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    Could a TikTok Ban in the US Be Seen as Bullying China and Backfire on America?

    Congress and the Biden administration are considering a variety of executive and legislative options to ban TikTok, a popular app with nearly 170 US users.

    Congress and the Biden-led administration are considering a variety of executive and legislative options to ban TikTok, an intensely popular video-sharing app with nearly 170 American users.

    The new US bill requires TikTok to cut links with its Chinese owner within 180 days or face a ban in the United States. (AP)
    The new US bill requires TikTok to cut links with its Chinese owner within 180 days or face a ban in the United States. (AP)

    However, the critics argue that the proposed ban could trigger long-term consequences for free speech and expression, global data transfer and mostly importantly US-China ties.

    On Wednesday, the US House of Representatives will vote on a bill that was overwhelmingly approved by committee last week. The legislation requires TikTok to cut links with its Chinese owner within 180 days or face a ban in the United States.

    While TikTok enjoys word-wide popularity, it has sparked immense concerns among governments about its Chinese ownership and apparent servitude to the Communist Party in Beijing.

    Avril Haines, America’s director of national intelligence, has warned the House intelligence committee that China could use TikTok to influence the November elections.

    “We cannot rule out the possibility that the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) would use it,” Haines said.

    Issuing a major warning to the US government, China on Wednesday claimed that the ban is an attempt to suppress TikTok as the United States has not provided any evidence that TikTok threatens its national security.

    In a press conference, the Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Wang Webin, denounced the US move as “bullying behaviour” that would “inevitably come back to bite the United States itself.”

    “Although the United States has never found evidence that TikTok threatens US national security, it has not stopped suppressing TikTok,” said Wenbin.

    “This kind of bullying behaviour that cannot win in fair competition disrupts companies’ normal business activity, damages the confidence of international investors in the investment environment, and damages the normal international economic and trade order,” he added.

    Meanwhile, TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew has arrived in Washington in a bid to garner support to stop the bill.

    In a letter to bill’s co-sponsors, TikTok’s vice president for public policy Michael Beckerman stated that the proposed legislation poses serious “constitutional concerns”.

    “This latest legislation being rushed through at unprecedented speed without even the benefit of a public hearing, poses serious Constitutional concerns,” he wrote in the letter, as per AFP.

    A look at Biden and Trump’s take on TikTok ban

    US President Joe Biden recently announced that he will sign the legislation, Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act, requiring Chinese tech giant ByteDance to divest from TikTok.

    Addressing reporters at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland’s Prince George’s County, Biden reaffirmed his support for the proposal, saying, “If they [Congress] pass this, I’ll sign it.”

    If passed, the legislation would give president the authority to declare other apps as a national security threat if they are controlled by a country considered hostile to the United States.

    The revived effort by Washington against TikTok alarmed the firm as TikTok officials were relieved when Biden himself joined the app as part of his re-election campaign.

    Former US President Donald Trump, who has long touted his tough stance against China, has reversed his position on the TikTok ban, claiming that youngsters in the United States “would go crazy” without the popular app.

    Trump’s U-turn coincides with his meeting with a billionaire Republican megadonor, who has a significant stake in ByteDance. The meeting has fueled speculations that economic interests are influencing Trump’s stance on the issue.

    Trump has even suggested that if the US bans TikTok, companies such as Facebook will gain an unfair advantage. “Without TikTok, you can make Facebook bigger, and I consider Facebook to be an enemy of the people,” he stated in a CNBC interview on Monday.

    The steps come as the US has increased pressure on Chinese companies in recent years, specifically in the semiconductor, electric vehicle, and biotech sectors. Experts believe that the United States may apply further measures to thwart competition from China, as “the decoupling is really in full force.”

    Earlier this month, the United States Senate voted to adopt legislation that could limit business with Chinese biotech corporations including WuXi AppTec and BGI due to national security concerns.

    China is viewed as a danger to the US auto industry, as US vehicle exports plummet and businesses such as General Motors reduce overseas operations.

    US Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm recently admitted that the US is “very concerned about China bigfooting our industry”.

    According to the White House, the US was conducting investigations into whether automobile imports by China pose any threat to national security, claiming that they may gather confidential information about US citizens and infrastructure and send it to China.

    A year later, the United States said that it will impose additional limitations to plug gaps that had opened up following the implementation of AI chip export limits in 2022.

    As the moves by US government has already infuriated Beijing, China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi said that the United States has been coming up with “new methods to suppress China”. He further claimed that Washington’s baseless allegations against Beijing have reached a “unbelievable degree.”

    “If it [U.S.] persistently monopolizes the high end of the value chain, and keeps China at the low end, where is fairness and competition?” Wang asked.

    Other than the US, some nations that have fully banned TikTok include Afghanistan, Kyrgyzstan, Nepal, India, Iran and Somalia.

    The vote is slated to take place today at 10 am (local time) at the House of Representatives.

    The bill’s fate is unknown in the Senate, where major stakeholders have expressed objections to taking such extreme action against TikTok amid concerns over data privacy, foreign interference, and cybersecurity risks.

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