【Comment】
六月中,等吧!
這次不一樣。
Vice President
Mike Pence plans hawkish China speech as trade tensions boil CNBC 20190530
KEY POINTS
- Vice President Mike Pence is planning a hawkish
speech on China during which he is expected to censure China’s human rights
record.
- The remarks would come amid an increasingly tense
trade conflict between the world’s two largest economies.
Vice President Mike Pence is planning a speech
around the 30th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre, according to
two sources familiar with the matter.
The remarks are expected to be a censure of China’s religious freedom and
human rights record from one of the Trump administration’s
highest-ranking China hawks. They are set
to come amid rising trade tensions between the world’s two largest economies.
A White House official confirmed a Pence speech is in the works – potentially in mid-June, following the anniversary
– but declined to comment on its contents.
VP Pence’s chief
of staff on Huawei’s legal case against the US
The Pentagon has estimated China has detained up to 3 million members of its
minority Muslim population, known as Uighurs, in camps in the Xinjiang autonomous
region. The administration has raised concerns
about certain companies’ assisting the Chinese government in those efforts. The New York Times and Bloomberg report that the White House is mulling penalties for up to
five companies — including camera maker Hikvision — involved in the surveillance
of China’s Uighur population.
In a statement provided to CNBC, Hikvision says it “takes these concerns very
seriously and has engaged with the U.S. government regarding all of this since last
October.” The company also says it has retained
human rights expert and former U.S. Ambassador Pierre-Richard Prosper as an advisor.
It’s unclear how soon the White House could unveil the new sanctions, and whether the vice president’s speech
would be a possible venue for doing so.
The speech would mark the latest escalation in a rhetorical tit-for-tat between
Washington and Beijing. China has ratcheted
up its threats against the U.S. in state media and is preparing to hike tariffs
on $60 billion in U.S. goods on Saturday.
Last week, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo accused Huawei executives of lying about the company’s ties to the
Chinese government. Amid the rising tensions,
Beijing warned the U.S. on Wednesday about a prolonged trade war.
“Don’t say we didn’t warn you!” the People’s Daily state newspaper wrote in
a commentary piece.
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