Wednesday, November 13, 2024 - US President-elect, Donald Trump is expected to tap Florida Senator, Marco Rubio as his nominee to become America's next top diplomat, according to reports, a selection likely to set a tough tone on relations with China from the outset.
The New York Times cited three sources familiar with Trump's
thinking who expressed confidence that the 45th and soon-to-be 47th president
had settled on Rubio.
The two were rivals during the contentious 2016 Republican
presidential primaries, during which Trump gave Rubio the epithet "Little
Marco." Trump considered him for the role of running mate, a position
ultimately filled by JD Vance, Rubio's Senate colleague from Ohio.
Rubio has been an outspoken critic of China during his time
in the Senate.
He cosponsored bipartisan legislation supporting the
international standing of Taiwan, the self-ruled island that China has vowed to
unify with, by force if necessary.
He also cosponsored legislation banning imports suspected to
be made with forced labor in China's Xinjiang, as well as a bill requiring the
U.S. government to report on human rights abuses in the majority-Muslim region.
Chinese officials there have been accused of detaining as many as 1 million
people in internment camps, which Beijing insists were reeducation camps.
Rubio was among the U.S. lawmakers Beijing targeted with
tit-for-tat sanctions in 2020 over his criticism of the situation Xinjiang and
China's crackdown on democracy in Hong Kong.
In September, Rubio introduced legislation to close
loopholes to prevent China, Russia, and other U.S. adversaries from
circumventing tariffs.
Trump has already asked Representative Michael Waltz, a
retired Green Beret and National Guard colonel representing Florida's Sixth
District, to replace outgoing National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan if
confirmed by the upper chamber.
Michael Waltz is also a known China hawk, having earlier
this year sounded the alarm over China's growing influence in the Western
Hemisphere.
He also supports expediting weapons exports to Taiwan to
help it better defend against potential Chinese aggression. "We must learn
from Ukraine by addressing the threat of the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) and
arming Taiwan NOW before it's too late," he wrote on X, formerly Twitter,
in May.
Although the U.S, like most countries, does not officially
recognize Taiwan diplomatically, it is the island democracy's main supplier of
arms, which Washington has sold for decades under the Taiwan Relations Act.
These arms sales rile China, which considers them a violation of its
sovereignty.
"Senator Rubio is one of
Washington's most levelheaded, strategic thinkers on countering the Chinese
Communist Party," said Michael Sobolik, a senior fellow in Indo-Pacific
Studies at the American Foreign Policy Council and author of Countering China's
Great Game: A Strategy for American Dominance, in an interview with Newsweek.
As for Waltz, Sobolik called him one of the House's
"most focused members on the issue" and observed he has "worked
consistently" on the behalf of political prisoners in the country.
"President-elect Trump's
picks for Treasury and Commerce will be telling, but early indications suggest
tough days ahead for Beijing," Sobolik added.
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