Wang Yi calls on China and U.S. to “get back on track” Cui Tiankai redlines Biden

On Monday (22), Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi reiterated his call for the Biden administration to “engage in frank dialogue” and promote “back on track” Sino-US relations. Chinese Ambassador to the U.S. Cui Tiankai also highlighted the “red line” of the Chinese Communist Party, saying that on issues related to Taiwan, Hong Kong, Xinjiang and Tibet, the Chinese Communist Party “has no room for concessions and must adhere to the red line”.

On Monday, the Chinese Foreign Ministry held a new “Blue Room Forum” web conference. In a speech on U.S.-China relations, Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi said that relations between the Communist Party and the United States have fallen into the “most difficult situation” since the establishment of diplomatic relations in the past few years, causing incalculable damage to both sides. He claimed that in order to “set things right and get back on track” in China-U.S. relations, the first step is to break down the “artificially high walls” erected by various so-called “misperceptions” of the CCP.

Wang also called on the Biden Administration to restart cooperation and abandon the practice of imposing tariffs on Chinese products and various restrictions on the activities of Chinese Communist Party groups in the U.S., such as Education (cultural export), science and technology, journalism, and overseas Chinese affairs.

In addition, Wang also mentioned that the CCP “has no intention of exporting its ideology and does not do anything to subvert the regime of any country.

Chinese Ambassador to the U.S. Cui Tiankai also spoke at the Blue Room Forum, saying that China and the U.S. should “clarify policy boundaries” and “distinguish the nature of the issues” and that on issues such as Taiwan, Hong Kong, Xinjiang and Tibet, the CCP “has no intention of subverting any state regime. On issues such as Taiwan, Hong Kong, Xinjiang and Tibet, the Chinese Communist Party “has no room for concessions and must adhere to the red line”.

Ironically, however, the Chinese Communist Party was revealed to be behind the military coup recently staged by the Burmese military government. According to a recent video retweeted by Radio Free Asia (RFA), during a crackdown on protests, someone shouted the command “one, two, three, go” in Chinese, and riot police moved forward step by step under the command.

On Saturday, thousands of Burmese protested in Mandalay, the second largest city in the country, and were shot at by the military. A young man was shot in the head and died on the spot, while another man was shot in the ribs and died after being taken to hospital. Some media outlets have questioned whether the live bullets used by the Burmese military are the same kind of bullets used by the Chinese Communist Party to crack down on students during the June 4 massacre in 1989, and that these bullets can explode after being fired into the human body, making them extremely lethal.

On Saturday afternoon, more than 400 Burmese immigrants from the San Francisco Bay Area and Northern California rallied in front of the Chinese Consulate in San Francisco to protest the Chinese Communist regime’s help in a coup d’état against the Burmese military government.