Home Latest News China Urges U.S. to ‘Cease and Desist’ Attacks on Trade Relations

China Urges U.S. to ‘Cease and Desist’ Attacks on Trade Relations

by AFP

File photo. Fred Dufour—AFP

Denouncing Trump’s decision to impose tariffs on Chinese goods, Beijing says U.S. president is trying to provoke trade war

Beijing forcefully denounced U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision on Thursday to impose tariffs on billions of dollars in Chinese goods, accusing him of putting the two economies on course for a trade war.

“If a trade war were initiated by the U.S., China would fight to the end to defend its own legitimate interests with all necessary measures,” China’s embassy in Washington said in a statement. “We urge the U.S. to cease and desist,” the embassy said, warning that by endangering China-U.S. trade relations Washington will “eventually end up hurting itself.”

In the latest in a series of aggressive moves on trade, mostly targeting China, Trump authorized new sanctions on up to $60 billion of Chinese imports to retaliate against “theft” of American intellectual property. The tariffs and the goods targeted will be identified in the coming weeks, but Trump said they could be as high as 25 percent—what he called a “reciprocal tax.”

The embassy’s statement was issued moments after markets closed on Wall Street but investors had already taken Trump’s move as a bad omen, with the benchmark Dow Jones Industrial Average falling more than 700 points amid fears of a tit-for-tat trade confrontation.

Washington accuses Beijing of forcing U.S. companies to enter joint ventures and transfer technology and trade secrets to their Chinese partners. At the same time U.S. companies are not able to license intellectual property in China.

U.S. officials also allege China has hacked U.S. networks and conducted industrial espionage to steal intellectual property.

The embassy said China had shown “sincerity in making reasonable suggestions” and made “great efforts” to deal with the current trade imbalance with the United States.

The United States recorded a record $337.2 billion trade deficit with China last year, and Trump demanded it be reduced by $100 billion. For the second time in a month, events in Washington whipped anxiety that Trump’s “America First” confrontations with major trading partners were headed toward full-scale trade conflict. But Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross suggested the new measures on intellectual property were in fact a way of bringing Beijing to the table, calling them “the prelude to a set of negotiations.”

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