American Govt Agents break into Chinese Consulate. Things keep escalating. Not Good!!!!

Bloomberg
[SIZE=6]Beijing Slams Forced U.S. Entry to China’s Houston Consulate[/SIZE]
Bloomberg News
July 25, 2020, 7:50 AM
Beijing Slams Forced U.S. Entry to China’s Houston Consulate
Beijing Slams Forced U.S. Entry to China’s Houston Consulate
(Bloomberg) – U.S.-China diplomatic tensions continued to simmer on Saturday as Beijing slammed the “forced entry” to its Houston consulate by U.S. personnel hours earlier and vowed to respond “as necessary.”

Federal agents and local law enforcement authorities broke into the consulate building late Friday, according to the Houston Chronicle and CNN, after issuing an order on July 21 that it must close within 72 hours.

The newspaper reported that among the personnel on site were some wearing shirts carrying the words “U.S. Department of State.” Agents tried three different entrances at the compound before prying open a back door, the Chronicle reported.

Beijing said that U.S. had broken diplomatic conventions by entering “China’s national property.”

“According to the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations and the Sino-U.S. Consular Treaty, the United States must not infringe on the premises of the Chinese Consulate in Houston in any way,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said in an a Q&A posted on the ministry’s website late on Saturday.

Beijing has already expressed “firm opposition” to the move and will respond as “proper and necessary,” Wang said.

On Friday, China ordered the U.S. to close its consulate in the southwestern city of Chengdu, retaliating for the Trump administration’s decision to shutter the Chinese mission in Houston.

The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs said Friday that the consulate’s closure was a “legitimate and necessary response to the unjustified act by the U.S.”

The widely anticipated retaliation came hours ahead of the U.S.’s deadline for Chinese diplomats to vacate the Houston facility, which the State Department said had served as a hub for spying and influence operations.

Beijing’s decision will not only oust American diplomats from the capital of Sichuan province – a region with a population rivaling Germany – it will close a key listening post for developments in neighboring Tibet. The move will probably have a bigger impact than shutting the U.S. consulate in Wuhan, but less than closing U.S. missions in the key financial centers of Hong Kong or Shanghai.

Wang,the foreign ministry spokesman, told a regular news briefing in Beijing that some consulate staff had “engaged in activities inconsistent with their capacity, interfered in China’s internal affairs and harmed China’s national security interests.” By Friday afternoon, dozens of police, plainclothes officers and People’s Liberation Army personnel were seen patrolling the street outside the building, searching phones and ordering people to delete photos.

U.S. Says Chinese Researcher at San Francisco Consulate Detained

While police ordered most reporters and pedestrians to leave the area, China’s state broadcaster began live-streaming footage of the consulate’s entrance.

U.S. stocks have been hit by the tensions, and spot gold topped $1,900 an ounce for the first time since 2011. China’s CSI 300 Index slumped 4.4% at the close on Friday, while the ChiNext Index dropped 6.1%, the most since Feb. 3.

“It’s not possible to carry out an entirely equivalent action, but choosing Chengdu shows China wants to reduce the harm made to bilateral relations,” said Wang Yiwei, a former Chinese diplomat and director of China’s Institute of International Affairs at Renmin University in Beijing. “The operations out of Chengdu are not the most high profile of the U.S. mission in China, compared to say Shanghai.”

In another potential sign of a deescalation, U.S. officials said a Chinese researcher wanted by law enforcement who had taken refuge in China’s San Francisco consulate was now in custody. The researcher, Juan Tang, is expected to have a court appearance on Friday, official said on a briefing call for reporters.

Yet the Chengdu and Houston consulate closures illustrate the alarming degree to which relations between the world’s two largest economies have worsened in recent years, as China assumes a more assertive posture on the world stage and the U.S. seeks to check its rise. President Donald Trump and his aides have stepped up attacks on China ahead of the U.S. election in November, accusing Beijing of spying, cybertheft and causing the coronavirus pandemic.

The Major Flashpoints Between the U.S. and China Now: QuickTake

In a speech Thursday at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum, U.S. Secretary of State Michael Pompeo accused President Xi Jinping and the Chinese leadership of attempting to “tyrannize inside and outside China forever” in pursuit of global hegemony. “Securing our freedoms from the Chinese Communist Party is the mission of our time,” Pompeo said.

In the first U.S. reaction to the Chengdu decision, a spokesman for the National Security Council said the closure of the Houston consulate was justified after years of espionage activity.

“For years, the CCP has undertaken a whole-of-society effort to steal American technology and intellectual property for commercial gain, and many of these activities are directed from PRC diplomatic facilities,” NSC spokesman John Ullyot said in a statement Friday. “Our action to direct the closure of PRC Consulate General in Houston was taken to protect American intellectual property and Americans’ private information.”

A commentary published by China’s official Xinhua News Agency moments after the Chengdu announcement said the Chengdu closure was “aimed at a few extremist forces in the U.S. government, not the American people.” “The U.S. has stirred up trouble in bilateral relations to the point of hysteria,” the commentary said.

In a sign things could deteriorate further, Wang, the Foreign Ministry spokesman, answered a question on Thursday about the future of the U.S.-China trade deal by saying the American side should think “carefully” about where the relationship was heading. Trump also said that his “phase one” deal meant “much less” to him in the wake of the pandemic.

The Chengdu mission, which opened in 1985, covers Chongqing, Guizhou, Yunnan, as well as Sichuan. The consulate has also served as a key U.S. perch to follow events in Tibet, where Communist Party efforts to suppress dissent have long been a focus of tensions between China and the West.

In 2012, former Chongqing police chief Wang Lijun sought refuge in the Chengdu consulate with evidence linking the family of his then boss, former Chongqing party secretary Bo Xilai, to the death of a British businessman. The episode exposed a scandal that would see Bo ousted and his wife convicted of murder, leading Xi to launch a nationwide anti-corruption campaign.

“They wanted to make it hurt a little bit more so they picked Chengdu,” said James Green, a former State Department official who is now a senior adviser for geopolitical consulting firm McLarty Associates. “What the Chinese care about more – and what we care about more – is what we do out of Chengdu, which is follow Tibet. And shutting that down kind of cuts our link to Tibet, which is a political blow to us.”

China Consulate Fight Shows Trump’s Hardliners Are in Charge

Global Times Editor-in-Chief Hu Xijin, who had earlier reported the timing of the decision on his Twitter feed, said U.S. diplomats were given the same 72-hour notice as their Chinese counterparts in Houston, meaning they must leave by Monday morning. The Wall Street Journal separately reported, citing unidentified people briefed on the matter, that China had given the affected diplomats 30 days to leave the country.

Wang Wenbin repeatedly sidestepped questions about when the diplomats would have to leave, saying only “we always talk about reciprocity in diplomacy.”

“The current situation in China-U.S. relations is not what China desires to see, and the U.S. is responsible for all this,” the Foreign Ministry said earlier Friday. “We once again urge the U.S. to immediately retract its wrong decision and create necessary conditions for bringing the bilateral relationship back on track.”

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By the time Trump leaves the scene, the World will be a totally different place politically, militarily, trade-wise, race-wise etc.
And if he refuses to concede defeat, the US will be fractured.
We will be talking of BT and AT.
[SIZE=1]BT— Before Trump
AT— After Trump[/SIZE]

Of course the chinese were spying. CIA knew the conduits of the espionage and had their own holes to peep into the chinese diplomatic establishment in houston. As long as the CIA knew the spying networks and who was spying on what, they made sure they didn’t get anything useful or they revealed something about themselves. Chinese discovered the peepholes into their outpost and closed them,but didn’t say anything because the whole diplomatic establishment in houston is a spying machine. Once peepholes were sealed CIA(US government) is now in “mwaga ugali nimwage mboga” mode and they would rather close the whole thing.

It’s clear these CCP operatives are up to no good.

[SIZE=5]People are burning documents at the Chinese Consulate in Houston, as Beijing says the US abruptly gave it 72 hours to shut it down
[ATTACH=full]316031[/ATTACH][/SIZE]

People are burning documents at the Chinese Consulate in Houston after China said the US gave it 72 hours to close, with the State Department accusing China of threatening US sovereignty and intimidating US citizens.

The local outlet ABC 13 reported early Wednesday morning that trash cans full of documents were being burned in the consulate’s courtyard.

A police official told the Houston Chronicle that witnesses saw paper being burned in what appeared to be open trash cans outside the building.

The police also told the local outlet Fox26 Houstonthat a fire reported at the consulate on Tuesday evening was the result of people burning documents. KPRC 2 reported that the police were told documents were being burned just after 8 p.m. local time on Tuesday.

One witness told KPRC 2: “You could just smell the paper burning.”

Fox26 reported that police officers and the fire department were not allowed onto the premises as it’s considered Chinese territory. The police official told the Houston Chronicle that the police were not allowed to access the building.

Video footage appears to show documents being burned outside the building:

The Houston police department also tweeted about the apparent document burning.

“About 8:25 pm on Tuesday, our officers responded to a meet the firefighter call to the China Consulate General in Houston building … Smoke was observed in an outside courtyard area,” the department said. “Officers were not granted access to enter the building.”

https://www.yahoo.com/news/people-burning-documents-chinese-consulate-100020264.html

“As for the US side’s forcible entry into the premises of the Chinese Consulate General in Houston, China expresses strong dissatisfaction
and resolute opposition,” the ministry said in a statement. “China will make a proper and necessary response to this.”

In Chengdu, on Saturday, spectators snapped photos outside the US consulate as police in T-shirts and surgical masks stood on the sidewalk and the closed-off street in front of the walled compound. The US consulate emblem inside the compound was taken down and staff could be seen moving about. Three removal vans were later seen in the compound. Plain-clothes officers also arrested a man who tried to hold up a sign near the consulate, according to the Reuters news agency, although it was not clear what the sign said.

The Chengdu consulate, which has been given until 10am (02:00 GMT) on Monday to close, opened in 1985 and has almost 200 employees, including about 150 locally-hired staff, according to its website. There are four other US consulates in mainland China.
China’s foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said some personnel at the Chengdu consulate were “conducting activities not in line with their identities” and had interfered in China’s affairs and harmed its security interests. He did not say how.

In recent days, the US Justice Department also accused the Chinese consulate in San Francisco of harbouring a Chinese researcher accused of concealing her ties to the Chinese military on a visa application. On Thursday, authorities announced charges against Juan Tang, 37, and three other Chinese scientists living in the US.

The Justice Department said Tang lied in an application last October as she made plans to work at the University of California, Davis and again during an FBI interview months later. Agents found photos of Tang dressed in military uniform and reviewed articles in China identifying her military affiliation. Agents said they believe Tang sought refuge at the consulate after they interviewed her at her home in the city of Davis on June 20.

Espionage, intelligence and counterintelligence are exercises full of comedy and are lethal at the same time.

You want to say the script of Jack Bauer is coming into reality?

Hii yote ju ya huwawei?:smiley:

:D:D:D
boss umefikiria mbali…hadi umefikia 24

There must be something this chinkus and their Democratic friends were planning. Trump is not known to overreact. There was a plan afoot.

Good. That’s the point. NWO and leftists have made immeasurable gains. It’s time someone actually did something because do nothing RINO’s weren’t going to and haven’t in such a long ass time.

Ukumbuki Jack aki invade Chinese Embassy? :D:D:D