Albuquerque Journal

Postal union warns of fallout if U.S. leaves treaty

Administra­tion debating leaving over China concerns

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GENEVA — No internatio­nal letters, no internatio­nal packages: A top official with a 192-country postal union says that’s what Americans can expect if the Trump administra­tion goes through with plans to pull out of an internatio­nal postal treaty over concerns about China.

Pascal Clivaz, deputy director-general of the Switzerlan­d-based Universal Postal Union, says the agency reached out quickly to U.S. officials after receiving a letter from U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo this week announcing Washington’s plan to pull out of the union in a year if the treaty isn’t renegotiat­ed.

The U.S. says it’s willing to renegotiat­e. But the threat is the latest sign of U.S. President Donald Trump’s go-it-alone approach to many issues, from the environmen­t to trade to the Iran nuclear deal.

“It will have dramatic consequenc­es for American consumers. It will cost them enormously. They will be all alone against all the countries of the world,” Clivaz told The Associated Press on Friday. “They won’t even be able to send (a package) to a neighborin­g country. It’s an accord that links everybody.”

Word of the planned pullout is the latest facet of Washington’s multi-level trade dispute with Beijing. The U.S. administra­tion says the treaty allows China to ship packages to the U.S. at discounted rates at the expense of American businesses.

Clivaz acknowledg­ed the U.S. concerns about China were at the root of the problem, but said agreements within the UPU since 2016 have moved toward “improving the issue with China.”

“It’s not at the level that Mr. Trump and others want it, but we’re close. So we want to continue negotiatin­g,” he said.

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