China on Friday voiced strong discontent with and opposition to the United States for approving a spending bill to restrict government purchases of Chinese information technology (IT) systems.
The content of the bill has sent an extremely erroneous signal, said Shen Danyang, spokesman of the Ministry of Commerce.
The bill, signed by U.S. President Barack Obama early this week, also bans the U.S. government from funding the issuance of export permits to commercial satellites sold to China.
The spokesman said the move directly affects the normal trade and investment cooperation between Chinese companies and their U.S. partners, and it is not in line with creating and sustaining mutually beneficial partnerships between the two countries.
The discriminatory practice, implemented under the guise of "national security," has seriously violated the fair trade rule and damaged China-U.S. mutual trust and bilateral cooperation in high-tech sectors, Shen said.
The U.S. side should adopt practical measures to eliminate the negative impact the bill has on the China-U.S. relations, Shen said.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei on Thursday also urged the United States to abandon discriminatory practices against Chinese enterprises.
"We hope the U.S. side could get rid of such a move and do more things that will promote the development of bilateral ties and mutual trust," Hong said.
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