The Borneo Post

G20 opens under assault from Trump on collective action

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BUENOS AIRES: G20 powers open two days of summit talks in crisis-hit Argentina on Friday after a stormy buildup dominated by US President Donald Trump’s consensus- bucking crusade to realign world trade.

Shortly before the summit kicks off, Trump’s “America First” charge will bear fruit with the signing in Buenos Aires of a successor to the North American free trade pact NAFTA.

The revamped accord, called the US-Mexico- Canada Agreement ( USMCA), looks a lot like the one it replaces. But enough has been tweaked for Trump to declare victory on behalf of the US workers he claims were cheated by NAFTA.

Yet, underlinin­g that the new deal may not be quite the gamechange­r he professes, the signing will be executed by senior trade negotiator­s from the three countries rather than their leaders attending the G20.

After imposing punishing tariffs on Chinese goods and threatenin­g more to come in January, Trump also has China in his sights as he prepares to meet President Xi Jinping on the G20 margins.

Following the USMCA signing, and once Argentina’s President Mauricio Macri has opened the first of the summit’s two days, a mass protest is planned for central Buenos Aires Friday afternoon.

Argentines are grappling with soaring inflation and unemployme­nt caused by an economic crisis, which has led to a deeply unpopular bailout from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

“There’s a lot of people who don’t have houses and don’t have work. They are not focusing on the people who have needs,” barber Ariel Villegas, 47, said at one protest Thursday outside the Argentine Congress building.

The government is vowing zero tolerance of violence as it hosts its biggest ever internatio­nal gathering, and says it has won promises from the protest organisers to keep the streets calm. The G20 summit will be accompanie­d by an array of diplomatic initiative­s with several bilateral meetings by the leaders attending, including Russian President Vladimir Putin, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

The United States has cast talks Saturday with Xi as a deadline for China to cave on key trade concerns of Trump, who has slapped 250 billion in tariffs on the Asian power.

The state-run China Daily said Friday that both sides could find a deal in Buenos Aires but warned the United States against pushing too hard on technology, amid US accusation­s of widespread theft by Beijing.

“Should there be any other aspiration­s, such as taking advantage of the trade spat to throttle Chinese growth, then an agreement is unlikely to be reached,” the newspaper said in an editorial.

“But a good deal means both sides walking away happy. The US should give its habitual winner-take-all approach to internatio­nal relations the weekend off,” it said.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel is one of the leaders due to sit down with Trump on Friday. But she will miss the summit’s opening after her plane was forced to make an emergency landing in Cologne due to a technical problem.

Her temporary absence could complicate French President Emmanuel Macron’s attempts to build a European front against Trump at a meeting of EU leaders attending the G20 on Friday morning.

Late on Thursday, Macron was defiant as he rejected those who wish to confront economic challenges by being “bellicose, isolationi­st and closing down borders”.

He also warned that France would refuse to move forward on a trade accord with South America’s Mercosur bloc if Brazil’s incoming far-right president, Jair Bolsonaro, pulls out of the Paris climate accord.

G20 sources said climate change was emerging as the biggest stumbling block to agreement on a joint communique in Buenos Aires when the summit concludes on Saturday.

Trump has yanked US out of the Paris pact, and his opposition to collective action stands in defiance of scientists’ increasing­ly urgent warnings that the planetary threat needs policy redress now. — AFP

 ??  ?? (Front, from left) Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto, Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau are pictured after signing a new free trade agreement in Buenos Aires on the sidelines of the G20 Leaders’ Summit. — AFP photo
(Front, from left) Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto, Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau are pictured after signing a new free trade agreement in Buenos Aires on the sidelines of the G20 Leaders’ Summit. — AFP photo

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