The Borneo Post

Trump growing frustrated with China, weighs trade steps — Officials

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WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump is growing increasing­ly frustrated with China over its inaction on North Korea and bilateral trade issues and is now considerin­g possible trade actions against Beijing, three senior administra­tion officials told Reuters.

The officials said Trump was looking at options including tariffs on steel imports, which Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross already has said he is considerin­g as part of a national security study of the US steel industry.

Whether Trump would take any steps against China remains unclear.

In April, he backed off from a threat to withdraw from NAFTA after he said Canadian and Mexican leaders telephoned him asking him to halt a planned executive order in favor of opening discussion­s.

The officials said there was no consensus on the way forward with China and they did not say what other options were being studied.

No decision was expected this week, a senior official said.

Chinese steel already is subject to dozens of anti- dumping and anti-subsidy orders. As a result it has only a small share of the US market.

“What’s guiding this is he ran to protect American industry and American workers,” one of the US officials said, referring to Trump’s 2016 election promise to take a hard line on trade with China.

On North Korea, Trump “feels like he gave China a chance to make a difference” but has not seen enough results, the official said.

The United States has pressed China to exert more economic and diplomatic pressure on North Korea to help rein in its nuclear and missile programmes. Beijing has repeatedly said its influence on North Korea is limited and that it is doing all it can.

“They did a little, not a lot,” the official said.

“And if he’s not going to get what he needs on that, he needs to move ahead on his broader agenda on trade and on North Korea.”

US Ambassador to China Terry Branstad, who arrived in Beijing on Tuesday, spoke reporters outside his residence on Wednesday and said the United States hoped to collaborat­e with China.

“We need to work together to deal with some of the pressing, difficult issues, such as the threat from North Korea. We want to work together to denucleari­se the Korean Peninsula,” he said.

The death of American university student Otto Warmbier last week, after his release from 17 months of imprisonme­nt in Pyongyang, has further complicate­d Trump’s approach to North Korea, his top national security challenge.

Trump signaled his disappoint­ment with China’s efforts in a tweet last week: “While I greatly appreciate the efforts of President Xi & China to help with North Korea, it has not worked out. At least I know China tried!”

Trump had made a grand gesture of his desire for warm ties with Chinese President Xi Jinping when he played host to Xi in April at his Mar-a-Lago retreat in Palm Beach, Florida.

“I think China will be stepping up,” Trump said at the time.

Since then, however, North Korea’s tests of long-range missiles have continued unabated and there have been reports it is preparing for another undergroun­d nuclear test.

Trump dropped by last Thursday as White House national security adviser H R McMaster and Trump senior adviser Jared Kushner were meeting Chinese State Councillor Yang Jiechi, an official said.

China’s inability to make headway on North Korea was one of the topics that was discussed, according to two people familiar with the meeting.

In a statement last week, China’s foreign ministry said Yang had met McMaster and Kushner, but it gave no details. — Reuters

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