The report concludes that the Biden administration’s “approach to China reflects much of the failed policies, and failed team, of the Obama administration, which saw China not as a competitor, but a nation that could be engaged on a whole host of issues from climate change to global development.”
Joe Biden Aims to Erase Donald Trump’s Policies in Combating China
The Biden administration has already taken steps to undo former President Trump’s policies in countering China, a Republican Study Committee report reveals.
Instead of displaying “American leadership through a strategy based on peace through strength, the Biden team so far has exhibited a pattern of weakness, and a return to Obama’s failed approach of engaging rather than holding China accountable for it’s bad behavior,” the report states.
Outlined in the report are ways in which the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) seeks a continuation of an Obama-style “vision of accommodation and cooperation, rather than containment and confrontation, with the CCP.”
The following are eight key actions from the report that demonstrate Biden’s approach:
- January 21, 2021: Biden issued an executive order to suspend Trump’s E.O. 13920, which protected the U.S. against China from accessing or owning parts of the U.S. power grid.
- January 21, 2021: Biden rejoined the World Health Organization without concern for “China’s covering up the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic.”
- January 22, 2021: The State Department “was undertaking a review of former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s historic determination that China was committing genocide against the Uyghurs.”
- January 26, 2021: Biden’s secretary of commerce nominee, Gina Raimondo, “refused to commit to keeping Huawei on the Department of Commerce’s Entities List.”
- January 27, 2021: The Treasury Department “delayed until late May the implementation of President Trump’s EO 12959 putting sanctions on Chinese military companies operating in the United States.”
- February 8, 2021: The State Department announced “the U.S. was rejoining the U.N. Human Rights Council. Despite the name, the so-called ‘human rights’ council includes Communist countries such as China and Cuba.”
- February 8, 2021: Biden withdrew the requirement for “American colleges and universities to disclose their partnerships with Confucius Institutes.”
- February 10, 2021: The Justice Department “announced in a court filing that the Department of Commerce is ‘reviewing’ whether or not TikTok was a national security threat.”
These actions are consistent with “a number of individuals who either have had links to the CCP, or have a record of weak statements and actions on confronting [China].” These individuals include high-ranking members of the Biden administration. See below:
- National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan
- U.S. ambassador to the United Nations nominee Linda Thomas Greenfield
- Under secretary of defense for policy nominee Colin Kahl
- White House National Security Council Director for the Indo-Pacific Kurt Campbell
- Secretary of State Tony Blinken
- CIA Director William Burns
- Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen
- Commerce secretary nominee Gina Raimondo
- Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas
- Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin
- Climate czar John Kerry
- Head of the Domestic Policy Council Susan Rice
- Special assistant to the president for presidential personnel Thomas Zimmerman
- White House National Security Council
- Middle East Coordinator Brett McGurk
The report concludes that the Biden administration’s “approach to China reflects much of the failed policies, and failed team, of the Obama administration, which saw China not as a competitor, but a nation that could be engaged on a whole host of issues from climate change to global development.”
China’s Huawei Chief Eager and Ready for a Joe Biden Call
Huawei founder and CEO Ren Zhengfei would welcome a phone call from President Joe Biden and the chance to talk about the Chinese telecom giant’s future on U.S. soil.
Zhengfei assured Biden if he made the call he would definitely pick up, in his first direct remark since the new administration took office.
“I will welcome that, but there has been no call so far,” Ren said, adding he’d like to broach joint development between China and the U.S. if talks came about, according to the official Chinese Communist Party (CCP) news outlet Global Times.
The remark was made last week at the sidelines of an event in Taiyuan, North China’s Shanxi Province, and follow a turbulent 12 months for the company and its dealings with the rest of the world.
The Trump administration announced sanctions against the company last August that isolated it from some technology it sourced from the United States, as Breitbart News reported.
Those impositions caused a shortage of computer chips for the company, hurting the growth of its smartphone business.
“Huawei is an enormous threat to our national security," @newtgingrich told Breitbart News. “We have to find a strategy to defeat them. I was tweeting about the gap in our big telecoms’ inability to compete." https://t.co/Whs3OIiD5W
— Breitbart News (@BreitbartNews) March 25, 2020
The move followed the United Kingdom’s earlier ban on Huawei equipment from its 5G networks and phase out of all current Huawei equipment by the end of 2027.
Now the company sees a way to return under a Joe Biden administration which will be more attuned to appeasment than confrontation, especially when it comes to Chinese business interests.
The Global Times report promised Huawei “is ready to show goodwill to the new administration,” and hopes that would proceed “irrespective as to whether the Biden administration relaxes export ban on the firm.”
Huawei was founded in 1987 and has long been accused of helping facilitate Chinese spying. Beijing officials in return accuse Washington of using national security as an excuse to stop a competitor to U.S. tech industries.
Huawei Has ‘Back Door’ Access in Its Networks, Warns United States https://t.co/NwehkRDY9O
— Breitbart London (@BreitbartLondon) February 13, 2020
The Biden administration was warned earlier this month it must combat China’s aggressive pursuit of control over global 5G infrastructure, as Breitbart News reported.
Rick Manning, president of Americans for Limited Government, said the CCP intends to use Huawei as a vehicle to dominate 5G networks worldwide.
The primary geopolitical question facing the Biden administration is, “What are they going to do with China?,” Manning said, before adding Chinese control of 5G networks would essentially provide the CCP with a kill switch over mobile Internet and data services.
Exclusive— Conservative Lawmakers Launch Legislative Blitz Exposing Biden’s Weakness on Communist China
Top conservative lawmakers in the U.S. House of Representatives are launching a legislative blitz against Democrat President Joe Biden, exposing his weakness when it comes to the threat of the Chinese Communist Party and Biden’s coziness with the Communists in Beijing.
The effort, led by Republican Study Committee (RSC) Chairman Rep. Jim Banks (R-IN), will consist of a messaging push as well as the introduction and rollout of a series of legislative proposals designed to curb Chinese influence and aggression and expose the Democrats and Biden for being weak on China. Banks and his team detailed the effort for Breitbart News exclusively ahead of the push, which will begin on Tuesday and carry on throughout the week. Under Banks, the RSC is planning blitzes like this on major issues frequently as a counter to Biden’s agenda pushed from the White House and by congressional Democrats.
“The Biden administration has lifted almost every single tough action the Trump administration took on China and has already demonstrated a clear pattern of going back to the tried and failed strategy of supporting China’s rise,” Banks told Breitbart News. “It’s not enough to compete with China, we must continue President Trump’s approach to confront China. The Chinese Communist Party is not a partner, it’s the greatest threat to the U.S. and worldwide freedom and prosperity, and if we fail to treat them as such, we will reap severe consequences.”
The House conservatives’ push comes on the heels of Biden’s first call last week with Chinese dictator Xi Jinping, the contents of which not much is known. But the White House did however release a readout of the call saying the two leaders discussed some concerns Biden has with “Beijing’s coercive and unfair economic practices, the crackdown in Hong Kong, human rights abuses in Xinjiang, and increasingly assertive actions in the region, including toward Taiwan” as well as the coronavirus pandemic and some other issues like “global health security” and “climate change.”
The RSC has compiled a six-page background memorandum that explains the House conservatives’ views on China and, in particular, the concerns with Biden’s approach to handling the CCP as compared with now-former President Donald Trump’s approach. The document opens by explaining the difference in philosophy and approach to China by Biden versus Trump, then details a series of executive actions Biden has already taken that empower the United States’ most ardent adversary.
On just his second day in office, Biden issued a flurry of executive orders helping the CCP. They include one that reentered the U.S. into the World Health Organization (W.H.O.) even after its efforts to cover up the Chinese origins of the coronavirus pandemic and another that allows Chinese Communists and Russians access to the U.S. power grid, undoing an order from Trump that barred them from getting into the nation’s energy supply. Five days later, Gina Raimonda, Biden’s nominee for Secretary of Commerce, refused to keep Chinese technology firm Huawei on the Department of Commerce’s Entities List, what is essentially a blacklist that prevents the company’s technology use from being authorized here. The day after that, Biden’s Treasury Department delayed until May an executive order Trump had rolled out sanctioning Chinese military companies operating in the United States. That’s all just in Biden’s first week in office. The RSC document continues for page after page, bullet point after bullet point, explaining how Biden has undermined the United States and empowered the Chinese Communist Party when it comes to his approach to Pacific Rim policy from the outset of his administration.
The RSC document also contains background information on several Biden political appointees over ties many have to the CCP. Biden officials named in the document include National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan, United Nations ambassador nominee Linda Thomas-Greenfield, the nominee for Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Colin Kahl, Secretary of State Tony Blinken, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, as well as Raimondo and even Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas and CIA Director William Burns. In other words, Biden administration CCP concerns are spread across the entire federal government in senior positions at everywhere from the White House to the CIA to the State Department to the Pentagon and Department of Homeland Security and even into the Treasury and Commerce Departments.
Banks’ team told Breitbart News that the chairman intends to counter Biden’s soft approach to China by showing that conservatives and Republicans know that China is America’s adversary, even though Biden sees China as a partner to America. Conservatives want to confront China, they said, while Biden just wants simple competition with the Chinese — something conservatives know is impossible because the Chinese do not fight fairly. Conservatives, Banks’ team said, want to contain China while Biden and the Democrats want to manage China’s rise. This week’s push by the RSC, which will continue all year and throughout the Biden administration, is designed to expose that and counter it while offering Americans who know something is wrong with China and Biden’s approach to China a different option.
The RSC’s effort to expose and counter Biden will include the introduction of at least 17 pieces of legislation from at least a dozen House Republicans to zone in on the threat of the Chinese Communist Party to America that the top conservatives in the RSC, the biggest caucus of conservatives in the House of Representatives, believes the Biden administration, at best, is not focused on or, worse, is mishandling. Many of these bills are designed to expose executive actions Biden has already taken helping China or has indicated he intends to take with regard to China, and their fate is unclear in the Democrat-controlled House of Representatives.
The bills include five from Banks himself, ones that would stop funding the People’s Liberation Army (PLA), place restrictions on acquisitions by the People’s Republic of China (PRC), and three pieces of legislation that have prior broad support. The first, introduced in the Senate also by Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), is the Online Consumer Protection Act. The second and third, both mentioned in the House GOP’s China Task Force report last year, are the Safe Career Transitions for Intelligence and National Security Professionals act and the Protect Our Universities Act.
It’s notable that Banks is following up on policies recommended by the GOP’s China Task Force from 2020. That effort was supposed to be bipartisan, led by both House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, but Pelosi pulled the Democrats out of it just as the coronavirus pandemic reached American shores in early 2020. The Republicans proceeded with a minority-only task force anyway and produced recommendations for the nation to combat the rising CCP last year just before the election. Republicans ended up flipping a net 15 seats from Democrat control after their publication of the report — hardly the only reason why the GOP gained seats from Democrats, but definitely a contributing factor — beating the odds and expectations of professional political prognosticators.
Other members involved in the legislative push include Reps. Ronny Jackson (R-TX), Greg Steube (R-FL), Joe Wilson (R-SC), Greg Murphy (R-NC), Ralph Norman (R-SC), Lance Gooden (R-TX), Jeff Duncan (R-SC), Bob Good (R-VA), Lauren Boebert (R-CO), Chip Roy (R-TX), and Debbie Lesko (R-AZ).
Jackson’s legislation would prohibit Biden from lifting sanctions that Trump levied against Chinese military companies. Steube’s bill would prohibit Biden from lifting Trump’s designation, made through the Department of Commerce, that Chinese technology firm Huawei is on the so-called “Entities List” unless it stopped being a member of the CCP and no longer threatened U.S. national security. Steube has another bill, too, that would require Chinese visa holders in the U.S. to disclose to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) any funds they receive from the CCP.
Wilson, meanwhile, is reintroducing a bill that would require transparency with regard to the Confucius Institutes.
Murphy is introducing another Confucius Institutes transparency bill as well, while Gooden’s legislation would force think tanks and nonprofits that receive more than $50,000 per year in funding from foreign governments — like China — to reveal that information publicly.
Norman’s bills include one that would ban PLA funding and another that would require sponsors of visas for foreign students and researchers to notify DHS whenever a visa holder participates in federally funded research programs and would allow for the removal of such an individual if deemed a threat by national security officials.
Duncan’s bill would stop Biden from lifting Trump’s prohibition on Chinese and Russian companies from accessing the U.S. energy grid, while Good’s bill would require an investigation and report into U.S. taxpayer money going into efforts to help China anywhere in the world.
Boebert’s bill would permanently remove the United States from the World Health Organization (W.H.O.) after it has been apparently compromised by CCP influence. Trump removed the U.S. from the W.H.O. during his presidency via executive action, but Biden has reentered the organization during the first few weeks of his presidency. Boebert’s bill would, if passed and signed into law, permanently remove the U.S. from the W.H.O. after the organization’s efforts to cover the CCP’s mishandling of the coronavirus pandemic which originated in Wuhan, China. Roy’s bill, meanwhile, would give an award to the Wuhan doctor who uncovered coronavirus in the first place.
Lesko’s legislation would prevent CCP officials and senior CCP members from entering the United States until China stops stealing intellectual property from the U.S.
No comments:
Post a Comment