China Calls Trump Cyberattack Claims 'a Farce'
China on Monday said tweets by President Donald
Trump suggesting Beijing was involved in a massive cyberattack on the US
government were "a farce" concocted for political motives.
A large-scale hack of US government agencies
including the Treasury was "under control" as of Saturday, according
to the outgoing US President.
But in a tweet thread he undercut his own
administration's assessment that Russia was behind the cyberattack, instead
saying China "may" also have been involved, without providing any
evidence.
Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin
stopped short of directly denying Beijing's involvement, but called US
accusations of cyberattacks "not serious, and self-contradictory."
"The accusations made by the US against China
have always been a farce, out of political motives," Wang told a press
briefing.
"The US has politicised cybersecurity issues,
continuously spread false information without conclusive evidence... in an
attempt to destroy China's image and mislead the international community,"
he added.
In July, two Chinese nationals were indicted by the
US for seeking to steal coronavirus vaccine research and hacking hundreds of
companies -- prompting Beijing to accuse Washington of "slander".
Trump's tweets on Saturday contradicted comments
just a day earlier from his Secretary of State Mike Pompeo about the source and
the severity of the cyberattack, leaving administration spokespeople scrambling
to reconcile the conflicting takes.
Pompeo earlier said the breach was "pretty clearly"
Russia's work, adding there had been a significant effort to use third-party
software to "essentially embed code inside of US government systems".
Cyber experts said the attack could have
far-reaching impact and take months to unravel.
Several US officials had previously pointed the
finger at Moscow, but none at Beijing.
Russia has denied involvement in the latest attack.
Trump as president has frequently played down
apparent threats from Russia -- including his refusal to recognise interference
by Moscow in the 2016 election despite the findings of US intelligence agencies



