Pompeo unloads on U.S. universities for China ties
WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Wednesday accused U.S. universities of caving to Chinese pressure to blunt or bar criticism of the Chinese Communist Party. The attack, which included identifying two university administrators by name, comes as the Trump administration seeks to cement its anti-China policies before leaving office in Janu-ary.
Pompeo took aim at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the University of Washington, claiming they refused to address the Trump administration’s concerns about China’s attempts to influence students and academics. In doing so, he specifically called out the president of MIT and a senior official at the University of Washington for ignoring the matter.
Both universities swiftly and emphatically denied the charges.
Pompeo defended the Trump administration’s tough stance on China in remarks at the Georgia Institute of Technology. The speech came less than a month before Georgia’s two critical run-off races that will determine control of the Senate.
“Americans must know how the CCP is poisoning the well of our higher education for its own ends, and how those actions degrade our freedoms and our national security. If we don’t educate ourselves, we’ll get schooled by Beijing,” he said. “They know that left-leaning college campuses are rife with anti-Americanism, and present easy target audiences for their antiAmerican messaging.“
Pompeo has been a champion of the administration’s hardline stance on Chinese policies in Taiwan, Tibet, Hong Kong, the western region of Xinjiang and the South China Sea, and he has made similar pronouncements before. He has imposed multiple layers of sanctions on Chinese officials; restricted visas for Chinese diplomats, journalists and academics; and lobbied other countries to reject Chinese hightech communications.
But his comments on Wednesday were striking in that he named the two American university officials as complicit in alleged Chinese malfeasance.
Pompeo said he had initially wanted to give his Georgia Tech speech at MIT, but the president of the renowned scientific institution, Rafael Reif, had turned him down for fear of offending Beijing.
“MIT wasn’t interested in having me give this speech on their campus,“Pompeo said. “President Rafael Reif implied that my arguments might insult their ethnic Chinese students and professors.”
MIT spokeswoman Kimberly Allen rejected Pompeo’s assertion, saying the university declined to host the speech because of coronavirus restrictions. She said several other prospective high-level events had also been rejected.