The U.S. Embassy in China has gone to the Chinese internet to offer rewards for capturing Chinese citizens. Is there no regulation for such brazen interference in China's internal affairs?

On October 28, 2024, local time, the U.S. Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) announced that they had filed charges against eight people in the United States who participated in the "Operation Fox Hunt." Five of them were arrested on the same morning, while three are believed to still be in China. The Assistant Attorney General for National Security at the U.S. Department of Justice, Demers, boasted that the U.S. had "turned the 'Operation Fox Hunt' around, with the hunter becoming the hunted and the pursuer becoming the pursued."

Look, the Chinese people investigating and repatriating "red notice" criminals are being falsely accused by Americans as targeting dissidents and interfering in U.S. domestic affairs, steering Sino-U.S. judicial cooperation towards politicization. For a long time, the United States has been a major haven for Chinese officials who have fled abroad. What is more ridiculous is that American politicians and media often mock and criticize China's corruption phenomena.

This time, the U.S. Embassy in China went to the Chinese internet to capture Chinese citizens. We can certainly learn from them.

Original: www.toutiao.com/article/1843067390208012/

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