Ted Cruz warns more Chinese consulates in U.S. face closure as tensions reach new high after Beijing used Houston premises as 'base for spying'
- Texas Senator Ted Cruz said Sunday that more Chinese diplomatic missions could end in the U.S. following the closure of China's Houston consulate
- There are five Chinese consulates in the U.S., including the now-shuttered Houston location, but not counting the embassy in Washington, D.C.
- Cruz said the consulate was 'closed because it had engaged in espionage, it had engaged in intellectual property theft, they used it as a base for spying'
- On Friday evening U.S. authorities were seen hammering into the door of the consulate after President Donald Trump ordered on Tuesday that it close
- Hours after Chinese diplomats left, the doors were forced open by US officials
- After the order on Tuesday night, Chinese diplomats set fire to documents in the courtyard of the building
- Sources have said that the consulate was well known as a center of spies who they allege used the consulate to spy on medical and scientific research
Ted Cruz signaled Sunday that more Chinese consulates could be closed in the U.S. after the Houston base was shuttered last week following revelations of spying on the premises.
'They may well be closed,' the Texas senator said when asked about other potential closures.
'That consulate was closed because it had engaged in espionage, it had engaged in intellectual property theft, they used it as a base for spying in Houston and throughout the Southwest,' Cruz told CBS News during an interview with Face the Nation host Margaret Brenner Sunday morning.
'And for a long time I have made the case that China poses the greatest geopolitical threat to the United States for the next century,' he continued.
'The most significant foreign policy consequence of this pandemic,' Cruz asserted, 'is people are understanding the threat China poses.'
Cruz is on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and has often warned of the threat China poses to the U.S. – including visiting Hong Kong to support protesters standing up to Beijing.
Texas Senator Ted Cruz claimed Washington could shutter more Chinese consulates after the Houston compound ceased operations Friday.'They may well be closed,' he said of the remaining four consulates
'I have made the case that China poses the greatest geopolitical threat to the United States for the next century,' Cruz told CBS host Margaret Brenner Sunday morning, claiming the Houston consulate in particular was a 'base for spying'
Beijing was told the Houston consulate had until Friday at 4:00 p.m. to cease operations.
That day, officials were seen hammering the door shut after diplomats and employees vacated the property.
Soon after the orders were issued, video emerged of diplomats burning documents in the courtyard of the consulate.
Republican Senator Marco Rubio, the acting chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, claimed in a tweet Wednesday morning that 'China's Houston consulate is a massive spy center, forcing it to close is long overdue.'
The consulate was raided by U.S. officials Friday, shortly after it officially closed for business.
The consulate, which Donald Trump forced to close, was reportedly a hot bed of spies and was allegedly being used to steal medical and scientific research.
On Friday afternoon, hours after the consulate officially closed and diplomats left, a group of men who appeared to be U.S. officials were seen forcing open a back door.
The back door of the Houston consulate was forced open Friday afternoon by what appeared to be teams of U.S. officials making their way into the empty building
The group of men was seen forcing the doors of the consulate open in Texas just hours after the Chinese employees and diplomats left
A trio of consular vehicles leave the Consulate General of China building late on Friday
The Chinese consulate in Houston closed its doors Friday, after an announcement Wednesday
Small fires were seen being ignited in the courtyard of the building on Tuesday evening
According to a Reuters witness, consulate staff had exited the building shortly after 4pm and left in vehicles. The back door was then forced open.
Chinese authorities have called on Washington to reverse its decision, and said the closure of the diplomatic office was 'breaking down the friendship bridge.'
In response, China has now ordered the closure of the US consulate in Chengdu - also within 72 hours.
The U.S. has an embassy in Beijing and consulates in Shanghai, Guangzhou, Chengdu, Shenyang, Wuhan and Hong Kong.
The Chinese consulate in Houston is one of five in the U.S., not counting the embassy in Washington DC.
On Tuesday, hours before the Trump administration made public its order to vacate the building, consulate employees were seen starting fires in a courtyard of the Houston building, prompting police officers and firefighters to rush to the area.
Fire crews were prevented from accessing the compound as documents were seen being burned.
Sources on Wednesday told NBC that the consulate was known as being a center for Chinese spying.
Multiple U.S. officials told the network that the Houston consulate has long been used by the Chinese government to steal valuable medical research, and was involved in attempts to infiltrate the oil and natural gas industries.
They said the consulate is well-fortified, was hardened to prevent U.S. surveillance, and was a high-tech communications hub to coordinate and execute various spying operations.
Fire crews arriving on the scene were told they could not enter to put out the blazes
Mark Warner, Democrat senator for Virginia and ranking member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, told NBC News's Katy Tur that he would not discuss the specific intelligence behind Wednesday's closure.
'But I can tell you for the last two years, I and other members of the intel committee have been holding classified briefings with business leaders and academic leaders about the concerted efforts of the Chinese communist party to steal our intellectual property, to steal it from companies, to steal it from universities, to be on better guard,' he said.
Warner suggested the action was driven by the FBI and its intelligence.
The State Department said China was directing 'massive illegal spying and influence operations.'
David R. Stilwell, who oversees policy for East Asia and the Pacific at the State Department, told The New York Times that the Houston consulate had a history of engaging in 'subversive behavior'.
China has five consulates in the United States. The Houston one, pictured, closed on Friday
He said the consulate was the epicenter of research theft in the United States.
For instance, Stilwell said, said the consul general, the top Chinese official there, and two other diplomats were recently caught using false identification to escort Chinese travelers to the gate area of a charter flight from George Bush Intercontinental Airport.
Stilwell said that some of China's attempted scientific thefts in the United States had accelerated over the last six months, and could be related to efforts to develop a vaccine for the coronavirus - although he again presented no evidence.
Mike Pompeo, the Secretary of State, who has been a leader in aggressively pushing hard-line policies on China, said Wednesday at a news conference in Copenhagen that the Trump administration was 'setting out clear expectations as to how the Chinese Communist Party is going to behave.'
He warned that the United States would 'take actions' to protect its interests.
Moving vans were pictured outside the consulate in Houston on Wednesday
Much of the interest in Houston has focused on the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.
In April 2019, three out of five scientists identified by federal authorities as being involved in efforts to steal American research on behalf of China at MD Anderson were ousted by the institution.
A fourth scientist resigned before the conclusion of the investigation, and the fifth was disciplined by the center.
Trump said during a news conference on Wednesday evening that 'it's always possible' his administration would close more Chinese missions.
The consulate closure marks a further breakdown in relations between the world's two largest economies, and is a significant shift from just six months ago, when the countries signed a trade deal and Trump boasted that the U.S.-China relationship 'might be the best it's been in a long, long time.'
Trump said six months ago that the relationship with China was excellent
Now relations between Trump and China's leader, Xi Jinping, are at a low
Now, in addition to closing the consulate, the U.S. is also considering a ban on Chinese-owned mobile apps such as Tik Tok, removing Chinese technology from the electrical grid, and sanctioning Communist Party officials over the internment of Muslims and a security law that effectively ends Hong Kong's independent legal status.
Trump has also cut off additional trade talks and threatened to penalize China because he said 'they could have stopped' the pandemic.
Hua Chunying, foreign ministry spokeswoman, described the reasons given by the US for closing the consulate as 'unbelievably ridiculous'.
She urged the U.S. to reverse its 'erroneous decision', or China would 'react with firm countermeasures'.
'While Chinese diplomats are promoting mutual understanding and friendship, the US embassy in China publicly attacks China's political system,' she said.
'As a result of smears and hatred fanned up by the US government, the Chinese embassy has received bomb and death threats.'
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