Rabu, 22 Juli 2020

US gives China 72 hours to shut Houston consulate as spying charges mount - CNA

BEIJING/WASHINGTON: The United States gave China 72 hours to close its consulate in Houston amid accusations of spying, marking a dramatic deterioration in relations between the world's two biggest economies.

China's foreign ministry called the move an "unprecedented escalation" and threatened unspecified retaliation. Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said the Chinese Embassy in the United States had received "bomb and death threats" because of "smears & hatred" fanned by Washington.

"The US should revoke its erroneous decision," she tweeted. "China will surely react with firm countermeasures."

Communist Party rulers in Beijing were considering shutting the US consulate in the central city of Wuhan in retaliation, a source with knowledge of the matter said.

The State Department said the Chinese mission in Houston was closed "to protect American intellectual property and Americans' private information".

The move comes in the run-up to the November US presidential election, in which President Donald Trump and his Democratic rival, Joe Biden, have both tried to look tough in response to China.

Speaking on a visit to Denmark, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo repeated accusations about Chinese theft of US and European intellectual property, which he said were costing "hundreds of thousands of jobs."

While offering no specifics about the Houston consulate, Pompeo referred to a US Justice Department indictment on Tuesday of two Chinese nationals over what it called a decade-long cyber espionage campaign that targeted defence contractors, COVID researchers and hundreds of other victims worldwide.

"President Trump has said: 'Enough. We are not going to allow this to continue to happen,'" Pompeo told reporters. "That's the actions that you're seeing taken by President Trump, we'll continue to engage in this."

Republican Senator Marco Rubio, acting chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, described the Houston consulate on Twitter as the "central node of the Communist Party’s vast network of spies & influence operations in the United States".

Trump was due to hold a news conference at 5.30pm, the White House said.

The New York Times quoted the top US diplomat for East Asia, David Stilwell, as saying that the Houston consulate had been at the "epicentre" of the Chinese army's efforts to advance its warfare advantages by sending students to US universities.

"We took a practical step to prevent them from doing that," Stilwell told the Times.

A Chinese diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity, denied the spying allegations and said the Houston mission acted like other Chinese consulates in the United States - issuing visas, promoting visits and businesses. The diplomat told Reuters it was not clear why Houston had become a target.

Ties between the United States and China have worsened sharply this year over a range of issues, from the coronavirus and telecoms gear maker Huawei to China's territorial claims in the South China Sea and clampdown on Hong Kong.

Jonathan Pollack, an East Asia expert with the Brookings Institution think tank, said he could not think of anything "remotely equivalent" to the deterioration in ties since the US and China opened full diplomatic relations in 1979.

“The Trump Administration appears to view this latest action as political ammunition in the presidential campaign ... It’s part of the administration’s race to the bottom against China.”

Overnight in Houston, firefighters went to the consulate after smoke was seen. Two US government officials said they had information that documents were being burned there.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said the consulate was operating normally.

One of the US government officials told Reuters the decision to close the consulate was “entirely justified” by classified intelligence, which he declined to describe, noting also that some cases of alleged Chinese spying have been made public.

RETALIATION THREAT

"The unilateral closure of China's consulate general in Houston within a short period of time is an unprecedented escalation of its recent actions against China," Wang told a regular news briefing.

Abraham Denmark, a senior Pentagon official for East Asia under former President Barack Obama, said there was no doubt China represented a "tremendous espionage threat" for the United States, but questioned whether the response was helpful.

"The question here is not China's culpability - I expect it's solid - but rather if suddenly closing the consulate in Houston will address the problem," he said.

A source with direct knowledge of the matter said China was considering closing the U.S. consulate in the central Chinese city of Wuhan, where the State Department withdrew staff and their families early this year due to the coronavirus outbreak that first emerged in the city.

China's foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment on whether it would shut the consulate.

Wang said the US government had been harassing Chinese diplomats and consular staff for some time and intimidating Chinese students. He said the United States had interfered with China's diplomatic missions, including intercepting diplomatic pouches. The State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the Chinese charges.

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2020-07-22 18:45:00Z
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Taiwan’s foreign minister says island may be Beijing’s next target after Hong Kong - South China Morning Post

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  1. Taiwan’s foreign minister says island may be Beijing’s next target after Hong Kong  South China Morning Post
  2. Pompeo urges 'entire world' to stand up to China  Yahoo Singapore News
  3. Commentary: To save its markets, Hong Kong needs to rely on China  CNA
  4. The Guardian view on rethinking China: right, but not because the US says so  The Guardian
  5. Confrontation with China is increasingly likely  Telegraph.co.uk
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-07-22 11:15:07Z
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China's Houston consulate closed to 'protect American intellectual property': US State Department - CNA

COPENHAGEN: The US State Department said on Wednesday (Jul 22) that the closing of China's consulate in Houston was to protect Americans' intellectual property and private information, a move that has further strained the already tense relations between the world powers.

Spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus said that under the Vienna Convention, states "have a duty not to interfere in the internal affairs" of the receiving country.

The comments came as US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo visited Copenhagen.

Ortagus said the US would not tolerate Chinese violations of their "sovereignty and intimidation of our people, just as we have not tolerated the PRC's unfair trade practices, theft of American jobs, and other egregious behavior."

"We have directed the closure of PRC Consulate General Houston, in order to protect American intellectual property and Americans' private information," she said, without giving any more details.

China announced earlier on Wednesday that the country had been ordered to close the Houston consulate, which was opened in 1979 - the first in the year the US and the People's Republic of China established diplomatic relations, according to its website.

"China urges the US to immediately withdraw its wrong decision, or China will definitely take a proper and necessary response," Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said.

The move comes as the world's two biggest economies have crossed swords on a growing number of fronts, from trade to Beijing's handling of the coronavirus pandemic and its policies in Hong Kong, Xinjiang and the South China Sea.

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2020-07-22 10:55:54Z
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China says US ordered closure of Houston consulate - CNA

BEIJING: The United States has ordered China to close its Houston consulate, Beijing said Wednesday (Jul 22), in what it called a "political provocation" that will further harm diplomatic relations.

"China urges the US to immediately withdraw its wrong decision, or China will definitely take a proper and necessary response," said foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin, adding that they were told Tuesday that the consulate would have to close.

"It is a political provocation unilaterally launched by the US side, which seriously violates international law ... and the bilateral consular agreement between China and the US."

He added that China "strongly condemns" the "outrageous and unjustified move which will sabotage China-US relations."

He said the consulate was operating normally but did not reply to questions about US media reports in Houston on Tuesday night that documents were being burned in a courtyard at the consulate.

"It appears to be open burning in a container within the courtyard of the Chinese consulate facility. It does not appear to be an unconfined fire but we have not been allowed access," Houston fire department chief Samuel Pena was quoted as saying by KTRK, an ABC television affiliate.

"We are standing by and monitoring."

Houston police told FOX 26 that staff there were burning documents because they are being evicted from the building on Friday afternoon.

The closure of the consulate was directed "in order to protect American intellectual property and American's private information," spokesperson for the State Department Morgan Ortagus said in a statement.

The Chinese Consulate in Houston was opened in 1979 - the first in the year the US and the People's Republic of China established diplomatic relations, according to its website.

The website says the office covers eight southern US states - including Texas and Florida - and has nearly one million people in the area registered at the consulate.

There are five Chinese consulates in the US, as well as an embassy in Washington.

READ: How hot could the US-China 'Cold War' get?

The development is another fissure in the increasingly fraught relations between the two countries. Tensions are mounting by the day, leading to a talk of a new Cold War. 

US President Donald Trump's administration has increasingly gone global against China, pushing other nations to reject its strings-attached aid and telecom titan Huawei, and siding unreservedly with Beijing's rivals in the dispute-rife South China Sea.

Trump has made China a major campaign issue as he heads into the November election, but the relationship looks unlikely to change in more than tone if he loses to Joe Biden, who has accused the president of not being tough enough. 

Last week, Trump signed legislation and an executive order to hold China accountable for the "oppressive" national security law it imposed on Hong Kong.

The Bill was approved by the US Congress to penalise banks doing business with Chinese officials who implement Beijing’s new national security law on Hong Kong.

The executive order is aimed at furthering punishing China for what he called its "oppressive actions" against Hong Kong.

It will end the preferential trade treatment Hong Kong has received for years - "no special privileges, no special economic treatment and no export of sensitive technologies," Trump told a news conference.

In addition, last week Washington formally declared Beijing's pursuit of territory and resources in South China Sea as illegal, explicitly backing the territorial claims of Southeast Asian countries against China's.

Washington has also infuriated Beijing by banning telecom giant Huawei and seeking the extradition from Canada of top company executive Meng Wanzhou.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo urged the "entire world" to stand up to China on Tuesday during a visit to Britain.

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2020-07-22 09:22:30Z
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Selasa, 21 Juli 2020

Trump shifts tone on coronavirus and masks amid flagging poll numbers - The Straits Times

WASHINGTON - President Donald Trump on Tuesday (July 21) said the coronavirus situation in America would worsen before improving and encouraged Americans to wear masks, breaking with his earlier optimism that the virus would disappear and his reluctance towards masks. 

His shift in tone during his return to the White House briefing room podium after a long hiatus appeared to be an attempt to regain the political narrative, as coronavirus cases and deaths surge in America.

The reversal from his initial downplaying of the seriousness of the virus comes amid a spate of polls showing his Democrat opponent Joe Biden expanding his lead over Mr Trump into the double digits, less than four months to the November election.

Mr Trump said as he opened the briefing on Tuesday: “It will probably, unfortunately, get worse before it gets better. Something I don’t like saying about things, but that’s the way it is.” 

He had tweeted that wearing masks was “patriotic” and posted a photo of himself wearing a mask on Monday after months of choosing not to wear one.

“We’re asking everybody that when you are not able to socially distance, wear a mask, get a mask,” he said at Tuesday’s briefing. 
“Whether you like the mask or not, they have an impact.”

The briefing was relatively short, lasting around 30 minutes, and focused mostly on his administration’s response to the coronavirus, unlike some of his previous briefings which could last hours and included attacks on Democrats and media organisations.

He previously helmed those briefings almost daily in March, when the pandemic first spiked in America. 

But he stopped doing so in April after a backlash to his suggestion that disinfectants could be injected into Covid-19 patients to treat them.

He may well see the briefings as a way to reach more voters and drum up support for himself, especially since the pandemic curtails attendance at in-person rallies.

On Monday, he told reporters in the Oval Office as he announced the return of the briefings: “I was doing them and we had a lot of people watching, record numbers watching in the history of cable television, and there’s never been anything like it. 

“It’s a great way to get information out to the public as to where we are with the vaccines and the therapeutics,” he said. 

“We had a good slot. A lot of people were watching.”

But one criticism he drew at the briefing was the absence of a clear national plan to combat the coronavirus. 

“We are in the process of developing a strategy that’s going to be very, very powerful. We’ve developed them as we go along,” he said, without giving further details. 

This could disadvantage him against Mr Biden, who voters rate higher in responding to the coronavirus and who is also trying to seize the narrative. 

Hours before the Tuesday briefing, the former vice-president announced a US$775 billion (S$1.07 trillion) economic plan focusing on affordable caregiving, which he linked to America’s economic recovery.

In his speech broadcast online, he blasted Mr Trump’s approach, saying: “This man simply doesn’t understand. He can’t deal with our economic crisis without serving and saving and solving the public health crisis.

“For all his bluster about his expertise on the economy, he’s unable to explain how he’ll actually help the working families hit the hardest. You know, he’s quit on you, and he’s quit on this country,” said Mr Biden.

A Quinnipiac University poll on July 15 found that 57 per cent of Americans think Mr Biden would do a better job handling a crisis, compared to 38 per cent who say the same of Mr Trump.

The same poll showed that 62 per cent of voters think Mr Trump is hurting rather than helping efforts to slow the spread of the coronavirus.

Some of his mixed messages also continued on Tuesday, raising questions about whether the President can turn around his re-election bid and turn the tide against the coronavirus.

When answering a question from a reporter, he repeated his earlier messages that the virus will disappear.

He also did not wear a mask at the briefing, despite showing reporters he was carrying one and saying he had no problem with wearing it.

Georgetown University’s global health law professor Lawrence Gostin wrote on Twitter that Mr Trump’s sudden support for masks was too little, too late, as there had been “countless mixed messages”. 

“We’ve failed in clear consistent health messages leaving Americans confused and bitterly divided,” he said.

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2020-07-22 01:52:46Z
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Scientists report that airborne coronavirus is probably infectious - CNA

WASHINGTON: Scientists have known for several months the new coronavirus can become suspended in microdroplets expelled by patients when they speak and breathe, but until now there was no proof that these tiny particles are infectious.

A new study by scientists at the University of Nebraska that was uploaded to a medical preprint site this week has shown for the first time that SARS-CoV-2 taken from microdroplets, defined as under five microns, can replicate in lab conditions.

This boosts the hypothesis that normal speaking and breathing, not just coughing and sneezing, are responsible for spreading COVID-19, and that infectious doses of the virus can travel distances far greater than the two meters urged by social distancing guidelines.

READ: COVID-19: Singapore publishes new research findings that could help with development of vaccines, more accurate testing

The results are still considered preliminary and have not yet appeared in a peer-reviewed journal, which would lend more credibility to the methods devised by the scientists.

The paper was posted to the medrxiv.org website, where most cutting-edge research during the pandemic has first been made public.

The same team wrote a paper in March showing that the virus remains airborne in the rooms of hospitalised COVID-19 patients, and this study will soon be published in a journal, according to the lead author.

"It is actually fairly difficult" to collect the samples, Joshua Santarpia, an associate professor at the University of Nebraska Medical Center told AFP.

READ: COVID-19 exposes scientific rift over proving when germs are airborne

The team used a device the size of a cell phone for the purpose, but "the concentrations are typically very low, your chances of recovering material are small".

The scientists took air samples from five rooms of bedridden patients, at a height of about 30cm over the foot of their beds.

The patients were talking, which produces microdroplets that become suspended in the air for several hours in what is referred to as an "aerosol", and some were coughing.

The team managed to collect microdroplets as small as one micron in diameter.

They then placed these samples into a culture to make them grow, finding that three of the 18 samples tested were able to replicate.

For Santarpia, this represents proof that microdroplets, which also travel much greater distances than big droplets, are capable of infecting people.

"It is replicated in cell culture and therefore infectious," he said.

READ: NUS researchers develop 3 new COVID-19 swabs to address shortage

WHY WE WEAR MASKS

The potential for microdroplet transmission of the coronavirus was at one stage thought to be improbable by health authorities across the world.

Later, scientists began to change their mind and acknowledge it may be a possibility, which is the rationale for universal masking.

The World Health Organization was among the last to shift its position, doing so on Jul 7.

"I feel like the debate has become more political than scientific," said Santarpia.

"I think most scientists that work on infectious diseases agree that there's likely an airborne component, though we may quibble over how large."

READ: Commentary: Controversies over COVID-19 research show the messy progress of science

Linsey Marr, a professor at Virginia Tech who is a leading expert on aerial transmission of viruses and wasn't involved in the study, said it was rare to obtain measurements of the amount of virus present in air.

"Based on what we know about other diseases and what we know so far about SARS-CoV-2, I think we can assume that if the virus is 'infectious in aerosols,' then we can become infected by breathing them in," she told AFP.

BOOKMARK THIS: Our comprehensive coverage of the coronavirus outbreak and its developments

Download our app or subscribe to our Telegram channel for the latest updates on the coronavirus outbreak: https://cna.asia/telegram

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2020-07-22 02:41:14Z
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Trump shifts tone on coronavirus and masks amid flagging poll numbers - The Straits Times

WASHINGTON - President Donald Trump on Tuesday (July 21) said the coronavirus situation in America would worsen before improving and encouraged Americans to wear masks, breaking with his earlier optimism that the virus would disappear and his reluctance towards masks. 

His shift in tone during his return to the White House briefing room podium after a long hiatus appeared to be an attempt to regain the political narrative, as coronavirus cases and deaths surge in America.

The reversal from his initial downplaying of the seriousness of the virus comes amid a spate of polls showing his Democrat opponent Joe Biden expanding his lead over Mr Trump into the double digits, less than four months to the November election.

Mr Trump said as he opened the briefing on Tuesday: “It will probably, unfortunately, get worse before it gets better. Something I don’t like saying about things, but that’s the way it is.” 

He had tweeted that wearing masks was “patriotic” and posted a photo of himself wearing a mask on Monday after months of choosing not to wear one.

“We’re asking everybody that when you are not able to socially distance, wear a mask, get a mask,” he said at Tuesday’s briefing. 
“Whether you like the mask or not, they have an impact.”

The briefing was relatively short, lasting around 30 minutes, and focused mostly on his administration’s response to the coronavirus, unlike some of his previous briefings which could last hours and included attacks on Democrats and media organisations.

He previously helmed those briefings almost daily in March, when the pandemic first spiked in America. 

But he stopped doing so in April after a backlash to his suggestion that disinfectants could be injected into Covid-19 patients to treat them.

He may well see the briefings as a way to reach more voters and drum up support for himself, especially since the pandemic curtails attendance at in-person rallies.

On Monday, he told reporters in the Oval Office as he announced the return of the briefings: “I was doing them and we had a lot of people watching, record numbers watching in the history of cable television, and there’s never been anything like it. 

“It’s a great way to get information out to the public as to where we are with the vaccines and the therapeutics,” he said. 

“We had a good slot. A lot of people were watching.”

But one criticism he drew at the briefing was the absence of a clear national plan to combat the coronavirus. 

“We are in the process of developing a strategy that’s going to be very, very powerful. We’ve developed them as we go along,” he said, without giving further details. 

This could disadvantage him against Mr Biden, who voters rate higher in responding to the coronavirus and who is also trying to seize the narrative. 

Hours before the Tuesday briefing, the former vice-president announced a US$775 billion (S$1.07 trillion) economic plan focusing on affordable caregiving, which he linked to America’s economic recovery.

In his speech broadcast online, he blasted Mr Trump’s approach, saying: “This man simply doesn’t understand. He can’t deal with our economic crisis without serving and saving and solving the public health crisis.

“For all his bluster about his expertise on the economy, he’s unable to explain how he’ll actually help the working families hit the hardest. You know, he’s quit on you, and he’s quit on this country,” said Mr Biden.

A Quinnipiac University poll on July 15 found that 57 per cent of Americans think Mr Biden would do a better job handling a crisis, compared to 38 per cent who say the same of Mr Trump.

The same poll showed that 62 per cent of voters think Mr Trump is hurting rather than helping efforts to slow the spread of the coronavirus.

Some of his mixed messages also continued on Tuesday, raising questions about whether the President can turn around his re-election bid and turn the tide against the coronavirus.

When answering a question from a reporter, he repeated his earlier messages that the virus will disappear.

He also did not wear a mask at the briefing, despite showing reporters he was carrying one and saying he had no problem with wearing it.

Georgetown University’s global health law professor Lawrence Gostin wrote on Twitter that Mr Trump’s sudden support for masks was too little, too late, as there had been “countless mixed messages”. 

“We’ve failed in clear consistent health messages leaving Americans confused and bitterly divided,” he said.

Related Stories: 

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2020-07-22 01:50:48Z
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