The Chinese Communist Party’s sanctions of Trump administration officials, imposed on President Donald Trump’s last day in office, are “unproductive and cynical,” President Joe Biden’s National Security Council spokeswoman said on Jan. 20.
The sanctions were announced about 24 hours after Pompeo declared the CCP’s repression of Uyghur Muslims in the Xinjiang region a “genocide.” The reasoning for the sanctions was violating “China’s sovereignty” and carrying out “a series of crazy moves” that “seriously disrupted China-U.S. relations.”
“Imposing these sanctions on Inauguration Day is seemingly an attempt to play to partisan divides,” Biden’s NSC spokeswoman Emily Horne said in a statement to news outlets.
“Americans of both parties should criticize this unproductive and cynical move. President Biden looks forward to working with leaders in both parties to position America to out-compete China,” she added.
On the “War Room” podcast, Navarro called the sanctions “a badge of honor from the country that gave us the China virus and the loss of 5 million manufacturing jobs and over 70,000 factories.”
“Ultimately what we need to do is stop American capital from flowing directly into China, or indirectly through Hong Kong,” he added.
Pompeo said that after a careful examination of the facts, he determined that China, under the direction and control of the Chinese Communist Party, “has committed genocide against the predominantly Muslim Uyghurs and other ethnic and religious minority groups in Xinjiang.
The party has for years detained Uyghurs in labor camps in Xinjiang, a desert region that abuts Russia, Mongolia, and Kazakhstan. A U.S. official said in a briefing in 2019 that up to 3 million of the approximately 10 million Uyghurs in Xinjiang are in “concentration camps.”
“These findings provide the strongest evidence yet that Beijing’s policies in Xinjiang meet one of the genocide criteria cited in the U.N. Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide,” he wrote.