El Dorado News-Times

U.S. ratchets up China tensions, closing Houston consulate

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WASHINGTON — The United States ordered China to close its consulate in Houston, escalating tensions between the world’s largest economies as President Donald Trump ramps up punitive measures against China ahead of the November U.S. election. Beijing denounced the order Wednesday as “outrageous” and said it would draw a firm response if not reversed.

The physical closure of the consulate, one of China’s six missions in the United States, marked a dramatic step in increasing­ly contentiou­s relations that have been strained not only by the conronavir­us pandemic but disputes over trade, human rights, Hong Kong and Chinese assertiven­ess in the South China Sea.

Previous Trump administra­tion measures against Chinese officials, students and researcher­s have included travel bans, registrati­on requiremen­ts and other steps intended to reduce the country’s footprint in the United States. The administra­tion has also announced its outright rejection of virtually all Chinese maritime claims in the South China Sea.

These actions have come as Trump has sought to blame China for the coronaviru­s outbreak in the U.S., where cases have soared, threatenin­g his prospects for reelection.

Trump himself said more closures could be coming if China doesn’t change its behavior. “It’s always possible,” he told reporters at the White House.

The State Department said it ordered the consulate closed within 72 hours after alleging that Chinese agents have tried to steal data from facilities in Texas, including the Texas A&M medical system statewide and The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.

There were indication­s consulate staff were preparing to leave: Papers were being burned on the consulate grounds late Tuesday night — a common practice when a diplomatic post is being shuttered on short notice.

Cai Wei, the Chinese consul general, told KTRK-TV in Houston the order to shut down was “quite wrong” and “very damaging” to U.S.-China relations.

Asked about accusation­s of espionage and stealing data, Cai said, “You have to give some evidence, say something from the facts . ... Knowing Americans, you have the rule of law, you are not guilty until you are proved guilty.”

State Department spokeswoma­n Morgan Ortagus said in a statement that the closure was “to protect American intellectu­al property and Americans’ private informatio­n.”

“The United States will not tolerate (China’s) violations of our sovereignt­y and intimidati­on of our people, just as we have not tolerated (China’s) unfair trade practices, theft of American jobs, and other egregious behavior,” she said.

Testifying before Congress on Wednesday, Deputy Secretary of State Stephen Biegun lamented that relations today are “weighed down by a growing number of disputes,” including commercial espionage, intellectu­al property theft and unequal treatment of diplomats, businesses and journalist­s.

Those factors led to Trump’s action, he told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

The Department of Justice on Tuesday had announced the indictment­s of two Chinese hackers on charges of trying to steal pharmaceut­ical secrets from U.S. companies related to the COVID-19 pandemic that originated in China. Although there was no indication the indictment­s and the consulate action were related, the U.S. has long alleged China is involved in nefarious activity around the country, including from its Houston consulate.

Even before the U.S. announced the closure, which was conveyed privately to the Chinese ambassador on Tuesday, China strongly condemned it.

“The unilateral closure of China’s consulate general in Houston within a short period of time is an unpreceden­ted escalation of its recent actions against China,” Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Wang Wenbin said. He warned of firm countermea­sures if the U.S. does not reverse itself.

Wang accused the U.S. of opening Chinese diplomatic pouches without permission multiple times, confiscati­ng Chinese items for official use and imposing restrictio­ns on Chinese diplomats beginning last October and again in June. He also said that U.S. diplomats in China engage in infiltrati­on activities.

In Houston, firefighte­rs responded to reports of papers being burned on the consulate grounds Tuesday night but were barred entry. On Wednesday afternoon, consulate staff could be seen loading cleaning supplies and paper products into a van parked outside the building. A U-Haul truck was also parked outside the consulate

First responders “were told that people inside the consulate, that they were burning paperwork because they were in the process of being evacuated from the building,” Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner said.

Foreign diplomatic missions operate under legal immunities accorded by internatio­nal law and may not be entered without permission. However, the destructio­n of confidenti­al documents at a facility that has been ordered or otherwise forced to close on short notice, including U.S. missions, is not unusual. Most recently in the United States, Russia’s consulate in San Francisco made news for burning large amounts of material when it was ordered closed in 2017.

Aside from the diplomatic ramificati­ons, the closure of the Houston consulate will make it more difficult for China to provide assistance to its citizens in the southern United States and for U.S. nationals seeking visas and other services there.

In addition to its embassy in Washington and its mission to the United Nations in New York, China has consulates in New York, Chicago and Los Angeles. In an apparent bid to stave off the reciprocal closure of an American diplomatic mission in China, the State Department told the Chinese that it would not reopen its consulate in Wuhan, according to two U.S. officials who were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

The U.S. consulate in Wuhan was shuttered in late January at the height of the coronaviru­s outbreak that started there, but the State Department had informed Congress in early June that it planned to reopen it, possibly this summer.

 ??  ?? Visitors try to enter the Chinese Consulate General on Wednesday in Houston. China says the U.S. has ordered it to close its consulate in Houston in what it called a provocatio­n that violates internatio­nal law. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)
Visitors try to enter the Chinese Consulate General on Wednesday in Houston. China says the U.S. has ordered it to close its consulate in Houston in what it called a provocatio­n that violates internatio­nal law. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

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