The United States needs to arrange its home before accusing others

While in power, Pompeo continued to press charges against China.

Reuters

In the last days of former President Donald Trump, then Secretary of State Mike Pompeo concluded his escalating anti-China rhetoric that he continued during his time in power, when he claimed that China was committing genocide and against humanity in Xinjiang.

The minister did not present objective evidence on this, but relied on fiery assertions from the illusions of the Christian extremist visionary, Adrian Zenz, and the false and repeated allegations of analysts of the Australian Institute for Strategic Policy "intelligence".

After the administration of President Joe Biden took the helm of power in Washington, there may be some hope for a new era in Sino-US relations soon.

But the new foreign policy staff appears determined not to continue Trump's anti-China approach, but rather to further strengthen the confrontation between the two countries.

There is no reconsideration or review of Pompeo's claims.

A report released last week by the American Public Information Research Laboratory (ABM), a nonpartisan organization, highlights Pompeo's dramatic accusations of genocide against China's Muslim Uighur minority.

The report was talking about death rates as a result of the Corona virus among many different societies in the United States.

The most shocking information in this report was about Native Americans, who have been dispossessed of their ancestral lands and under strong cultural pressure to abandon their traditional principles and religious practices, dying at twice the rate of white Americans.

Native American communities are largely located in remote areas, where poverty and lack of basic social services, low life expectancy rates, and high neonatal mortality have led to other serious public health dilemmas.

And in New Mexico, where I live, Native Americans are dying from Corona at four times the known national rate.

The hypocrisy of the US government to continue its public campaign to bring charges and condemnation against China for its supposed mistreatment of ethnic minorities is based on rumors and fabrications. It's terrifying.

It seems that the political and media elites in the United States are determined to continue focusing on China's treatment of the Corona virus in the first days of its emergence when the new disease began to appear in Wuhan.

With the Biden administration stabilizing, there is still some hope that US policymakers will decide to improve their relations with China and engage with China in economic development, and find new ways to promote a future of prosperity not only in the interest of the two countries but for the world at large.

Kenneth Hammond is Professor of East Asian and World History at New Mexico State University.

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