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New York Times JUNE 29, 2017

U.S. Targets Chinese Bank, Company and 2 Citizens Over North Korea Ties
By ALAN RAPPEPORT
WASHINGTON — The Trump administration has imposed sanctions on a Chinese bank, a Chinese company and two Chinese citizens in an effort to crack down on North Korea’s financing and development of weapons of mass destruction.

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The sanctions follow the death of Otto F. Warmbier, an American student who was imprisoned by North Korea, and come as frustration grows in the United States government over the North’s missile tests.

The sanctions are directed at the Bank of Dandong, a Chinese lender that Treasury officials say acts as a conduit for illicit North Korean financial activity. The department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network is moving to sever the bank from the American financial system, which would severely limit its ability to work with any other banks around the world.

“The Department of the Treasury is committed to protecting the U.S. financial system from North Korean abuse and maximizing pressure on the government of North Korea until it abandons its nuclear and ballistic missile programs,” Steven Mnuchin, the Treasury secretary, said. “While we will continue to seek international cooperation on North Korea, the United States is sending an emphatic message across the globe that we will not hesitate to take action against persons, companies and financial institutions who enable this regime.”

Sanctions are also being imposed on Dalian Global Unity Shipping and two Chinese citizens who the Treasury said have business dealings with North Korea related to illicit financial transactions.

Mr. Mnuchin would not say if the United States warned China about the sanctions, but he said they were not meant as any sort of message to the Chinese

President Trump encouraged China, one of North Korea’s only allies and a major trading partner, to pressure the North to curb its nuclear ambitions.

Last week, Mr. Trump expressed his frustration on Twitter, where he wrote: “While I greatly appreciate the efforts of President Xi & China to help with North Korea, it has not worked out.”

He added: “At least I know China tried!”


Also
New York Times
JUNE 29, 2017


U.S. Seeks to Keep Closer Tabs on Chinese Money in America

By PAUL MOZUR and CECILIA KANG
When President Trump talked tough about China’s economic impact on America during the campaign, he criticized its trade policies and its approach to its currency.

Yet one of the first pieces of imminent legislation under the Trump administration that could have a major impact on the economic relationship between the two countries centers on something different: Chinese deal making in the United States.

White House officials and a group of lawmakers on both sides of the aisle are pushing for new laws intended in part to keep closer tabs on the surge of Chinese money into America. Some in Washington say that money could help China expand its technological and military abilities. While any legislation would face congressional debate and review, a large number of Trump administration employees who deal with both trade and national security have said they support some sort of overhaul of how the United States vets such deals.

The push would expand the powers of a little-known but important panel — the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, or Cfius — that can effectively block foreign deals for American companies on national security grounds. In particular, it could reshape the ways American technology companies, big and small, raise money from Chinese investors.

“We’ll try to enable Cfius to take a tougher line against certain investments emanating from those nations that pose a clear threat to our national security, focused particularly in the area of advanced technology,” said Senator John Cornyn, Republican of Texas, who said last week that he would propose the legislation.

The Trump administration has not staked out a formal stance, but experts are watching how the committee treats a pair of pending deals as a test of the political winds. The first is a $1.2 billion bid by Ant Financial — the electronic payments affiliate of the Alibaba Group, the Chinese e-commerce giant — for a remittances company based in Dallas called MoneyGram. The second is a $1.3 billion offer by a China-backed buyout fund for Lattice Semiconductor, which makes a range of advanced communications and telecommunication chips.

Chinese buyers are pouring more and more money into the United States. In 2016, Chinese investment in America jumped threefold to $46 billion from the year before, according to the research firm Rhodium Group. Chinese purchases in recent years have included buildings and movie theater chains.

But some deals have been in potentially sensitive areas, like semiconductors, which Cfius has increasingly blocked. A growing number have also been among start-ups working on cutting-edge technology, but they are difficult to track and are often too small to be reviewed by Cfius.

In a report this year that was first reported by The New York Times, the Pentagon said it was concerned about the flow of Chinese investment into start-ups working on important technology like artificial intelligence, robotics and augmented reality.

Critics also argue that Beijing and companies supported by the government have sought to form joint ventures or license technology, neither of which Cfius currently reviews.

“There is a perception that different financial structures are being used to avoid potential Cfius oversight,” said Andrew Shapiro, a founder of the advisory firm Beacon Global Strategies and former assistant secretary of state for political-military affairs. “So they will try to close those loopholes.”

Over the past two years, Cfius (pronounced sih-fee-us) has broken up a number of major Chinese bids for semiconductor companies, leading to Chinese complaints.

It is unclear how China’s government would respond to the revamped regulator, but the move would most likely stoke some tensions. At a recent news conference, Lu Kang, a spokesman for the Foreign Ministry, said, “There should not be undue political dimensions imposed on commercial takeovers, let alone political intervention.”

Xiaohe Cheng, an associate professor at the School of International Studies at Renmin University in Beijing, added that some of Cfius’s recent decisions were “discriminative towards Chinese companies.”

Yet foreign businesses often complain of an unfair operating environment in China, and increasingly American officials have begun seeking what they call reciprocity, or bringing American limits on Chinese investment closer to China’s limits on American investment there. Beijing forbids foreign investors from acquiring meaningful stakes in companies in a number of industries, including the media, internet and telecommunications.

Such an initiative in the United States would have far wider economic implications and is likely to be dealt with separately from the coming legislation on Cfius.

Recently, several Trump officials, including Wilbur Ross, the secretary of commerce, have also expressed support for expanding the committee.

“His staff is well versed on the issues, and he clearly sees the need for updating Cfius,” said Paul S. Triolo, the head of practice on technology policy for the Eurasia Group, an advisory firm.

“He appears to be leading the charge on this with the administration,” he added.

Cfius includes members of a number of American agencies, including the Departments of Defense, State, Justice, Treasury and Homeland Security, and experts are watching closely to see how the committee acts under the Trump presidency.

Ant Financial, the Alibaba affiliate, is bidding against a company based in Kansas called Euronet Worldwide to acquire MoneyGram. Some lawmakers, led by representatives from Kansas and Texas, where MoneyGram is based, have said an Ant purchase would expose the personal financial details of American users.

Douglas Feagin, Ant Financial’s head of international operations, said in an interview that the company intended to allow MoneyGram to continue to operate on its own and that the data it had would continue to be stored in the United States on a network separate from Ant’s networks.

“The test cases will be things like the Alibaba deal,” said Adam Segal, an emerging technologies expert at the Council on Foreign Relations.

While experts say it could be difficult to argue that MoneyGram is important to national security, the potential deal for Lattice Semiconductor offers a more straightforward argument.

The Pentagon report released this year cites the bid for Lattice from a venture capital firm called Canyon Bridge as an example of a tactic used to skirt government oversight. The purpose of creating Canyon Bridge was to obscure the source of capital to “enhance the possibility” that the transaction would be approved by Cfius, the report said.

Canyon Bridge has said that there was never any intention to obscure the source of the fund’s capital, as shown by meetings it had with Cfius before the deal was signed.

The coming debate about Cfius is likely to be undergirded by concerns about reciprocity.

“There’s this question about letting a Chinese company do something in the U.S. that China wouldn’t let a U.S. company do in China,” said James Lewis, a senior vice president at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a think tank.

“That’s what people say in private,” he added. “That it’s not a two-way street, that it’s not fair and that we need to do something about it.”
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Wait just a minute...aren't we the US supposed to be playing nice with China because we don't want them to incite NK to bomb us? And China owns most of our debt anyhow.

Is Trump on PMS or what? First he's anti-China, then pro-China and now he's anti-China again. Can he make up his mind? What is this? Does he suddenly have more estrogen than his own daughter? :lol:
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Trump and North Korea is interesting. The Chinese have recently been incrementally adjusting their relations with NK, such as re-enforcing the border, suspending oil sales in June + coal imports earlier in the year. Observable aspects of the current Chinese/NK relationship usually get reported (in greater depth) in the press here in South Korea.

Trump has often said that he doesn't like to broadcast his strategic thinking on sensitive foreign policy matters, and obviously this is a Chinese trait. China is never going to issue a statement saying that they are pragmatically drawing down their support for NK. If Trump's interactions with the Chinese leader(ship) are facilitating cooperation for mutual interests on the NK dilemma, its actually something being achieved even if it doesn't have an immediate payoff.

What-ever Trump's self-created domestic political head-fucks are ... these are issues primarily for Americans to be concerned about. His agenda/thinking on East-Asian is somewhat of a dis-connected area and I'd be interested to read any discussion on it.

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