China suspends cooperation with U.S on range of issues, sanctions Pelosi over Taiwan trip

U.S House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
China's Foreign Ministry announced new
countermeasures against Washington on Friday, including the suspension of
climate talks, in response to Nancy Pelosi's visit to Taiwan, hours after it
announced sanctions against the US House speaker.
The measures include the cancellation of
future phone calls and meetings between Chinese and US defense leaders, for
which future dates had not been announced, and the cancellation of annual naval
meetings under the China-US military maritime consultation mechanism.
China also suspended cooperation on the
repatriation of illegal immigrants, legal assistance on criminal matters and
the combat of transnational crimes, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying
said in a briefing Friday.
It suspended its anti-drug cooperation with
the US, which has already been strained in recent years.
The US has blamed China for failing to stop
synthetic opioids reaching the US as both Beijing and Washington disagree on
how to counteract the problem.
China's Foreign Ministry also said it would
suspend climate change talks, a major area of cooperation despite escalating
tensions in recent years.
The moves come after Beijing announced that
it would sanction Pelosi and her immediate family over the visit to Taiwan, and
as it stepped up military drills and warplane incursions around the island.
Earlier Friday, China's Foreign Ministry
condemned Pelosi for what it described as her "vicious and provocative
actions," saying her trip to Taiwan amounted to "seriously
interfering in China's internal affairs."
"U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
insisted on visiting Taiwan in disregard of China's serious concerns and firm
opposition, seriously interfering in China's internal affairs, seriously
undermining China's sovereignty and territorial integrity, seriously trampling
on the one-China principle, and seriously threatening the peace and stability
across Taiwan Strait," a statement from China's Ministry of Foreign
Affairs said on Friday.
"In response to Pelosi's vicious and
provocative actions, China has decided to impose sanctions on Pelosi and her
immediate family," the statement said.
Pelosi's visit to Taiwan on Wednesday, when
she met President Tsai Ing-wen and other leaders, has infuriated China's
Communist Party, which views the self-governed democratic island as its
territory -- despite never having controlled it.
At a news conference in Tokyo during the last
stop of her Asia tour, Pelosi struck a defiant tone, saying China had sought to
isolate Taiwan from the international community but would not prevent US
officials from traveling there.
"We will not allow (China) to isolate
Taiwan," the California Democrat said Friday. "They are not doing our
travel schedule."
The White House summoned the Chinese
ambassador to the US, Qin Gang, on Thursday to condemn China's
"irresponsible" military activities following Pelosi's trip, National
Security Council spokesperson John Kirby told CNN. The meeting was first
reported by The Washington Post.
Ahead of the visit, Beijing had warned it
would take "forceful measures" if Pelosi went ahead, and on her
departure it launched live-fire military exercises and sent missiles over
Taiwan for the first time.
Taiwan's Defense Ministry said as of 11 a.m.
Friday, several Chinese military jets and warships had conducted exercises around
the Taiwan Strait and crossed the median line -- the halfway point between the
island and mainland China.
Taiwan's military responded with radio
warnings, air patrol forces, naval ships, and shore-based missile systems, the
ministry said.
On Thursday, China sent 22 warplanes into
Taiwan's air defense identification zone (ADIZ), all of them crossing the
median line.
A number of countries, including from the G7
grouping of some of the world's largest economies, have criticized China's
drills, urging Beijing not to change the status quo in the region.
In her comments on Friday, Pelosi said the
visit to Taiwan had been about maintaining the status quo.
"It's about the Taiwan Relations Act,
the US-China policy, all of the pieces of legislation and agreements that have
established what our relationship is -- to have peace in the Taiwan Strait and
to have the status quo prevail," she said.
Pelosi also rejected suggestions by some
critics that her visit had more to do with burnishing her legacy than
benefiting the island, calling the claim "ridiculous."
She pointed to Taiwan's "free and open
democracy," successful economy and relatively progressive LGBTQ rights.
"This isn't about me -- it's about them," she added.
"It's about Taiwan, and I am proud to
have worked over the years to showcase the concerns that they have with
mainland China."
Meanwhile Japanese Prime Minister Fumio
Kishida on Friday called for an immediate halt to China's drills, saying they
were "a serious issue concerning the security of our country and its
people."
Earlier, Japan lodged a formal complaint
after five Chinese missiles landed in its Exclusive Economic Zone.
Amid worsening relations, China canceled a
planned meeting between the Chinese and Japanese foreign ministers.
On Thursday, China's Vice Foreign Minister
Deng Li summoned envoys to China from European countries, the EU and Japan in
protest of their statements regarding Taiwan.
The G7 statement "distorts the
facts" and is a "blatant political provocation," said Deng, who
accused the countries involved of interfering with China's internal affairs.
Pelosi's visit to Taiwan was the first by a
sitting House speaker in 25 years, since then-House Speaker Speaker Newt
Gingrich's visit in 1997. Her Asia tour also included stops in Malaysia,
Singapore, South Korea and Japan.
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