The regime did not lift its sanctions against Rubio, but quietly changed the translation of his name, a move said to be an attempt to minimize embarrassment.
The Chinese communist regime has signaled it will communicate with the new U.S. secretary of state despite the regime’s sanctions against the Trump appointee, former Sen. Marco Rubio.
Following his confirmation on Jan. 20, Rubio is now the first sitting U.S. secretary of state sanctioned by the Chinese regime.
Beijing also sanctioned former U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Jan. 21, 2021—one day after Pompeo and the first Trump administration left office.
Speaking from Beijing on Jan. 20, Guo Jiakun, spokesperson for China’s Foreign Ministry, did not answer a question on whether Beijing would drop its sanctions against Rubio.
Instead, he said: “China will firmly defend national interests. In the meantime, it’s necessary for high-level Chinese and American officials to maintain contact in an appropriate way.”
Rubio and Rubio
Meanwhile, in Beijing’s official Chinese-language transcript of its press conference, the regime quietly replaced one Chinese character used for Rubio’s name with a homophone. Chinese netizens responded after, saying that the regime was trying to minimize its embarrassment by making people think there are two different people.
In previous official statements on Rubio’s sanctions, the translation “卢比奥” was used, while the latest transcript referred to him as “鲁比奥.”
Chen suggested the new translation is a way for Chinese leader Xi Jinping to avoid the self-made dilemma.
“That is to say, the sanctioned one is ‘Rubio卢比奥,’ the one [they] interact with is ‘Rubio鲁比奥.’”
Rubio’s Record on China
Rubio’s appointment was approved unanimously by the U.S. Senate on Jan. 20.
As senator, Rubio authored nearly 150 China-related bills, including bills on improving human rights in China; protecting American industrial power by limiting the CCP’s access to U.S. technology, capital, and federal tax credits; and countering the CCP’s influence and espionage in the United States.
He also served as the acting chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee in 2020 and 2021, and chairman of the Joint China Commission between 2017 and 2019.
Beijing Previously Blocked Engagement Following US Sanctions
Beijing previously refused to engage with the U.S. Defense Department’s communication requests, citing U.S. sanctions against China’s then-Defense Minister Li Shangfu.
In 2018, the Trump administration sanctioned Li, an aerospace expert, for allegedly buying Russian weapons when he headed the Equipment Development Department of the Chinese military.
After Li became defense minister, his department refused requests to speak with his U.S. counterpart, Lloyd Austin, the Pentagon chief told a Senate panel in May 2023.
Terri Wu contributed to this report.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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