The Phnom Penh Post

Trump preps China sanctions

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PRESIDENT Donald Trump was poised to unveil sanctions against China on Thursday for what he called the theft of US intellectu­al property, fuelling fears of a trade war as Beijing vowed to retaliate.

White House spokesman Raj Shah said that Trump will announce actions following an “investigat­ion into China’s state-led, market-distorting efforts to force, pressure, and steal US technologi­es and intellectu­al property”.

According to his schedule, released by the White House on Wednesday evening, he was to sign “a Presidenti­al Memorandum targeting China’s economic aggression”.

The Chinese Commerce Ministry issued a pre-emptive warning, saying in a statement on Thursday that Beijing “will certainly take all necessary measures to resolutely defend its legitimate rights and interests”.

It is just weeks since Trump shortcircu­ited White House deliberati­ons and announced a raft of sanctions on foreign-produced steel and aluminium off the cuff.

That move prompted the resignatio­n of top economic adviser Gary Cohn, a global stock market selloff, legal disputes and threats of retaliator­y measures.

On Wednesday, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell warned that the prospect of a trade war was a growing threat to the world’s largest economy.

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang urged Trump on Tuesday to not act “emotionall­y”, but the impulsive president is showing no sign of backing down.

US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer recently put a separate proposed package of $30 billion in tariffs on Chinese imports on the president’s desk.

And Trump appears to have agreed to at least that amount, as he tries to fulfil campaign promises to get tough on “cheating” by US trade partners, which he says have destroyed American jobs.

The US trade deficit with China ran to a record $375 billion last year – but US exports to the country were also at a record.

Washington has long accused Beijing of forcing US companies to turn over proprietar­y commercial informatio­n and intellectu­al property as a condition of operating in China.

Trump claims to have built up a generally good relationsh­ip with his Chinese counterpar­t Xi Jinping whom he has praised for his role in pressuring North Korea over its nuclear program.

However, the trade dispute threatens to cast a pall over those relations, especially given the recent warnings from Beijing.

A senior official in Lighthizer’s office said on Wednesday the Clinton, Bush and Obama administra­tions had attempted over the decades to coax China into respecting market economics and trade liberalisa­tion, but all had failed.

The Trump administra­tion opened an investigat­ion last August, acting on a series of allegation­s against China, including that as a condition of doing business, Beijing forces US companies to enter joint ventures and transfer technology and trade secrets to domestic partners, and that American firms are not able to license intellectu­al property in China as freely as Chinese companies.

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

Xi sent his top economic adviser Liu He to Washington this month to discuss trade tensions, but the US official said that at no point had the Chinese made a constructi­ve proposal.

“Certainly by November, the background was such that officials in China had reason to know about the concerns we’ve raised . . . At least, as of today the administra­tion has not been satisfied with the types of responses we’ve been getting from China,” the senior official in Lighthizer’s office said, speaking on condition of anonymity in a briefing to reporters.

“Obviously the president will have the final say in terms of what we end up doing here.”

“As a general matter, we do have very strong evidence that China uses foreign ownership restrictio­ns such as joint venture requiremen­ts and foreign equity limitation­s to require or pressure technology transfer from US companies to Chinese entities,” he added.

Along with the announceme­nt of that offensive, Washington also held out the possibilit­y of a detente with regards to the EU, which reacted furiously to the news of steel and aluminium tariffs.

In a joint statement, US Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross and EU Trade Commission­er Cecilia Malmstroem said they had agreed to immediatel­y begin “a process of discussion” on the tariffs and other matters “with a view to identifyin­g mutually acceptable outcomes as rapidly as possible”.

The White House already said Canada and Mexico, which are major producers of the metals, will temporaril­y be exempt from the tariffs during talks to renegotiat­e the North American Free Trade Agreement.

 ?? NICOLAS ASFOURI/AFP ?? US President Donald Trump and China’s President Xi Jinping leave a business leaders event at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on November 9.
NICOLAS ASFOURI/AFP US President Donald Trump and China’s President Xi Jinping leave a business leaders event at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on November 9.

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