Home China State Dept’s China Page Focuses On Trade Curbs

State Dept’s China Page Focuses On Trade Curbs

The U.S. State Department highlights trade deficit and U.S. business concerns.

The U.S. State Department has changed references to China on its website, emphasising the trade deficit in an expanded section on economic ties, while dropping talk of working with allies and assistance to China on cultural and environmental issues.

The February 13 changes underscore the new administration’s focus on trade and other priorities after removing a phrase last week from the department’s Taiwan fact sheet about not supporting the island’s independence, which angered Beijing.

China’s economy is “one of the most restrictive investment climates in the world”, read the expanded section on economic ties that highlighted the U.S.-China trade deficit and U.S. businesses’ concerns on the challenges of operating in China.

“China also engages in unfair trade practices, including using forced labor and massive state subsidies, putting American businesses at a disadvantage, and making them complicit in China’s human rights abuses,” the webpage read.

Responding to a query on the changes, a spokesperson for China’s foreign ministry described them as “distorting facts and slandering China’s foreign policy, and hyping up so-called China-U.S. strategic competition

From ‘PRC’ to ‘China’

The State Department also dropped the phrase “People’s Republic of China (PRC)” from its country fact sheet on China, opting instead for “China”.

Wen-Ti Sung, fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Global China Hub, believes that the revised language seems to “drive a hard bargain by raising complaints on economic policy issues” but also represents U.S. softening on fundamental matters core to the Chinese ruling party’s interests, namely regime security.

The site also features new language on countering Chinese cyber activity against U.S. government bodies and critical infrastructure networks as well as efforts to obtain U.S. cutting-edge technology for military purposes.


Nitin A Gokhale WhatsApp Channel

It emphasises the need to rebuild the U.S. industrial base and shore up its lead in artificial intelligence.

An expanded section on China’s role in international bodies accuses the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) of attempting to “manipulate and subvert” such bodies as the United Nations.

It seeks to “groom and install CCP members in leadership and other positions,” the section adds.

A Shift in Tone

The site skips previous mention of “(working) closely with our allies and partners to defend our interests and values”, saying instead that Washington will “follow the principles of reciprocity and fairness” in ties with China.

It also drops a section on U.S. assistance to China that listed programmes for preserving Tibetan culture, environmental protection, human rights and combating drug trafficking.

The omissions come as Trump embarks on a massive programme to reshape the U.S. government, by attempting to dismantle the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and suspending foreign assistance.

(With inputs from Reuters)