The Sun (San Bernardino)

China panel warns on ‘existentia­l struggle’

- By Kevin Freking and Ellen Knickmeyer

A special House committee dedicated to countering China began its work Tuesday with a prime-time hearing designed to awaken Americans to the dangers that lawmakers say the Chinese government poses to the United States’ economy and security.

While some critics expressed concern the hearings could escalate U.S.Chinese tensions, the panel’s chairman framed the competitio­n between the two nations as “an existentia­l struggle over what life will look like in the 21st century.”

Tensions between the U.S. and China have been rising for years, with both countries enacting retaliator­y tariffs on an array of imports during President Donald Trump’s time in office. China’s opaque response to the COVID-19 pandemic, its aggression toward Taiwan and the recent flight of a possible spy balloon over the U.S. have fueled lawmakers’ desire to counter the Chinese government. The new Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party is expected to be at the center of many of their efforts over the next two years.

The committee’s chairman, Rep. Mike Gallagher, R-Wis., opened the hearing by calling for a sense of urgency. Addressing the difficulty of finding common ground on China-focused legislatio­n, he said the Chinese government has found friends on Wall Street and in lobbyists on Washington’s K Street who are ready to oppose the committee’s efforts.

“Time is not on our side.

Just because this Congress is divided, we cannot afford to waste the next two years lingering in legislativ­e limbo or pandering for the press,” Gallagher said in prepared remarks.

Gallagher is looking for the committee to shepherd several bills over the finish line during the next two years and issue a set of recommenda­tions on longterm policies. So far, Gallagher appears to have Democratic buy-in and support. The vote to create the committee was bipartisan, 36565. Opponents on the Democratic side largely voiced the concern that the committee could stir an even greater rise in anti-Asian hate crimes. Gallagher said he is committed to ensuring the focus is on the Chinese Communist Party, not on the people of China.

Rep. Raja Krishnamoo­rthi, D-Ill., the ranking Democrat on the committee, said the CCP is counting on lawmakers to be “fractious, divided, partisan and we have to do the opposite.”

“We have no choice but to rise to the challenge at this point. It’s that serious,” Krishnamoo­rthi said.

The witnesses for Tuesday’s hearing include two former advisers to Trump: Matthew Pottinger, the deputy national security adviser who resigned immediatel­y after the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol; and H.R. McMaster, who was national security adviser from February 2017 to April 2018.

McMaster is no stranger to testifying about the threats he sees from China. He has warned Congress that the U.S. clung too long to the idea that China would liberalize its economy and form of governance as it was welcomed into internatio­nal systems.

He has recommend the U.S. not engage in trade or investment that transfers sensitive technology the Chinese Communist Party can use to gain military and economic advantages. He also has testified the U.S. should not do business in China in a way that helps the CCP stifle freedom and perfect its technology-enabled police state.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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