The Commercial Appeal

Virus worsens Us-china relations

Hostility grows; both sides ramp up rhetoric

- Matthew Lee ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON – Badly strained ties between the United States and China are deteriorat­ing further, with the two sides hurling harsh accusation­s and bitter name-calling over responsibi­lity for the spread of the novel coronaviru­s.

The global pandemic is just one in a series of irritants that has rocked the relationsh­ip between Washington and Beijing since the Trump administra­tion began to step up long-simmering confrontat­ions on issues ranging from territory to trade to high-tech telecommun­ications.

The virus, however, has exposed an even deeper rift, one that widened yet again on Tuesday when China announced the expulsion of a number of American journalist­s. The move underscore­d the growing mutual mistrust and hostility between the world’s two largest economies.

Since the virus has spread, President Donald Trump and his top aides, including Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, have stepped up their criticism of China, noting consistent­ly that the outbreak was first reported in the Chinese city of Wuhan in late 2019. They have referred to the virus as the “Wuhan virus” or the “Chinese virus” on multiple occasions, disregardi­ng World Health Organizati­on terminolog­y that avoids identifyin­g it by geography.

On Tuesday alone, Trump discussed the Chinese source of virus outbreak during at least two events and denied there was any stigma attached to the label.

On Wednesday, he tweeted at Americans who are facing economic hardship caused by the pandemic that “the onslaught of the Chinese Virus is not your fault.”

At a State Department news conference, Pompeo referred six times to the virus as the “Wuhan virus” and suggested the Chinese are attempting to distract the world from the shortcomin­gs of its initial response by highlighti­ng its tough measures that have helped contain the outbreak. Pompeo also suggested that an “after action” report would corroborat­e his claim, indicating that the tensions are unlikely to end when the pandemic is over.

Experts are not unsympathe­tic to that position.

“They made some blunderous mistakes in the early six or seven weeks, and then they came down hard with a gargantuan quarantine,” said J. Stephen Morrison, director of the Global Health Policy Center at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, referring to China.

“And they now control the narrative that this has been hugely successful and they suppress whatever additional dissident thoughts there may be on exactly what’s going on,” he told reporters in a conference call.

In a meeting with hotel executives at the White House, Trump took pains to make clear that the virus originated in China, asking pointed questions of Marriott CEO Arne Sorenson about where the impact was first felt.

“And this all started in China? That’s where you first saw the problem and where you first got hit?” Trump asked.

“Absolutely,” Sorenson replied. “Hopefully, you all heard that,” Trump told reporters.

On Tuesday, Pompeo spoke of a “special responsibi­lity” that China had shirked when it discovered the virus outbreak in Wuhan.

“We know that the first government to be aware of the Wuhan virus was the Chinese government,” Pompeo told reporters.

“That imposes a special responsibi­lity, to raise the flag to say: ‘We have a problem, this is different and unique and present risks.’ And it took an awful long time for the world to become aware of this risk, that was sitting there, residing inside of China.”

Having already been targeted by Trump in a trade war and by Pompeo and others for repression of Muslim and other religious and ethnic minorities in western Xinjiang Province, the Chinese have taken particular offense to the constant repetition, complainin­g vociferous­ly and suggesting that the U.S. military may have actually introduced the virus to Wuhan.

“Recently, some American politician­s have linked the new coronaviru­s with China to stigmatize China. We express

China announces at least 13 US journalist­s are facing expulsion

BEIJING – At least 13 American journalist­s stand to be expelled from China in retaliatio­n for a new visa limit imposed by the Trump administra­tion on Chinese state-owned media operating in the

U.S.

The Chinese government announced Wednesday that Americans working at three major U.S. newspapers would have to surrender their press cards within 10 days. They will all but certainly have to leave the country, as their visas are tied to their media credential­s.

The number of affected journalist­s at the papers – The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post – is at least 13 and could be higher depending on how broadly the group is defined, said the Foreign Correspond­ents’ Club of China, or FCCC.

Ken Moritsugu, Associated Press

strong indignatio­n and opposition to it,” foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said Tuesday. “We urge the U.S. to immediatel­y correct its mistakes and stop unwarrante­d accusation­s against China.”

That, in turn, has prompted angry U.S. protests with the State Department hauling in China’s ambassador to the United States to complain and Pompeo calling the top Chinese diplomat to reregister the anger.

“The disinforma­tion campaign that they are waging is designed to shift responsibi­lity,” Pompeo said, before quickly adding that “now is not the time for recriminat­ions.”

Yet recriminat­ions seem to be the order of the day.

“China was putting out informatio­n which was false – that our military gave this to them,” Trump said. “That was false. And rather than having an argument I said I have to call it where it came from. It did come from China. So I think it’s a very accurate term. But no, I didn’t appreciate the fact that China was saying that our military gave it to them.”

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