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Trade war: US, China set to take action against each other as tensions escalate

From 2011 to 2018, more than 90 per cent of the Department of Justice's cases alleging economic espionage by a state have involved China, and more than two-thirds of trade secret thefts have a nexus to China.

Edited by: India TV News Desk New Delhi Published : Dec 13, 2018 11:56 IST, Updated : Dec 13, 2018 11:56 IST
Trade war between US and China
Image Source : AP

US, China set to take action against each over trade war

As tensions between the United States and China escalate over trade, cyber hacking and espionage after senior American law enforcement officials identified Beijing as the most serious threat to Washington's national security, both the nations are now set to take action against each other, officials said.

Officials from the FBI and Departments of Justice and Homeland Security who briefed US lawmakers on Wednesday, explained China's methods of non-traditional espionage, including their use of ordinary Chinese expatriates instead of spies at universities and businesses, and intellectual property theft, CNN reported.

"As the US proceeds a whole of society response to this threat, we must address the vulnerabilities within our system while preserving our values and the open, free and fair principles that have made us thrive," the Senate Judiciary Committee was informed by EW Priestap, the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Assistant Director of Counter-intelligence.

"What hangs in the balance is not just the future of the US, but the future of the world."

The administration was reacting to China's "steadily increasing" economic espionage activity, which costs the US an estimated $225 billion a year, the Department of Justice's (DOJ) top national security official told lawmakers on Wednesday.

From 2011 to 2018, more than 90 per cent of the DOJ's cases alleging economic espionage by a state have involved China, and more than two-thirds of trade secret thefts have a nexus to China, Assistant Attorney General John Demers said.

Priestap and his colleagues testified hours after Secretary of State Mike Pompeo confirmed in an interview with Fox News that the US believes Beijing was behind the massive cyber-attack on the Marriott hotel chain, CNN reported.

The New York Times reported on Tuesday that the assault was part of a broader Chinese operation that also targeted health insurers and the security clearance files of millions of Americans.

Those disclosures came a day after President Donald Trump said that he would be willing to use Huawei's Chief Financial Officer (CFO) Meng Wanzhou who was arrested in Canada for violating US sanctions on Iran as a bargaining chip in his trade war with Beijing, which for now is in a 90-day pause.

A Canadian judge on Tuesday night granted Meng a $7.5 million bail, while she awaits extradition to the US.

US business executives are now bracing for further retaliation from China due to Meng's arrest.

(With IANS inputs)

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