Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

‘China won’t be pushed around on trade’

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China has warned that its critical relationsh­ip with the United States could break “like a glass,” and used the most global of stages to warn the Trump administra­tion it wouldn’t be pushed around on trade.

Foreign minister Wang Yi insisted on Friday that his country “will not be blackmaile­d” or bow to pressure. “Protection­ism will only hurt oneself, and unilateral moves will bring damage to all,” he told the UN General Assembly gathering of world leaders.

President Donald Trump this week cranked up punitive tariffs on China, and Beijing responded in kind, escalating a trade war between the world’s two largest economies.

Trump upped the ante by then accusing China of meddling in the upcoming US midterm elections because it opposes his trade policies. He has presented little evidence to back up the allegation­s, which China says are untrue. Wang, in separate remarks at a think tank, said US-China relationsh­ip was at a critical point, four decades since ties were normalized.

“The relationsh­ip between our two countries is a common asset. It must be preserved and valued. It’s the result of generation­s of people’s efforts,” Wang said. “It’s like a glass. It’s easy to break it” and would be difficult to repair, he said. Although Wang presented China as upholding multilater­al institutio­ns — drawing an implicit contrast with Trump’s anti-globalist stance — Beijing’s top diplomat said the suspicions that China seeks global hegemony and to displace the US as a world leader is false. But he warned it’s an idea that is spreading, amplifying difference­s between the two countries.

“This is a serious strategic misjudgmen­t,” Wang told the Council on Foreign Relations in New York, “that will be extremely detrimenta­l to US interests and the future of the United States.” He said China rather seeks a path of peaceful developmen­t.

He defended China’s assertive behaviour in the South China Sea, where it has built man-made islands to reinforce its sweeping territoria­l claims that are disputed by its neighbours. AP

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