The US on Thursday told China it was upset it did not hand over US intelligence leaker Edward Snowden after he fled to Hong Kong, saying that the decision had undermined relations.
US President Barack Obama, meeting senior Chinese officials who were in Washington for annual wide-ranging talks, “expressed his disappointment and concern” over the Snowden case, the White House said in a statement.
US Deputy Secretary of State William Burns, one of the main US officials in the talks, said Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) agreed at their summit last month at the California resort of Sunnylands to cooperate over problems.
“That is why we were very disappointed with how the authorities in Beijing and Hong Kong handled the Snowden case, which undermined our effort to build the trust needed to manage difficult issues,” Burns said.
“We have made clear that China’s handling of this case was not consistent with the spirit of Sunnylands or with the type of relationship — the new model — that we both seek to build,” Burns said at a joint press event.
Snowden, a former government contractor, fled the US for Hong Kong after revealing details of pervasive US intelligence surveillance on the Internet. The US sought his extradition to face charges.
However, Snowden was allowed to leave Hong Kong, a territory of China that enjoys a large amount of autonomy, for Russia.
Since arriving in Russia on June 23, Snowden has been stuck in the transit zone of Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport as he seeks a way to get to a country that will offer him asylum.
Chinese State Councilor Yang Jiechi (楊潔篪), speaking next to Burns, defended decisions on Snowden, whose allegations of US snooping in Chinese Internet networks caused a stir in Beijing.
“The central government of China has always respected the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region government’s handling of cases in accordance with the law,” he said.
Hong Kong “handled the Snowden case in accordance with the law and its approach is beyond reproach,” said Yang, a central figure in Chinese foreign policy.
“The Americans are just trying to save face,” Hong Kong pro-democracy lawmaker Claudia Mo (毛孟靜) said, dismissing the rebuke from Washington as “diplomatic talk.”
“The Chinese didn’t exactly invite Snowden to come to Hong Kong,” Mo said.
Hong Kong executive council member Bernard Chan (陳智思) was also critical of Washington, saying “Hong Kong and China were not the ones at fault.”
“It was the US, not Hong Kong, that decided to operate a global electronic spying operation, which even some Americans now believe is out of control,” Chan wrote in the South China Morning Post. “It was the US, not Hong Kong, that decided directly or via outsourcing to use the services of a young man who turned out to be disloyal.”
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