Tensions between the
United States and
China continue to run high, and they likely won't simmer when
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo meets with survivors of the Tiananmen Square massacre Tuesday afternoon.In 1989, student-led demonstrations aiming for
Democratic reforms in China were held in
Beijing before the government forcibly suppressed the movement. Pompeo extending a hand to the surviving participants certainly seems like a shot at the Chinese Communist Party, especially as it cracks down on a contemporary pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong. Earlier Tuesday, Pompeo blasted pro-Beijing authorities in Hong Kong for denying permission to hold a vigil in remembrance of the massacre for the first time in 30 years.
But some critics of the
Trump Administration think the secretary's gesture is hypocritical, since just a day earlier federal
police used tear gas and flash grenades to disperse a peaceful protest against police brutality at Lafayette Square across from the
White House so
President Trump could pose for a photo-op in front of the historic St. John's Church, and police have clashed violently with demonstrators across the country over the last several days.