Arab Times

Trump’s national security adviser takes aim at China

Japan confirms scrapping of US missile defense system

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PHOENIX, June 25, (AP): President Donald Trump’s national security adviser warned China on Wednesday that the United States is waking up to the threat that it believes the Chinese Communist Party poses “to our great way of life” and will act to check the spread of Beijing’s ideology.

Robert O’Brien said his speech challengin­g China was the first of many in the coming weeks by senior administra­tion officials, including Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Attorney General William Barr and FBI Director Christophe­r Wray.

“The days of American passivity and naivety regarding the People’s Republic of

China are over,” O’Brien told a group business leaders in Phoenix.

“America, under President Trump’s leadership, has finally awoken to the threat of the Chinese Communist Party’s actions and the threat they pose to our great way of life.”

This latest verbal offensive is an extension of Trump’s harsh words for Beijing’s handling of the coronaviru­s, which has killed more than 120,000 Americans. It follows on the heels of former national security John Bolton’s book that alleges Trump was soft on Chinese President Xi Jinping and other authoritar­ian leaders to advance his own political agenda. According to Bolton, Trump asked Xi for China to buy more agricultur­al products to help the president win farm states and told the Chinese leader that he was right to build detention camps to house thousands of Chinese ethnic minorities.

That statement could make the president’s tough-on-China mantra a hard sell. The Trump campaign released an online video last month that included clips of former vice-president Joe Biden previously describing the Chinese as “not bad folks” and saying economic growth in China was in the US interest.

O’Brien harsh words come as China has rebuffed US efforts to negotiate a three-way nuclear weapons treaty with Russia and as the administra­tion seeks Beijing’s help in getting North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons. The White House also is trying negotiate a new US-China trade agreement.

The Trump adviser said the consensus for decades among American policymake­rs was as the US invested more in China and trained more Chinese engineers, scientists, bureaucrat­s and others, the faster China would liberalize – first economical­ly and then politicall­y.

He said the US welcomed China into the World Trade Organizati­on in 2001 with concession­s and trade privileges while playing down China’s human rights abuses and the theft of US technology, which hurt American businesses.

“As China grew richer and stronger, we believed that the Chinese Communist Party would liberalize to meet the rising democratic aspiration­s of its people,” O’Brien said. “This was a bold, quintessen­tially American idea. It was born of our innate optimism and by the experience of our triumph over Soviet communism. Unfortunat­ely, it also turned out to be very naive.”

O’Brien offered a list of Chinese activities that he said were aimed not only at repressing its own citizens, but influencin­g Americans. He said he was not attacking the Chinese people, but the Chinese Communist Party.

He said China has worked to eliminate “unfriendly” Chinese language media outlets worldwide and has turned to Twitter to spread anti-American disinforma­tion. In more than a dozen American cities, people listen to FM radio stations with “subtle pro-Beijing propaganda,” O’Brien said. Earlier this week, the administra­tion designated the US operations of four major Chinese media outlets as “foreign missions” – an action that could force some of their staff to leave the country.

He cited China’s cybersecur­ity activities that he said collect personal data on millions of Americans. He said the administra­tion is working to prevent certain companies such as the tech giant Huawei that are closely tied to the Chinese Communist Party’s intelligen­ce and security apparatus from accessing US data.

Under Trump, the US has imposed restrictio­ns on US semiconduc­tor technology from going to Huawei and has limited the People’s Liberation Army’s ability to use student visa programs to place its officers in US colleges and universiti­es.

Also:

TOKYO: Japan’s National Security Council has endorsed plans to cancel the deployment of two costly land-based US missile defense systems aimed at bolstering the country’s capability against threats from North Korea, the country’s defense minister said Thursday.

The council made its decision Wednesday, and now the government will need to enter negotiatio­ns with the US about what to do with payments and the purchase contract already made for the Aegis Ashore systems.

The council is expected to also revise Japan’s basic defense plan later this year to update the missile defense program and scale up the country’s defense posture. Defense Minister Taro Kono announced the plan to scrap the systems earlier this month after it was found that the safety of one of the two planned host communitie­s could not be ensured without a hardware redesign that would be too time consuming and costly.

 ??  ?? In this photo taken on June 24, a woman wearing a face mask walks past workers washing the street in Lisbon’s old center. Portugal avoided the dramatic numbers of infections and deaths recorded by some other European Union
countries during the early months of the coronaviru­s outbreak but since ending its state of emergency and lockdown at the end of April, its total of officially recorded new infections has remained stubbornly high. (AP)
In this photo taken on June 24, a woman wearing a face mask walks past workers washing the street in Lisbon’s old center. Portugal avoided the dramatic numbers of infections and deaths recorded by some other European Union countries during the early months of the coronaviru­s outbreak but since ending its state of emergency and lockdown at the end of April, its total of officially recorded new infections has remained stubbornly high. (AP)

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