BEIJING, May 27 (NNN-AGENCIES) — China is digging in for a tough period
of deteriorating ties with the United States, fanning the flames of
patriotism with Korean War films, a viral song on the trade war, and
editorials lambasting Washington.
The trade spat has turned into a war of words since President Donald Trump blacklisted Huawei last week over concerns the telecom giant’s equipment could be used by Beijing for espionage.
The move, which bans US companies from providing technology Huawei needs, came as the two sides have yet to resume trade negotiations after they exchanged steep increases in tariffs.
State-run Xinhua news agency echoes President Xi Jinping’s tough stance when he called on cadres earlier this week to brace themselves for a “new Long March” — recalling the legendary strategic retreat by Communist revolutionaries in the 1930s who regrouped and went on to triumph in 1949.
Xi warned local officials of “complicated and long-term effects” of
external influences.
Trump has left the door open for reconciliation with plans to meet
President Xi on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Japan next month.
But Chinese state media have ramped up the rhetoric.
A Xinhua commentary Thursday called the US government “selfish and
arrogant”.
Since Trump raised tariffs on $200 billion in Chinese goods in mid-May,
the Communist Party mouthpiece People’s Daily has been running a daily column tag-lined “an alarm bell”, rejecting Trump’s arguments that China’s rise was leading to American losses.
Korean War films stoking anti-US sentiments from the 1950s were broadcast for six consecutive days on state television from May 16, reminding audiences of a time when the Cold War came to China’s doorstep as it fought on North’s side against US-led UN forces defending the South.
Meanwhile, a song penned by a former Chinese government official vowing to beat the US “out of its wits” on the trade war went viral this week, before
it was pulled down from popular social media platforms WeChat and Weibo for violating their content rules.
The song is set to the tune of a well-known wartime anti-Japanese
propaganda film, “Tunnel War”.
Chinese netizens have rallied around Huawei after Trump’s threat to
kneecap the company, which is widely seen as a move to thwart Beijing’s hi-
tech ambitions.
An interview last week with the telecom giant’s founder, Ren Zhengfei, was
one of the top trending topics on China’s Twitter-like microblogging platform Weibo.
Hundreds of commentators said they wouldn’t abandon the company, while a few called for boycotting iPhones. — NNN-AGENCIES