In a new spate of allegations,the United States on Friday accused China and Russia of stepping up cooperation to spread false narratives over the coronavirus pandemic.
The country has also accused Beijing of increasingly adopting techniques honed by Moscow.
“Even before the COVID-19 crisis we assessed a certain level of coordination between Russia and the PRC in the realm of propaganda,” said Lea Gabrielle, coordinator of the State Department’s Global Engagement Center, which tracks foreign propaganda.
“But with this pandemic the cooperation has accelerated rapidly,” she told reporters.
“We see this convergence as a result of what we consider to be pragmatism between the two actors who want to shape public understanding of the COVID[-19] pandemic for their own purposes,” she said.
Xi on Friday discussed cooperation over the pandemic in a telephone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Russia “opposes the attempts by some forces to use the epidemic as a pretext to blame China and will stand firmly by China’s side,” Putin told him, according to China’s state-run Xinhua news agency.
China and Russia often find common cause and clash with the United States on issues from Venezuela to the use of economic sanctions to disarmament.
The Global Engagement Center earlier said thousands of Russian-linked social media accounts were spreading conspiracies about the pandemic, including charging that the virus first detected last year in the Chinese metropolis of Wuhan was created by the United States.
China outraged the United States when a foreign ministry spokesman tweeted a conspiracy that the US military brought the virus to Wuhan, but the two countries reached an informal rhetorical truce in late March after telephone talks between President Donald Trump and his counterpart Xi Jinping.
Tensions have again soared as Secretary of State Mike Pompeo pushes the theory that the virus originated in a Wuhan laboratory, a stance that Beijing in turn calls disinformation.
Both the World Health Organisation and the US government’s top epidemiologist say there is no evidence the virus came from a lab, with most scientists saying it emerged at a Wuhan meat market that butchered exotic animals.
China’s ambassador to the United States, Cui Tiankai, recently bemoaned what he said was an effort to brand “objective facts as disinformation and propaganda.”
“Behind the mind-set of ‘always blame China’ is a kind of dirty politics, championed by a few people who shift the spotlight for political gain,” Cui wrote in The Washington Post.