This Week in Asia

Top Beijing envoy to US criticises Biden's moves targeting Chinese products over national security

China's top envoy to the US criticised President Joe Biden's recent moves targeting Chinese products on national security grounds, even as he acknowledged that the American leader's recent summit with President Xi Jinping helped to stabilise the bilateral relationship.

Speaking at a conference hosted by Chinese state media outlets on Thursday, Ambassador Xie Feng appeared to reference an investigation into connected technology used in Chinese vehicles and actions aimed at reducing possible vulnerabilities tied to products from the country in American port infrastructure.

"Viewing e-vehicles as 'iPhone[s] on wheels' or describing cargo cranes as 'Trojan horses' only gets one into a never-ending cycle - overstretching national security leads to excessive anxiety," Xie said, according to a report on the ambassador's remarks published by his embassy.

Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

"If 'de-risking' is all about China, it means lost opportunities and lose-lose outcomes," it added. "After all, with over 70,000 American companies investing in China and the two economies so closely connected, a forced 'decoupling' can be too expensive."

US government concerns about potential national security vulnerabilities embedded in Chinese products and investments in America have gathered momentum for years, prompting measures like a law in 2018 that strengthened the authorities of the Committee of Foreign Investment in the US, or CFIUS.

These measures continued under Biden's watch, with ever-tightening restrictions on China's access to advanced chips and chipmaking tools, prompted by concerns that Beijing could leverage them to develop military technologies.

The concerns reached a fever pitch this week with the closely watched House of Representatives passage of a bill that would force Chinese tech company ByteDance to divest its popular short-video sharing app TikTok to keep its service to US users intact.

Acting on alarms sounded by American officials and others in Washington that Beijing could remotely operate Chinese-manufactured cranes to disrupt the flow of goods and reveal information about US military shipments, Biden last month signed an executive order to mandate the reporting of cyber incidents.

Warnings about port vulnerabilities have included a report published last year by the Brookings Institution spotlighting the Chinese commercial logistics platform Logink, which collects information on shipping and cargo movement worldwide and provides tracking, data management and other services free of charge.

The Biden administration also plans to invest more than US$20 billion in American port infrastructure over the next five years, including an effort to onshore US crane manufacturing.

Logink, which describes itself as a "one-stop logistics information service platform", began as a provincial programme in China in 2007. It became part of a regional network in northeast Asia in 2010 and a global platform after 2014.

Just days later, the US Commerce Department announced that its investigation into "connected" car technology developed by China could lead to the imposition of restrictions on these products.

On a more positive note, Xie praised the "successful" summit between Xi and Biden in California in November, stating that "the San Francisco vision" had "stabilised the bilateral relationship".

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2024. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

More from This Week in Asia

This Week in Asia3 min readWorld
Why Chinese Think Tanks' South China Sea Reports Targeting Vietnam, Indonesia Will Only Escalate Tensions
Two recent reports from Chinese think tanks targeting Vietnam and Indonesia over the South China Sea reflect the potential for disputes in the waterway to escalate following Beijing's maritime clashes with the Philippines. Beijing-based Grandview Ins
This Week in Asia4 min read
South China Sea: Philippines Set To File Case Over Reef Damages Against Beijing Within Weeks
The Philippines has said it plans to file a formal complaint against China over environmental damage to its territory in the South China Sea within "a few weeks". While analysts say such a move would have little chance of being heard in an internatio
This Week in Asia3 min read
Malaysians Shocked By Thousands Of Bangladeshis Crowding At Airport To Beat Deadline For Legal Work
Thousands of migrant workers from Bangladesh rushed to beat a hard Friday deadline for new labourers to enter Malaysia, but many more are shut out from being able to work in the Southeast Asian country and send millions of dollars in crucial remittan

Related Books & Audiobooks