
By Carlos Martinez – Jan 27, 2022
The following article by Carlos Martinez features as a chapter in the forthcoming bookĀ Sanctions Kill ā The World Stands Up. The article provides a detailed analysis of the sanctions imposed by the US and its allies on the Peopleās Republic of China and exposes the role they play within the escalating New Cold War.
Sanctions Kill ā The World Stands UpĀ will be published by World View Forum in early Spring 2022.
Background
The instinctive attitude of the United States towards the Chinese Revolution was of course one of hostility. In a protracted war between progress and reaction, between the future and the past, the governments of the US and the Peopleās Republic of China were, and are, are on opposite sides of the barricades. Hence shortly after the formation of the PRC in 1949, the US maintained a strict embargo on China.
With the move towards rapprochement in the early 1970s and a tacit agreement to āpeacefully coexistā, the embargo was finally removed. Then with Chinaās strategic shift to integrate into the global economy, the trickle of trade and investment gradually expanded into one of the largest and most important economic relationships in the world, with bilateral trade volume currently standing at just over half a trillion dollars annually. Thousands of US businesses have generated enormous profits from their investments in China and (particularly in recent years) from selling to a vast and growing Chinese market.
Ruling classes in the West were, to a considerable extent, comfortable with incorporating China into globalised capitalism, to the extent that Chinaās role was limited to providing cheap, competent and well-educated labour. However, it was never the intention of the Chinese leadership to remain permanently at the lowest rung of the global economic ladder. China has pursued a patient strategy of welcoming foreign investment, setting up joint enterprises with Western companies, learning the latest technologies and management techniques, and building up its own advanced industry. Meanwhile it has invested very heavily in education and innovation. Chinaās R&D spending reached 378 billion USD in 2020 ā 2.4 percent of its GDP and nearly three times the figure for the US.
As a result, China is on its way to becoming āa moderately developed socialist country by the middle of the 21st centuryā, as Deng Xiaoping predicted some 35 years ago.1Ā China has become a world leader in network technology, in renewable energy, nuclear energy, high-speed rail, artificial intelligence, nanotechnology, quantum computing, and several other important areas. It is increasingly competing with the US in spaces that the US is used to dominating, such as cloud computing and industrial automation.
RELATED CONTENT: Coups, Censorship & Propaganda: the US New Cold War Playbook
The US ruling class has not responded favourably to all this. These uppity Asian communists refuse to stay in their lane! Columbia University economist Jeffrey Sachs recently described the response of US elites to Chinaās emergence as a science and technology powerhouse: āThe basic attitude, if I could paraphrase, was: āhow dare they do that? Thatās what we do, not what they do. Theyāre a workshop, weāre the technology leader.āā2
Chinaās Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) has caused further discomfort. The Belt and Road, described by British political analyst Jude Woodward as āa vision of continental integration on a historic scaleā,3is a growing economic network underpinned by rapid infrastructure development ā particularly high-speed rail, ports, and energy production and transmission. Beijing leads the financing and macro planning for this historic initiative. The expansion of the Belt and Road into large parts of Central Asia, Southeast Asia, the Middle East, Africa and further afield has become a major source of concern for those that seek to preserve US hegemony. In the words of US āelder statesmanā Henry Kissinger, the practical significance of the BRI will be to āshift the worldās centre of gravity from the Atlantic to the Pacific.ā4Ā That is, China is creating a development path that isnāt defined by the US or US-controlled institutions.
In summary, the US ruling class finds itself in a position in which its role as sole economic, political and military superpower is under threat. To make matters worse, the source of this threat is a socialist, non-white, developing country which is working in concert with other countries towards the democratisation of international relations.
This is the overall context for the New Cold War, in which the US is the principal antagonist and China is the principal target. Just like the original Cold War (waged against the Soviet Union, the socialist countries and the Global South), the New Cold War is being fought on multiple fronts: political, military, ideological, propagandistic and economic.
Wave of sanctions under Trump and Biden
Then-secretary of state Hillary Clinton wrote in 2011 that āone of the most important tasks of American statecraft over the next decade will be to lock in a substantially increased investment ā diplomatic, economic, strategic, and otherwise ā in the Asia-Pacific region.ā5These words heralded the launch of the āPivot to Asiaā, which clearly identified China as the primary concern of US foreign policy in the modern era. But it was under the Trump administration that the New Cold War started to escalate in a serious way, with the initiation of a trade war ā supposedly to put a stop to āthe greatest theft ever perpetrated by anyone or any country in the history of the world.ā6Trump imposed a wide range of tariffs, unprecedented since the lifting of the trade embargo some 50 years ago.
Alongside the tariffs, the Trump administration imposed new US sanctions against China for the first time since 1989. In 2018, two of Chinaās top technology companies, Huawei and ZTE, were banned from providing equipment to any federal US agency. A year later, US companies were prevented from doing business with Huawei or its subsidiaries unless they had specifically been provided with a government licence ā due to Huawei allegedly violating the USās unilateral (and illegal) sanctions against Iran.
In the summer of 2020, the Trump administration announced two new sets of sanctions against China. Under the Uyghur Human Rights Policy Act, several senior Chinese officials were subjected to visa restrictions and asset freezing. Under the Hong Kong Autonomy Act, a number of top Hong Kong officials (including Chief Executive Carrie Lam) plus all 14 Vice Chairpersons of the National Peopleās Congress were subjected to similar punishment.
Things have only got worse in the first year of the Biden administration. In June 2021, Biden signed an executive order banning US citizens from investing in Chinese companies with alleged ties to the defence or surveillance technology sectors. The list of banned companies includes Huawei, China Mobile Communications Group, and Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC) ā a key player in Chinaās bid to develop its homegrown semiconductor industry (semiconductors are a crucial component of modern electronic devices). The list of banned companies purportedly connected to the āChinese military-industrial complexā was expanded in December 2021 to include SenseTime, which develops facial recognition technology.7
The Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act was signed into law on 23 December 2021. Startlingly, this Act inverts the principle of presumption of innocence, since it contains āa rebuttable presumption that goods mined, produced, or manufactured (wholly or in part) in Chinaās Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region are made with forced labor, where goods designated as such will be subject to an import ban into the United States.ā8Ā That is, there is a starting assumption that any item produced in Xinjiang incorporates forced labour. Any importer will have to provide āclear and convincing evidenceā that goods haveĀ notĀ been made with forced labour ā a sufficiently high legal bar that, in practice, makes the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act a blanket ban on all goods produced in Xinjiang.
Aside from these economic sanctions, the White House announced in December that it would be conducting a ādiplomatic boycottā of the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, in light of āChinaās egregious human rights abuses and atrocities in Xinjiang.ā9
The State Department has also been strongly encouraging US allies to join its growing system of sanctions and boycotts. Britain, Canada and the EU imposed travel bans and asset freezes over alleged human rights abuses in Xinjiang, in parallel with the USās sanctions.10Ā Canada, Britain and the European Union have also followed the US lead in passing Magnitsky legislation, providing for sanctions against individuals alleged to have committed human rights abuses. This essentially means that under a āunified set of rulesā, US-imposed sanctions on individuals are automatically applied in those countries.11Ā Meanwhile, Australia, Britain and Canada have announced their support for Bidenās ādiplomatic boycottā of the Olympics.12
The overall picture then is one of steadily escalating sanctions against China over the course of the last four years, with the changed occupancy of the White House not impacting this trajectory in the slightest.
Sanctions as New Cold War propaganda
The typical motivation for imperialist sanctions is to foment popular unrest by causing serious economic harm; āmaking the economy screamā, like the CIA did in Chile when it had the temerity to elect a Marxist government.13Ā Sanctions against Zimbabwe, Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua, Iran, Syria, Belarus and the Democratic Peopleās Republic of Korea (DPRK) are manifestly designed with such a purpose in mind. Needless to say, such a strategy would have no chance of success in China, which is the second largest economy in the world and which is more than capable of imposing counter-measures that would cause significant damage to US business interests.
Sanctions against Chinese individuals over alleged human rights abuses in Xinjiang and Hong Kong will have very little effect on Chinaās economic growth; rather, such sanctions form part of a propaganda āfull-court pressā designed to vilify China, to cultivate broad anti-China sentiment, and to build public support for the New Cold War. This propaganda is already having an impact; in the US, it has produced āa bipartisan consensus in Washington towards getting tough with China that is now extending to the broader public.ā14
The propaganda surrounding the treatment of the Uyghur Muslim population of Xinjiang is particularly pernicious. This web of lies has been comprehensively debunked elsewhere, for example in an academic study by Eurispes,15Ā an extensive report by the International Action Center,16Ā and numerous investigative reports in the Grayzone.17Ā Suffice here to briefly note the following points:
1) While the State Department has accused Chinaās government of perpetrating a genocide in Xinjiang,18Ā absolutely no credible evidence has been supplied. As Jeffrey Sachs points out: āThe charge of genocide should never be made lightly. Inappropriate use of the term may escalate geopolitical and military tensions and devalue the historical memory of genocides such as the Holocaust, thereby hindering the ability to prevent future genocides. It behooves the US government to make any charge of genocide responsibly, which it has failed to do here.ā19
2) The reports and data analysis implicating the Chinese government in genocide, cultural genocide and forced sterilisation come almost exclusively from two sources, both utterly devoid of credibility. One is Adrian Zenz, a professional anti-China fanatic and senior fellow at the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation who is apparently āled by Godā to spread slanders about China.20Ā The other is the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI). ASPI is an Australian government think tank which receives funding from, among others, NATO, the US Department of Defense, the US State Department, Britainās Foreign Office, Lockheed Martin, BAE Systems and Raytheon. In short, it is deeply involved in the business of New Cold War and the militarisation of the Pacific, and obviously cannot be relied upon to carry out unbiased research on China.
3) The Uyghur population from 2010 to 2018 increased from 10.2 million to 12.7 million, an increase of 25 percent. In the same period, the Han Chinese population in Xinjiang increased by just 2 percent (the differential is explained largely by the fact that national minorities were exempt from the One Child Policy).21
4) As to claims of ācultural genocideā, there are over 24,000 mosques in Xinjiang, a higher number of mosques per capita of Muslim population than Turkey.22Ā All schools in Xinjiang teach the Uyghur language. All road signs have both Uyghur and Chinese writing. Pakistanās Ambassador to China, Moin ul Haque, returning from an observer mission to Xinjiang, described the region as āa mosaic of 50-plus ethnic minorities, and these ethnic minorities exist in a very peaceful and harmonious manner.ā23
Western sanctions against China over human rights abuses in Xinjiang can thus be clearly understood as part of an elaborate campaign of information warfare. Nobody that has researched the question can seriously believe that a genocide is taking place in Xinjiang. Any sanctions are not designed to punish Chinese officials for misdeeds but to support an overall structure of disinformation portraying China as a malevolent force.
Trying to slow Chinaās rise
Thanks to Chinaās economic strength, the West canāt starve the Chinese people into submission through economic warfare. However, one important motivation for the steadily escalating sanctions regime is to attempt to decelerate Chinaās emergence as the worldās pre-eminent leader in advanced technology. The authors of a recent report by Harvardās Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs observe that āChinaās rapid rise to challenge US dominance of technologyās commanding heights has captured Americaās attention.ā24Ā The report notes that China has already established a leading role in several key areas and, āin others, on current trajectories, it will overtake the US within the next decade.ā
One āchoke pointā the US can leverage is its head start in the design and manufacture of semiconductors. As noted above, semiconductors are at the core of all electronic devices. Advances in semiconductors are driving ā and will continue to drive ā transformative change in a wide range of industries, from energy to medicine to space research. The Belfer Center report estimates that China is on course to become āa top-tier player in the semiconductor industry by 2030.ā As such, preventing (or at least slowing) Chinaās emergence as a semiconductor superpower is a key priority for the US.
This issue goes beyond economics. If China outpaces the US in technological innovation, it will shift the entire global balance of forces; it will significantly weaken the ability of the imperialist powers to impose their will on the rest of the world; and it will showcase the fundamental validity of socialism as a means of propelling human progress. As Deng Xiaoping stated in 1984, āthe superiority of the socialist system is demonstrated, in the final analysis, by faster and greater development of the productive forces than under the capitalist system.ā25
Indeed, developments in technology in the coming decades form a crucial component of the material basis for the progression to a more advanced socialism. British researcher Keith Lamb writes: āChinaās goal of building a modern socialist country by 2049 is predicated on mastering semiconductor technology which is the linchpin of the modern age, making innovations such as self-driving electric vehicles; fully-automated AI production systems, and supercomputers possible.ā26
Such are the reasons for the wave of sanctions connected to the semiconductor industry. The US wants to restrict Chinaās ability to import semiconductors and, more importantly, to prevent China achieving self-sufficiency in semiconductor production. Blacklisting SMIC, Chinaās biggest manufacturer of computer chips, in December 2020, means that it is no longer able to source supplies from US companies. Chinese chip designers have been cut off from access to leading-edge chip design tools.27Ā Meanwhile Huawei has been prevented from importing chips, impacting its production of high-end smartphones.28Ā The US has been able to enforce many of these sanctions on an international scale, by virtue of its ālong-arm jurisdictionā ā sanctioning non-US chipmakers that use US-made components. One notable absurdity here is that Taiwan, a region of China, complies with the US sanctions regime, and therefore Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) ā the worldās most valuable semiconductor company ā has been forced to stop its exports to the companies on the US Entity List, including Huawei.29
Unfortunately for US imperialism ā but thankfully for China and the peoples of the world ā this campaign of economic warfare is doomed to failure. As Radhika Desai notes, āUS efforts to restrict chip supply to China will only increase its resolve to develop the necessary technology to produce the chips it needs domestically.ā30Ā Indeed, according to market analysis firm GlobalData, US coercion is fomenting a āhigh octane, whole nation, everything-it-takes campaign to create a de-Americanized domestic semiconductor supply chain able to supply 75% of its needs by 2025ā and achieve full self-sufficiency ten years later.ā31
In the meantime, while stimulating Chinaās fast track to semiconductor self-sufficiency, sanctions are adversely impacting technology companies outside China, which for the last two decades has been the largest market for computer chips, in addition to being the ideal hi-tech manufacturing location. In recent years, the US semiconductor industry has derived over a third of its revenues from sales to China.32Ā These revenues have in turn fed into the R&D cycle and contributed to an impressive pace of innovation. It seems the US has settled on a ālose-loseā strategy to replace the framework of cooperation that had brought significant benefit to both sides in recent decades.
Another area in which the US is using sanctions to gain a competitive advantage is solar power. China is by far the worldās largest producer of solar energy, with an installed capacity of 254 GW ā more than three times that of the US, and growing fast.33Ā China also produces the bulk of the global supply of polysilicon (a key material in the production of solar panels). Johannes Bernreuter, author of the Polysilicon Market Outlook 2024, predicts that āChinaās share in the global solar-grade polysilicon output will approach 90 percent in the coming years.ā34
Unable to compete on price or productivity, the US has resorted to imposing sanctions on large parts of Chinaās solar panel industry35Ā ā ostensibly on the basis of evidence-free and comprehensively debunked claims of the manufacturers using Uyghur forced labour.36This is profoundly irresponsible and short-sighted behaviour. Chinese investment in solar technology over the course of the last 10-15 years has pushed the entire industry forward, and has brought prices down to a level where solar power is more cost-effective than fossil fuel alternatives in many parts of the world. This is an important contribution to the global struggle to prevent climate breakdown. The Western powers should be working closely with China and other countries on developing and deploying clean energy, rather than imposing sanctions with a view to gaining some fleeting economic advantage.
RELATED CONTENT: The Worldās Largest Trade Pact is a Game-Changer for China
Unite to oppose hegemonism and Cold War
China is a leading voice opposing the Westās illegal sanctions regime, consistently using its role in international forums (including the UN Security Council and the G20) to oppose unilateralism and bullying. China has added its voice to the global demand to end the blockade on Cuba. Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian demanded last year that the US āimmediately and completely lift unilateral sanctions against Cuba in compliance with the purposes of the UN Charter and basic norms governing international relationsā, adding that China āresolutely rejects any external interference in other countriesā internal affairs, imposition of unilateral sanctions, and attempt to gang up on other countries.ā37Ā China has consistently opposed unilateral sanctions against the DPRK,38Ā Zimbabwe,39Ā Eritrea,40Afghanistan,41Ā Venezuela,42Ā Nicaragua,43Ā Syria,44Ā Iran45Ā and Belarus.46
With its strong opposition to sanctions, war, interference and hegemonism; through its pursuit of multilateralism and its support for the principles of the UN Charter; and through its consistent engagement with the countries of the world on the basis of equality, friendship, solidarity and mutual benefit, China is an indispensable force in the development of a new, multipolar system of international relations. Such a framework is desperately needed by the peoples of the world, and those of us living in the belly of the imperialist beast should do what we can to support it.
References
- Deng, X 1987,Ā We Must Tell Our Young People About Chinaās History, Marxist Internet Archive, accessed 08 January 2022, <https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/deng-xiaoping/1987/74.htm>.Ā ā©ļø
- Sandbu, M 2021,Ā Jeffrey Sachs: āI see no financial obstacles to getting to net zero by 2050ā, Financial Times, accessed 08 January 2022, <https://www.ft.com/content/ab219fef-eece-463e-9b3c-6e4813d5effe>.Ā ā©ļø
- Woodward, Jude.Ā The US vs China: Asiaās New Cold War?Ā Geopolitical Economy. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2017, p246Ā ā©ļø
- Delaney, R 2017,Ā Kissinger urges greater cooperation with China as āthe worldās centre of gravityā shifts, South China Morning Post, accessed 09 January 2022, <https://www.scmp.com/news/china/policies-politics/article/2112957/kissinger-urges-us-boost-cooperation-beijing-massive>.Ā ā©ļø
- Clinton, H 2011,Ā Americaās Pacific Century, Foreign Policy, accessed 09 January 2022, <https://foreignpolicy.com/2011/10/11/americas-pacific-century/>.Ā ā©ļø
- Feith, D 2016,Ā Trump Would Make China Great Again, Wall Street Journal, accessed 09 January 2022, <https://www.wsj.com/articles/trump-would-make-china-great-again-1461258110>.Ā ā©ļø
- Bhuiyan, J 2022,Ā US sanctioned Chinaās top facial recognition firm over Uyghur concerns. It still raised millions, The Guardian, accessed 09 January 2022, <https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jan/06/china-sensetime-facial-recognition-uyghur-surveillance-us-sanctions>.Ā ā©ļø
- Hansson, L 2022,Ā Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act becomes law, Reed Smith, accessed 09 January 2022, <https://www.reedsmith.com/en/perspectives/2022/01/uyghur-forced-labor-prevention-act-becomes-law>.Ā ā©ļø
- Madhani, A 2021,Ā U.S. imposes sanctions on China over human rights abuses of Uighurs, PBS, accessed 09 January 2022, <https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/u-s-imposes-sanctions-on-china-over-human-rights-abuses-of-uighurs>.Ā ā©ļø
- Wintour, P 2021,Ā US and Canada follow EU and UK in sanctioning Chinese officials over Xinjiang, The Guardian, accessed 10 January 2022, <https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/22/china-responds-to-eu-uk-sanctions-over-uighurs-human-rights>.Ā ā©ļø
- Steinhaeuser, I 2021,Ā How human rights sanctions need to evolve for everyoneās benefit, Thomson Reuters, accessed 10 January 2022, <https://www.thomsonreuters.com/en-us/posts/news-and-media/magnitsky-act-human-rights-sanctions/>.Ā ā©ļø
- Mather, V 2022,Ā The Diplomatic Boycott of the Beijing Winter Olympics, Explained, New York Times, accessed 10 January 2022, <https://www.nytimes.com/article/diplomatic-boycott-olympics.html>.Ā ā©ļø
- Foreign Relations of the United States, 1969ā1976, Volume XXI, Chile, 1969ā1973 Document 93, Office of the Historian, accessed 10 January 2022, <https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v21/d93>.Ā ā©ļø
- Kynge, J 2020,Ā US and China: edging towards a new type of cold war?, Financial Times, accessed 06 June 2021, <https://www.ft.com/content/fe59abf8-cbb8-4931-b224-56030586fb9a>.Ā ā©ļø
- Eurispes academic report: Xinjiang ā understanding complexity, building peace, Friends of Socialist China, accessed 10 January 2022, <https://socialistchina.org/2021/06/03/eurispes-academic-report-xinjiang-understanding-complexity-building-peace/>.Ā ā©ļø
- Have you been lied to about Xinjiang, human rights ā and China?, International Action Center, accessed 10 January 2022, <https://iacenter.org/2021/12/25/facts-on-xinjiang-%e2%88%92-exposing-u-s-anti-china-propaganda/>.Ā ā©ļø
- Porter, G; Blumenthal, M 2021,Ā US State Department accusation of China āgenocideā relied on data abuse and baseless claims by far-right ideologue, The Grayzone, accessed 10 January 2022, <https://thegrayzone.com/2021/02/18/us-media-reports-chinese-genocide-relied-on-fraudulent-far-right-researcher/>.Ā ā©ļø
- Shesgreen, D 2021,Ā The US says China is committing genocide against the Uyghurs. Hereās some of the most chilling evidence., USA Today, accessed 11 January 2022, <https://eu.usatoday.com/in-depth/news/politics/2021/04/02/is-china-committing-genocide-what-you-need-know-uyghurs/7015211002/>.Ā ā©ļø
- Sachs, J 2021,Ā The Xinjiang Genocide Allegations Are Unjustified, Project Syndicate, accessed 11 January 2022, <https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/biden-should-withdraw-unjustified-xinjiang-genocide-allegation-by-jeffrey-d-sachs-and-william-schabas-2021-04>.Ā ā©ļø
- Singh, A; Blumenthal, M 2019,Ā China detaining millions of Uyghurs? Serious problems with claims by US-backed NGO and far-right researcher āled by Godā against Beijing, The Grayzone, accessed 11 January 2022, <https://thegrayzone.com/2019/12/21/china-detaining-millions-uyghurs-problems-claims-us-ngo-researcher/>.Ā ā©ļø
- Wang, Y; Peng, W 2020,Ā Xinjiang population growth best answers Western smear campaign on Uygurs, Global Times, accessed 11 January 2022, <https://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1199917.shtml>.Ā ā©ļø
- Lew, L 2021,Ā What is going on in Xinjiang and who are the Uygur Muslims?, South China Morning Post, accessed 11 January 2022, <https://www.scmp.com/news/china/politics/article/3132112/what-going-xinjiang-and-who-are-uygur-muslims>.Ā ā©ļø
- Video: What do three ambassadors talk about Xinjiang with Liu Xin?, CGTN, accessed 11 January 2022, <https://news.cgtn.com/news/2021-04-27/What-do-three-ambassadors-talk-about-Xinjiang-with-Liu-XināZMA1UeE2T6/index.html>.Ā ā©ļø
- Pan, C 2021,Ā US-China tech war: China to overtake America in core 21st century technologies within next decade, Harvard report predicts, South China Morning Post, accessed 12 January 2022, <https://www.scmp.com/tech/tech-war/article/3159107/us-china-tech-war-china-overtake-america-core-21st-century>.Ā ā©ļø
- Deng, X 1984,Ā Building a Socialism with a Specifically Chinese Character, China.org.cn, accessed 12 January 2022, <http://www.china.org.cn/english/features/dengxiaoping/103371.htm>.Ā ā©ļø
- Lamb, K 2021,Ā U.S. seeks to engage in tech war by strangling Chinaās semiconductor industry, CGTN, accessed 12 January 2022, <https://news.cgtn.com/news/2021-11-23/U-S-to-wage-a-tech-war-by-strangling-China-s-semiconductor-industry-15q13B7M1uE/index.html>.Ā ā©ļø
- Schneider, J 2021,Ā Will China Hit Back on Chips?, ChinaTalk, accessed 13 January 2022, <https://chinatalk.substack.com/p/will-china-hit-back-on-chips>.Ā ā©ļø
- Fried, I 2019,Ā Huaweiās smartphone effort takes a giant hit, Axios, accessed 13 January 2022, <https://www.axios.com/huaweis-smartphone-effort-takes-a-giant-hit-03390bfc-bb30-4465-b177-2dc17d9469f1.html>.Ā ā©ļø
- Feng, C 2021,Ā US-China tech war: supercomputer sanctions on China begin to bite as Taiwanās TSMC said to suspend chip orders, South China Morning Post, accessed 13 January 2022, <https://www.scmp.com/tech/tech-war/article/3129362/us-china-tech-war-supercomputer-sanctions-china-begin-bite-taiwans>.Ā ā©ļø
- Desai, R 2021,Ā A dangerous dialogue, CGTN, accessed 13 January 2022, <https://news.cgtn.com/news/2021-11-26/A-dangerous-dialogue-15v2s5XVslO/index.html>.Ā ā©ļø
- GlobalData 2021,Ā Blowback against US chip sanctions on China, Verdict, accessed 13 January 2022, <https://www.verdict.co.uk/china-semiconductors-chip-sanctions/>.Ā ā©ļø
- ibidĀ ā©ļø
- Installed solar energy capacity, Our World In Data, accessed 14 January 2022, <https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/installed-solar-pv-capacity?country=CHN~IND~USA~Europe>.Ā ā©ļø
- Pickerel, K 2021,Ā No avoiding it now: Soon the Top 4 polysilicon manufacturers will be based in China, Solar Power World, accessed 14 January 2022, <https://www.solarpowerworldonline.com/2021/05/no-avoiding-it-now-soon-the-top-4-polysilicon-manufacturers-will-be-based-in-china/>.Ā ā©ļø
- Angel, R 2021,Ā US bans target Chinese solar panel industry over Xinjiang forced labor concerns, The Guardian, accessed 14 January 2022, <https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jun/25/us-bans-target-chinese-solar-panel-industry-over-xinjiang-forced-labor-concerns>.Ā ā©ļø
- Rumors of āforced laborā in Xinjiang refuted, Global Times, accessed 14 January 2022, <https://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1182815.shtml>.Ā ā©ļø
- OāConnor, T 2021,Ā China Backs Cuba in Saying US Should Apply Sanctions To Itself, Newsweek, accessed 14 January 2022, <https://www.newsweek.com/china-backs-cuba-saying-us-should-apply-sanctions-itself-1612735>.Ā ā©ļø
- China opposes āunhelpfulā unilateral U.S. sanctions on DPRK, CGTN, accessed 14 January 2022, <https://news.cgtn.com/news/2022-01-13/DPRK-is-sanctioned-by-Biden-for-first-time-after-missile-tests-16MqSSqFanK/index.html>.Ā ā©ļø
- Liu, C 2021,Ā China, African countries call on US to remove illegal sanctions on Zimbabwe, Global Times, accessed 14 January 2022, <https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202110/1237275.shtml>.Ā ā©ļø
- China stands against any unilateral sanctions on Eritrea: Chinese FM, Global Times, accessed 14 January 2022, <https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202201/1245253.shtml>.Ā ā©ļø
- Chinese top diplomat calls on US, other Western countries to lift sanctions on Afghanistan, TASS, accessed 14 January 2022, <https://tass.com/world/1354583>.Ā ā©ļø
- China Ratifies Its Rejection of US Sanctions Against Venezuela, Telesur, accessed 14 January 2022, <https://www.telesurenglish.net/news/China-Ratifies-Its-Rejection-of-US-Sanctions-Against-Venezuela-20210927-0007.html>.Ā ā©ļø
- Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Wang Wenbinās Regular Press Conference on January 12, 2022, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Peopleās Republic of China, accessed 14 January 2022, <https://www.fmprc.gov.cn/eng/xwfw_665399/s2510_665401/202201/t20220112_10481428.html>.Ā ā©ļø
- Zhou, L 2021,Ā China says Syria needs end to US sanctions, not a colour revolution, South China Morning Post, accessed 14 January 2022, <https://www.scmp.com/news/china/diplomacy/article/3142089/china-says-syria-needs-end-us-sanctions-not-colour-revolution>.Ā ā©ļø
- Reuters Staff 2021,Ā U.S. should lift Iran sanctions, including on China -Chinese envoy, Reuters, accessed 14 January 2022, <https://www.reuters.com/article/iran-nuclear-china-idUKL1N2SK2OY>.Ā ā©ļø
- Majeed, Z 2021,Ā Belarus Strengthens Ties With āironclad Friendā China As West Slaps Sanctions On Regime, Republic World, accessed 14 January 2022, <https://www.republicworld.com/world-news/europe/belarus-strengthens-ties-with-ironclad-friend-china-as-west-slaps-sanctions-on-regime.html>.Ā ā©ļø
Featured image: File photo.
- Orinoco Tribune 2https://orinocotribune.com/author/yullma/October 16, 2025
- Orinoco Tribune 2https://orinocotribune.com/author/yullma/
- Orinoco Tribune 2https://orinocotribune.com/author/yullma/October 14, 2025
- Orinoco Tribune 2https://orinocotribune.com/author/yullma/