Trade and missiles not related, China tells Trump
The North Korea nuclear issue and China-US trade are two issues that are in two completely different domains.
Qian Keming
BEIJING: China said the US should not link trade to discussions about North Korea’s nuclear programme, after President Donald Trump accused Beijing of taking no action on Pyongyang despite profiting from business with America.
“We believe that the North Korea nuclear issue and China-US trade are two issues that are in two completely different domains,” Chinese Vice Minister of Commerce Qian Keming told reporters, adding “the issues are not related, and should not be discussed together”.
“In general, China-US trade, including mutual investment, is mutually beneficial, and both China and the United States have gained great profits from bilateral trade and investment cooperation,” he said.
The comments came in response to a question about tweets from Trump on Saturday warning that he would no longer allow China to “do nothing” on North Korea, after the hermit state launched its second intercontinental ballistic missile test.
Trump, who is at loggerheads with Beijing over how to handle Kim’s regime, has repeatedly urged China to rein in its recalcitrant neighbour, but Beijing insists dialogue is the only practical way forward.
In his critique, Trump linked trade woes with the Asian giant to policy on North Korea, after South Korea indicated it was speeding up the deployment of a US missile defence system (THAAD) that has infuriated China.
The president’s tweets coincided with a 10-hour bilateral mission that saw US B-1B bombers along with fighter jets from the South Korean and Japanese air forces practise intercept and formation drills.
It was followed on Sunday by the successful test of a THAAD missile defence system in Alaska.
China, Pyongyang’s main economic and diplomatic ally, opposes any military intervention and calls for a resolution through dialogue.
It has also long argued that the THAAD deployment in South Korea will destabilise the region.
On trade, the United States has blamed the unbalanced relationship – marked by a trade deficit with China of US$309bil (RM1.3 trillion) last year – on Beijing’s policies that impede access to their market.
China says Washington’s own rules restricting US high-tech exports are partially to blame. — AFP