Beijing: China has strongly hit back at US President Donald Trump for accusing Beijing of meddling in American elections, dismissing the allegations as fabricated and a malicious smear. Speaking at a media briefing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian stated that Beijing has always strictly upheld the principle of non-interference in the internal affairs of other nations and has zero interest in interfering with US electoral processes. In a sharp counter-attack, Lin asserted that the international community is fully aware of which global power habitually conducts long-term surveillance on foreign governments, businesses, and private citizens while stealing foreign data on a massive scale. He urged Washington to halt its groundless accusations and stop using China as a convenient domestic campaign issue.
The sharp diplomatic friction threatens to derail Chinese President Xi Jinping’s highly anticipated reciprocal visit to the United States scheduled for September. The state visit was initially agreed upon during a positive bilateral summit in Beijing this past May, where both leaders had reached key understandings to stabilize economic ties and manage geoeconomic concerns. However, Chinese international relations experts warn that the positive momentum from the May summit is being systematically eroded by domestic political maneuvers in Washington. Analysts note that Trump appears to be adopting an aggressively hawkish stance to deflect domestic criticism that he went soft on Beijing during his Asia trip, while simultaneously attempting to signal geopolitical toughness to voters ahead of the upcoming US midterm elections.
The rising tensions are further compounded by friction points including ongoing US tariff investigations against Beijing and controversial American arms sales to Taiwan. During a recent primetime address, Trump accused China of orchestrating the illicit acquisition of 220 million American voter files alongside manipulating historical election outcomes. Chinese academics emphasize that while these highly charged rhetorical attacks are primarily driven by immediate domestic electoral considerations, their continued use risks undermining the fragile strategic stability achieved between the two superpowers earlier this year.