Chinese Communist Party Minister in Australia Wang Jining
Australia announced the revocation of the “Belt and Road” agreement signed between Victoria and the Chinese Communist Party, which led to the discontent of the Chinese Embassy in Australia, criticizing Australia for unreasonable provocation and continued tension between China and Australia. “The Chinese Communist Party is not a cow,” and no one would agree that it deserves to be conspired to slaughter in its prime milking years.
Australian Prime Minister Morrison has shown a tough stance against the CCP’s actions over the past year or so, not only banning the highly controversial Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei from participating in domestic 5G network projects on national security grounds, and constantly calling for an independent international investigation into the source of the global pneumonia epidemic, pointing the finger at the CCP, which has countered by raising the trade threshold, targeting Australian wine, barley and beef by implementing Anti-dumping duties and increased tariffs on Australian wine, barley and beef.
On the same day that Australian Foreign Minister Marise Payne announced the withdrawal of the Victorian “Belt and Road” agreement, Chinese Minister to Australia Wang Jining criticized Australia for blocking Chinese investment proposals and blocking Huawei over the past few years, and firmly emphasized that Huawei is not a security threat, arguing that Australia is partnering with the United States to undermine the interests of the Chinese Communist Party in order to protect U.S. technological superiority.
Wang clarified that “the Chinese Communist Party is not a cow,” and he did not think anyone would agree that the Chinese Communist Party was milked in its prime, only to be conspired to slaughter it in the end. But we will strongly defend our national interests,” he stressed.
In response to Wang’s claim that “the CCP is not a cow,” Aaron Connelly, a Southeast Asia expert at the Australian Institute for International Strategic Studies, tweeted, “Not a lamb, not a cow. It may be a wolf, it’s not clear.”
Recent Comments