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US National Security Advisor slams China, calls Xi Jinping a successor of Joseph Stalin

Washington: US National Security Advisor Robert O’Brien recently launched an attack on China and likened the country's president Xi Jinping to dictator Joseph Stalin.

"The Chinese Communist Party is a Marxist-Leninist organization. The Party General Secretary Xi Jinping sees himself as Josef Stalin’s successor," he said.

Robert O’Brien said Chinese Communist Party seeks total control over the lives of its people.

Speaking on the treatment given to Muslim Uyghurs and miniorities in the country, he said: "The Chinese Communist Party reinterprets religious texts, including the Bible, to support communist party ideology. It locks up millions of Muslim Uyghurs and other minorities in reeducation camps where they are subjected to political indoctrination and forced labor, while their children are raised in Party-run orphanages."

Robert O’Brien said: " This process annihilates family, religion, culture, language, and heritage of the people who are caught up in these camps. Under the Chinese Communist Party, information is tightly controlled and expression is constantly surveilled, so that it can be quashed or shaped by the state."

He said American government should be concerned about the Xi regime.

He said the US government is taking decisive action to counter China.

"As Americans, I am certain that we will rise to successfully meet the challenge presented by the Chinese Communist Party, just as we have responded to all the great crises over our history. President Trump is leading the way. And like President Trump, I firmly believe that our best days as a country remain ahead of us," he said.

Stalin's brutal regime 

Russian dictator Stalin’s totalitarian regime was notorious for severe mass repressions, ethnic cleansing, executions, deportations and famines which killed millions of people.

Such was Stalin’s hold on Soviet politics and its social life that after his demise in 1953, Nikita Khrushchev had to order a series of nationwide political reforms known as 'De-Stalinization'.

Stalin was officially denounced on 25 February 1956 when Khrushchev, while speaking at the closed session of the 20th Party Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, shocked everyone by denouncing Stalin's dictatorial rule and his cult of personality saying it was inconsistent with the party and its ideology.    

'China is planning to remake the world in its image'

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