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US ratchets up anti-China hostility with legislative barrage

A staggering 25 pieces of new legislation revive Trump-era racial profiling of Chinese-Americans and risk damaging crucial research partnerships while laying the ground for conflict, report DUNCAN MCFARLAND and KRISTA CHAN

REFLECTING US determination to escalate tensions with China, the US House of Representatives passed 25 Bills in one week in September aimed at “countering” supposed Chinese influence and addressing alleged national security concerns.
 
Initiated by the Republican-led select committee on the Chinese Communist Party, the stated goal of the legislative onslaught was to deal with “the threat posed by the Chinese Communist Party and develop a plan of action to defend the American people, our economy, and our values.”
 
In reality, the anti-communist, anti-China policy programme is based on racial profiling, xenophobia, and the desire to maintain US global hegemony.
 
HR 1398, entitled Protect America’s Innovation and Economic Security from the Chinese Communist Party, is a revival of the Trump-era China Initiative. This Department of Justice (DoJ) programme targeted primarily Chinese and Chinese-American scientists accused of doing research that threatened US national security.
 
The Bill’s declared aim is to “curb spying by the Chinese Communist Party on United States intellectual property and academic institutions.” Under the Trump administration, the DoJ targeted hundreds of Chinese-American academics and scientists, many of whom lost their jobs, but not a single supposed Chinese spy was ever prosecuted.
 
Instead, the climate of fear and racism led many Chinese scientists to return to China.
 
Jane Wu, a prominent neuroscience researcher at the University of Illinois, was persecuted, and her lab was shut down; she then took her own life. California’s Democrat Party Representative Judy Chu, chair of the Asian Pacific American Caucus, denounced the Bill as “an egregious outcome of xenophobic and fear-mongering rhetoric.”
 
Also notable is HR 1157, the Countering the PRC Malign Influence Fund Authorisation Act of 2023, which allocates $1.6 billion over five years for the State Department and USAid to fund media and civil society groups around the world to counter China’s “malign influence.”
 
The real goal of this heavy spending is to smear and undermine China’s Belt and Road Initiative, an international development and co-operation plan that includes 150 participating countries. The Bill passed with a bipartisan 351-36 majority.
 
The House also passed the Biosecure Act, aimed at prohibiting contracts with biotechnology companies that have relationships with a “foreign adversary.” While China is not named in the Bill, five Chinese companies are explicitly mentioned.
 
After the release of the Bill, one of the companies, WuXi AppTec, said its inclusion in the ban was “a pre-emptive and unjustified designation without due process that the company strongly objects to.”

Additionally, members of Congress failed to acknowledge the strong reliance of US pharmaceutical supply chains on some of the targeted Chinese companies and the danger their anti-China legislative crusade could pose to health in the US.
 
HR 9456, Protecting American Agriculture from Foreign Adversaries Act, would prohibit the sale of farmland to Chinese immigrants and nationals if they are deemed a national security threat, such as by purchasing land located near a US military installation.
 
The Countering CCP Drones Act attempts to block the sale of Chinese-manufactured drones, already widely in use in the US. The Securing Global Telecommunications Act is aimed at Chinese telecommunications equipment manufacturers, such as Huawei.

The various other measures target a long list of products, such as Chinese EVs and batteries — crucial to managing climate change — and even profitable Wall Street investments in Chinese tech companies.
 
Many Asian and Chinese-American advocacy groups have spoken out against the 25 anti-China Bills. Having passed the House of Representatives, the Bills are now being considered by the Senate.
 
While their final passage is uncertain, what’s already confirmed is that the latest barrage of anti-China propaganda helps prepare US public opinion for conflict or war with China — an outcome that would be a disaster for the working class everywhere.
 
Racist “yellow peril” stereotypes are being whipped up, reminiscent of McCarthy-era repression targeting progressives and communists. Countering the anti-China hate speech and fear-mongering with factual and balanced narratives and reporting is an urgent necessity.

The reality is that China is not an “enemy” but rather a country that continuously seeks to co-operate with the US on urgent global issues such as climate change, health, and peace.

This article appeared on Peoplesworld.org.

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