On Tuesday, US authorities gave China 72 hours to shut down its Houston, Texas Consulate, accusing its staff of systematically engaging in espionage.
Beijing responded by ordering US diplomats to leave America’s diplomatic mission in Chengdu, with Washington claiming that China has no right to respond in that kind of tit-for-tat manner.
China has expressed strong opposition and a firm protest against the forcible entry of the USA side in the territory of the Chinese consulate general in Houston.
Earlier, a law professor told China’s influential Global Times newspaper that US officials actions were illegal, and constituted a violation of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations.
Article 27 of the Convention requires states to protect the premises, archives and property of the consular in the event of the severance of consular relations or closure of a consular post.
US officials including at least one State Department employee entered the property less than an hour after the expiry of Washington’s 72 hour deadline for the diplomatic mission’s closure.
The Chinese government already retaliated to the Houston mission’s closure by ordering Washington to shut down its Consulate in the southwestern Chinese city of Chengdu on Friday, with diplomats given 72 hours to evacuate the compound.
Chinese police have tightened security outside the Chengdu Consulate, closing off the street it’s on to traffic and beefing up both the uniformed and plain clothes’ presence.
Observers have expressed fears that the USA-China consulate spat may escalate, with President Donald Trump reportedly considering the closure of additional Chinese diplomatic missions in the United States.
On Thursday, the FBI arrested Juan Tang, a Chinese national accused of lying to US officials about her service in the Chinese military.
Juan had briefly taken refuge in the Chinese Consulate in San Francisco before being apprehended. If convicted, she may face up to 10 years in prison and a fine of $250,000.
The US clampdown on Chinese nationals has included travel bans against senior Communist Party officials and corporate executives from companies such Huawei, as well as restrictions on entry for Chinese journalists, and clandestine expulsions of Chinese diplomatic officials late last year.
Last week, US media reported that the Trump administration was considering a wholesale ban on entry for all 90 million+ Communist Party members and their families.
Chinese Consul General Cai Wei said US officials have yet to provide any proof regarding his Consulate’s alleged espionage activities. For now the accusations seem baseless.
Along with the Embassy in Beijing, and the soon to be closed Chengdu Consulate, the US has diplomatic missions in the Chinese cities of Shenyang, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Wuhan.
China’s Embassy in Washington is complemented by consulates in New York City, Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles and, until Friday, the Houston mission.
Sputnik / ABC Flash Point Diplomatic News 2020.
Where does the scrimmage end?
It ends @ the moment the US dollar collapses?