Audio By Carbonatix
Terry Branstad will be stepping down as United States Ambassador to China after more than three years in Beijing, a source confirmed to CNN Monday.
Branstad is expected to leave Beijing before the November presidential election the source said.
The announcement comes amid increasing tensions between the US and China on several fronts.
The Chinese government announced on Friday it would be imposing unspecified restrictions on senior US diplomats and personnel inside China after Washington put in place a similar measure targeting Beijing's diplomatic corps on September 3.
In a Twitter post early Monday, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo thanked Branstad for his service to the American people as the US Ambassador.
"President (Donald Trump) chose Ambassador Branstad because his decades-long experience dealing with China made him the best person to represent the Administration and to defend American interests and ideals in this important relationship," Pompeo said.Pompeo didn't give a reason for Branstad's departure, or any announcement about a potential successor to the important diplomatic post.
Branstad was one of then-President-elect Trump's first ambassadorial picks in December 2016, shortly after Trump won the US Presidential election.
Trump said at the time that the then-Iowa governor was picked for his experience in public policy, trade and agriculture, as well as his "long-time relationship with (Chinese) President Xi Jinping," whom Branstad had known since 1985 through US-China government exchanges.
During that period, the two were believed to have maintained a friendship of sorts, with Xi meeting again with Branstad during a visit to the US in 2012 while still vice-president.Originally Branstad's appointment was welcomed by Beijing, with Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang lauding him as an "old friend of the Chinese people."
But Branstad has overseen one of the rockiest periods of US-China relations in recent history. Since his appointment, the Trump administration has placed tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars of Chinese goods as part of a long-running trade war.
It has also banned Chinese technology firms such as Huawei from the country's communications infrastructure and receiving US components, and tightened visa restrictions on Chinese state media journalists working in the US.
On September 9, an opinion piece written by Branstad, in which he accused the Chinese government of "exploiting" US openness in recent decades, was rejected for publication by Communist Party mouthpiece People's Daily for being "seriously inconsistent with facts."
"If you do wish to publish this op-ed in the People's Daily, you should make substantive revisions based on facts in the principle of equality and mutual respect," the state media publication said in its rejection letter.
In response, Secretary of State Pompeo accused People's Daily of "hypocrisy," saying that if the Chinese government was a mature power, it would "respect the right for Western diplomats to speak directly to the Chinese people."
Latest Stories
-
“Everybody looks at me differently; some say I’m pretty” – Abigail Anderson opens up on living with vitiligo
51 seconds -
President Trump’s moment of opportunity and the world at a crossroads
2 minutes -
Ghana Cocoa board moves toward economic independence amid $2.5 billion debt crisis
3 minutes -
AGA Obuasi Mine & partners inspire girls at Asare Bediako SHS to pursue careers in STEM
28 minutes -
The 2026 WAFCON tournament will continue – CAF
33 minutes -
Ministry of Youth Development urges responsible celebrations ahead of Valentine’s Day
36 minutes -
DVLA clears 400k licence backlog, expands 24-hour operations
45 minutes -
AMA hands over repaired bus to Greater Accra Market Association
47 minutes -
Be purposeful about political interest—Prof Oquaye urges youth
49 minutes -
Deputy Transport Minister urges innovation at Ghana Airports to boost revenue
49 minutes -
When love turns competitive: The social media effect on Valentine’s Day celebrations
49 minutes -
Ghana to sign more visa waiver agreements as passport gains global strength — Ablakwa
57 minutes -
Photos: Mahama backs Ghana’s path to first female president
58 minutes -
Gov’t targets over 10m chicks in nationwide Nkoko Nkitinkiti project expansion
1 hour -
Provident Insurance celebrates World Radio Day on Joy FM’s Super Morning Show
1 hour
