The Trump administration still has a big card in its hand with a series of heavy-handed sanctions against the Chinese Communist Party

The U.S. election remains in the global spotlight, with President Trump‘s team waging a legal battle in multiple states while striking a series of heavy blows at the Chinese Communist Party, which is behind the election meddling. The U.S. media said the Trump administration has more cards than it can count to sanction the Chinese Communist Party, which is simply defenseless.

The 2020 U.S. election was marred by unprecedented fraudulent practices as leftist politicians, unscrupulous media, tech giants and the CCP teamed up to stage a coup against President Trump. Trump’s legal team has gathered extensive evidence of election fraud and is still waging a legal battle to preserve the integrity of the election.

Meanwhile, the Trump administration has launched a series of heavy-handed attacks on the Chinese Communist Party, which is suspected of being behind the rigging of the U.S. election.

On December 24, Radio Free Asia published a commentary saying that the U.S. countermeasures are coming one after another, to a dizzying extent! Although Xi Jinping is always dreaming of China, the fact is that when the U.S. and China are playing, the U.S. has countless cards to play, and the Chinese Communist Party has only three or four “three-legged kung fu” tricks to play.

In early December, the U.S. Congress passed the Highly Skilled Immigrant Fairness Act, which prohibits people with ties to the Chinese Communist Party’s military and Communist Party from adjusting their immigration status and obtaining green cards in the United States.

On December 7, the U.S. sanctioned 14 Vice Chairmen of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress of the Communist Party of China for undermining the democratic process in Hong Kong.

On December 16, several U.S. Senators introduced the “Stop Forced Organ Harvesting Act” to stop the Communist Party of China from forcibly harvesting the organs of prisoners of conscience and to impose sanctions on officials and institutions that participate in or support forced organ harvesting.

On the same day, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) issued a statement that it would add Lai Chi Ying, who was arrested by the Hong Kong government, to its list of “religious prisoners of conscience.

On December 17, U.S. Secretary of Energy Dan Brouillette issued an order prohibiting utilities responsible for supplying critical defense facilities from purchasing and installing Chinese imported power system equipment starting January 16, 2021.

On the same day, 78 members of the U.S. House of Representatives send a letter to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo calling for the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office to be renamed the Taiwan Representative Office and supporting a bilateral free trade agreement between the United States and Taiwan.

On the same day, the U.S. Department of State issued a travel alert, treating Hong Kong like any other city in China and urging U.S. citizens to think twice before traveling to Hong Kong because of the threat posed by arbitrary and illegal law enforcement by the Chinese Communist authorities.

On December 18, President Trump signed the Foreign Company Accountability Act, which includes Chinese companies listed in the U.S. in audits. Chinese companies will be forced to delist from U.S. exchanges if they fail to comply with U.S. Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) audits in the next three years.

On the same day, the U.S. announced a list of sanctions, placing 59 Chinese companies, universities and individuals on the “Entity List” (blacklist). These include China’s leading chipmaker, SMIC, among others.

On the same day, the FBI issued a warrant for Xinjiang Jin, a Chinese software engineer suspected of disrupting several June 4 video conferences this year.

On Dec. 20, Reuters said U.S. lawmakers are expected to support a $1.9 billion grant to Chinese telecommunications equipment makers huawei and ZTE to help the industry replace equipment in telecommunications networks that “threaten national security.

On Dec. 21, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced that, in a demonstration of his determination to hold the Chinese Communist Party accountable for human rights abuses, he would impose visa sanctions on all Chinese officials involved in human rights abuses. These individuals are banned from entering the United States in the future, and their families may face the same restrictions.

On December 22, the U.S. Department of Commerce released its first list of “military end-users,” a number of Chinese companies that will be restricted from purchasing U.S. goods and technology; the list also includes the Hong Kong Flight Service.

On the same day, the destroyer USS McCain entered the waters adjacent to the Spratly Islands. The Chinese Communist Party claimed that the McCain was trespassing in the waters adjacent to the Spratly Islands and Reefs, but the U.S. military said that the McCain was enforcing the right to freedom of navigation, which upholds international law.

Radio Free Asia commented that the U.S. game tactics can be said to be comprehensive, multi-layered, justified, and can stand the upper hand. On the other hand, the Chinese Communist Party has no more cards in its pocket than arresting a group of democrats – even in Hong Kong and the mainland – or making small moves on some procurement.

Some commentators say, “Justified is strong, justified is poor”, the Chinese Communist Party knows how to violate human rights, naturally lost the moral high ground!