KEY POINTS
  • The Trump administration announced two actions against Chinese companies and officials just days ahead of a high-level trade meeting set to take place in Washington on Thursday and Friday.
  • "You don't do these things prior to negotiations. It does not set a good tone, that's tactically. Strategically, all these actions — I think — are causing the Chinese to wonder: 'What is the US' real motive here?'" Max Baucus, a former U.S. ambassador to China.
  • Another issue that could stall the U.S.-China trade negotiation is the ongoing protests in Hong Kong, said William Reinsch, senior advisor and Scholl Chair in international business at think tank Center for Strategic and International Studies.

The latest U.S. actions against Chinese officials and companies don't "set a good tone" for an upcoming high-level trade talk, a former American ambassador to China said Wednesday.

The Trump administration on Tuesday placed visa restrictions on Chinese officials it "believed to be responsible for, or complicit in, the detention and abuse of" Muslim minorities in China's northwestern Xinjiang region. That followed a Monday move to blacklist 28 Chinese companies alleged to be involved in surveillance and detention of minority groups in China.