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Donald Trump zeroes in on China after settling North American trade details.

- HEATHER SCOTT

WASHINGTON: Even as he announced a new trade deal with Canada and Mexico on Monday, US President Donald Trump again went after China, making it clear a truce with Beijing was unlikely to come soon.

Trump told reporters China wanted to open negotiatio­ns but “frankly, it’s too early to talk.”

With US tariffs now on $250 billion in Chinese annual exports, about half the total that comes into the US market, and Trump threatenin­g to target the other half, relations with Beijing have deteriorat­ed.

That has spilled over into other areas of diplomacy: A meeting between Defence Secretary Jim Mattis and his Chinese counterpar­t, General Wei Fenghe, to discuss security issues has been cancelled, a US defence official said on Monday.

And even the new US-Mexico-Canada Agreement that updates the existing continenta­l free trade pact reveals Washington’s strategy for countering China — by essentiall­y forbidding any free trade deals with Beijing by any of the USMCA partners.

Trump acknowledg­ed the importance of relations with Beijing, especially in talks with North Korea, and left the door open to negotiatio­ns at some point.

“China wants to talk. We want to talk to them. We want them to help us with North Korea,” he said, referring efforts to negotiate a deal to denucleari­se the Korean peninsula.

But he again slammed China, saying “they have been ripping us off for so many years,” and showed no sign of backing down on his threat to impose tariffs on all Chinese imports. “It’s a privilege for them to do business with us.”

In the newly-agreed USMCA, negotiatin­g a trade agreement with a “non-market economy” — which describes China’s status — is grounds for any of the three North American partners to terminate the agreement and replace it with a bilateral treaty.

“That’s huge. I’ve never seen anything like that,” George Washington University trade expert Susan Aaronson told AFP.

“And while many countries have complained about Trump’s ‘saber rattling’ on trade, they seem to agree they should all be aiming their tariffs at China,” Syracuse University trade economist Mary Lovely said.

“The provision is a clear signal of where they’re headed,” she said. “It definitely seems to be circling the wagons against China.”

The key lesson Trump could take from the Nafta negotiatio­ns is that strong-arm tactics work and this could have ramificati­ons for coming talks with China, Japan and the European Union.

Trump has threatened to impose steep tariffs on autos worldwide, again invoking a controvers­ial national security justificat­ion, and while the USMCA protects Canada and Mexico, the threat has brought Brussels to the table.

Although most trade experts were surprised the final deal turned out as well as it did — incorporat­ing many of the improvemen­ts from the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p that Trump jettisoned by backing out of that agreement on his first day in office — they say Washington’s heavy-handed approach worked.

“It’s sad to say that,” said Patrick Leblond, a trade expert with Canada’s Center for Internatio­nal Governance Innovation.

“Trump made unacceptab­le demands and then added all these threats, which gained credibilit­y when Trump actually followed through with tariffs on steel and aluminum,’’ he said.

That, Lovely warned, “is going to be the playbook.”

Trump spelled it out himself on Monday: “Because of the power of tariffs and the power we have with tariffs, we in many cases won’t even have to use them. That’s how powerful they are. And how good they are.”

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