, the White House said China’s Civil Aviation Administration sent a letter to 36 foreign air carriers, including a number of US carriers, demanding changes.
The carriers were told to remove references on their websites or in other material that suggests Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau are part of countries independent from China, US and airline officials said.
The White House said in a statement that President Donald Trump‘willstandup forAmericans resisting efforts by the Chinese Communist Party to impose Chinese political correctness on American companies and citizens.’
“This is Orwellian nonsense and part of a growing trend by the Chinese Communist Party to impose its political views on American citizens and private companies. We call on China to stop threatening and coercing American carriers and citizens.”
Taiwan is China’s most sensitive territorial issue.
Beijing considers the self-ruled, democratic island a wayward province.
Hong Kong and Macau are former European colonies that are now part of China but run largely autonomously.
China’s foreign ministry said China’s top diplomat, Yang Jiechi, and US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo had discussed bilateral ties by phone, with Yang saying relations were at ‘an important stage’.
It was unclear if the call came after, or was a response to, the White House statement – or if the two had even discussed the issue of how Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau are referred to by US companies.
According to a foreign ministry statement late on Saturday, Yang told Pompeo the two countries
My group just got back from China. We’re going to have to rework China because that’s been a one-way street for decades. Donald Trump, US President
should strengthen exchanges, maintain close communication over economic and trade issues and respect each other’s ‘core interests and major concerns’.
China and the United States should ‘ properly settle disputes and sensitive issues’, keep up communication and coordination on major international and regional issues and ‘ push bilateral relations forward along the right track’, Yang said.
The White House’s sharp criticism follows contentious trade talks between senior US and Chinese officials last week.
The Trump administration demanded a US$ 200 billion cut in China’s trade surplus with the United States by 2020, sharply lower tariffs and a halt to subsidies for advanced technology, people familiar with the talks said.
“My group just got back from China. We’re going to have to rework China because that’s been a one-way street for decades,” Trump said at an event in Cleveland on Saturday.
“We can’t go on that way,” he said, although he also said he has a lot respect for Chinese President Xi Jinping.
Trump earlier this week praised his relationship with Xi but there were no signs of significant progress at the talks on Thursday and Friday, raising fears of a trade war between the world’s two largest economies.
Trump has already proposed tariffs on 50 billion of Chinese goods which could go into effect next month.
China has said its own retaliatory tariffs on US goods, including soybeans and aircraft, will go into effect if the US duties are imposed.
It has also requested that Washington treat Chinese investment equally under national security reviews and stop issuing new restrictions on Chinese investment.
The dispute over how airlines refer to Hong Kong, Taiwan and Macau is another area of tension in US- China relations.
A spokesman for Airlines for America, a trade group representing United Airlines, American Airlines and other major carriers, said on Saturday it was working with the US government to determine ‘ next steps’ in the dispute.
In January, Delta Air Lines, following a demand from China over listing Taiwan and Tibet as countries on its website, apologized for making ‘an inadvertent error with no business or political intention’, and said it had taken steps to resolve the issue. — Reuters