Secretary of State Mike PompeoMichael (Mike) Richard PompeoPompeo imposes visa restrictions on Chinese officials over ‘intimidation’ tactics Israel’s new Gulf relations give Biden’s team a new Middle East hub Pompeo knocks Turkey in NATO speech: report MORE on Friday announced that the State Department has ended five exchange programs with China, calling them “propaganda.”
Pompeo said in a statement that the programs are “fully funded and operated by the [Chinese] government as soft power propaganda tools.”
“They provide carefully curated access to Chinese Communist party [CCP] officials, not to the Chinese people, who do not enjoy freedoms of speech and assembly,” he said.
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The department terminated the Policymakers Educational China Trip Program, the U.S.-China Friendship Program, the U.S.-China Leadership Exchange Program, the U.S.-China Transpacific Exchange Program and the Hong Kong Educational and Cultural Program.
The programs were conducted under Section 108A of the Mutual Educational and Cultural Exchange Act (MECEA), which allows federal employees to travel using foreign government funds.
“The United States welcomes the reciprocal and fair exchange of cultural programs with [Chinese] officials and the Chinese people,” Pompeo said in his statement. “But one-way programs such as these are not mutually beneficial.”
Pompeo announced the move with less than two months left in the Trump administration, as relations between Washington and Beijing remain strained.
President TrumpDonald John TrumpAppeals court OKs White House diverting military funding to border wall construction Pentagon: Tentative meeting between spy agencies, Biden transition set for early next week Conservative policy director calls Section 230 repeal an ‘existential threat’ for tech MORE has battled China over its trading practices and response to the coronavirus outbreak while members of both parties have said the U.S. should confront China over various other policies and actions on the world stage.
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In an op-ed in The Wall Street Journal on Thursday, Director of National Intelligence John RatcliffeJohn Lee RatcliffeHillicon Valley: Senate Intelligence Committee leaders warn of Chinese threats to national security | Biden says China must play by ‘international norms’ | House Democrats use Markup app for leadership contest voting Pompeo imposes visa restrictions on Chinese officials over ‘intimidation’ tactics Senate Intelligence Committee leaders warn of Chinese threats to national security MORE warned that China is the number one national security threat, saying Beijing intends to “dominate the U.S. and the rest of the planet economically, militarily and politically.”
Pompeo announced visa restrictions on Friday that target Chinese officials who he said are involved in coordinating domestic and foreign influence operations.