China Shutters US Consulate In Chengdu In Retaliation For Houston Mission Closure Tyler Durden Fri, 07/24/2020 - 05:58 As one prominent CCP mouthpiece warned yesterday afternoon, China has unveiled its retaliation against Washington for ordering the abrupt closure of a consulate in Houston. And markets aren't taking it too well. China announced Friday morning that it would order the closure of the American consulate in Chengdu, a major Chinese city and the capital of Sichuan Province. As the New York Times explains, this latest tit-for-tat suggests that the bilateral relationship between the world's two largest economies has reached another grim milestone as the deterioration accelerates. The tit-for-tat consulate closures were yet another twist in deteriorating relations between Washington and Beijing, perhaps the gravest one yet. Previous moves by the two sides have included visa restrictions, new travel rules for diplomats and the expulsion of foreign correspondents. By shutting down diplomatic missions, however, the two countries seem to be moving inexorably toward a deeper divide. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing said the move was a “legitimate and necessary response to the unjustified act by the United States.” It said the United States was responsible for the deterioration in relations and urged it to “immediately retract” its directive to close the consulate in Houston. China’s announcement came hours after Secretary of State Mike Pompeo delivered a speech outlining the Trump administration’s increasingly aggressive stance toward China on virtually every aspect of the relationship — from trade to technology. “We must admit a hard truth that should guide us in the years and decades to come, that if we want to have a free 21st century, and not the Chinese century of which Xi Jinping dreams, the old paradigm of blind engagement with China simply won’t get it done,” Mr. Pompeo said on Thursday. “We must not continue it and we must not return to it." He spoke in California at the library of President Richard M. Nixon, whose visit to China in 1972 set in motion a new era of relations that, he said, China exploited to the disadvantage of the United States. His reference to the closing of the consulate in Houston was met with a round of applause. A speech delivered by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo last night seemed to pour salt in the wound, as America's top diplomat suggested that the Chinese people should essentially rebel against totalitarian Communist Party rule. But Pompeo's speech wasn't the only reason for CCP officials to grouse. Media reports published yesterday claimed the US had identified at least 25 CCP members who are involved with sensitive research at universities around the US. Sen Marco Rubio tweeted earlier this week that China's Houston consulate was a "nest of spies"; the White House hasn't offered much in the way of justification for the decision. White House adviser Kellyanne Conway said during a press briefing earlier this week that President Trump "remains unhappy" with China over its handling of an outbreak that has killed more than 140,000 Americans. Washington “abruptly demanded” the closure of the Houston consulate late Tuesday, according to media reports confirmed by China's Foreign Ministry. The order apparently led officials at the diplomatic mission to start burning sensitive documents, drawing the attention of local police.