In the WeChat post on Monday, the Ministry of State Security said that despite positive signals from senior US officials during recent China visits, Washington’s new approach was to “compete” with Beijing.
The ministry – which oversees the secret police and intelligence – accused the US of being “two-faced” in its China policy, which it said was “doomed to fail” as Beijing would not follow Washington’s agenda.
“To truly realise the move from Bali to San Francisco, the US needs to show real sincerity,” it said.

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Biden had on Sunday responded to reports that Xi may not attend, saying he was “disappointed … but I am going to get to see him”, without elaborating.
It said US strategy on China had in the past involved “engagement” while “quietly pushing for its infiltration and containment”.
Now, according to the ministry, the US strategy on China was to “compete” and “manage the competition”.
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It said that included “decoupling and disconnecting at the economic level, ganging up at the political level, deterrence and containment at the security level, discrediting and disparaging at the public opinion level, and constraining and locking down at the rules level”.
“We fear that the US has even more bleak tactics it could use,” the post said.
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China planning ‘innovative’ export controls as tensions with US persist
China planning ‘innovative’ export controls as tensions with US persist
Zhu Feng, dean of the School of International Studies at Nanjing University, said the ministry’s latest social media post “reflects the dissatisfaction of Chinese government departments with the Biden administration’s China policy”.
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He said despite high-level exchanges resuming, “there has been no substantial relaxation of the US policy of suppressing China”.
Zhu added that it might have been a statement of the ministry’s “political stance” and that Xi could still attend the Apec talks.
Shi Yinhong, an international relations professor at Renmin University of China in Beijing, noted that it was not for the spy agency to say if Xi would attend the San Francisco summit.
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