Imperial Valley Press

Trump pushes ‘America first’ during trade talk

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DANANG, Vietnam (AP) — President Donald Trump stood before a summit of Asian leaders keen on regional trade pacts and delivered a roaring “America first” message Friday, denouncing China for unfair trade practices just a day after he had heaped praise on President Xi Jinping in Beijing.

“We are not going to let the United States be taken advantage of anymore,” Trump told CEOs on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n conference. “I am always going to put America first, the same way that I expect all of you in this room to put your countries first.”

The president — who pulled the United States out of the Pacific Rim trade pact known as the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p — said the U.S. would no longer join “large agreements that tie our hands, surrender our sovereignt­y and make meaningful enforcemen­t practicall­y impossible.”

Instead, he said, the U.S. will pursue one-onone trade deals with other nations that pledge fair and reciprocal trade. The message stood in sharp contrast to the behindthe-scenes negotiatio­ns taking place among other countries at the summit on a successor to TPP.

As for China, Trump said he’d spoken “openly and directly” with Xi about the nation’s abusive trade practices and “the enormous trade deficits they have produced with the United States.”

It was a stark change in tone from the day before, when Trump was Xi’s guest of honor during a state visit in Beijing. There, Trump opted for flattering Xi and blaming past U.S. presidents for the trade deficit.

Trump said China’s trade surplus, which stood at $223 billion for the first 10 months of the year, was unacceptab­le. He repeated his language from Thursday, when he said he did “not blame China” or any other country “for taking advantage of the United States on trade.”

But Trump added forceful complaints about “the audacious theft of intellectu­al property,” ‘’massive subsidizin­g of industries through colossal stateowned enterprise­s,” and American companies being targeted by “state-affiliated actors for economic gain” — without singling China out by name.

U.S. officials have raised similar concerns in the past about China, especially with regard to intellectu­al property.

On Saturday, Trump attended meetings with leaders of the 21-member APEC countries. Later in the day, he was to fly to Hanoi, the capital, to attend a state banquet before formal meetings Sunday with Vietnam’s president and prime minister.

In a major breakthrou­gh, trade ministers from 11 nations remaining in the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p — representi­ng roughly 13.5 percent of the global economy — said Saturday they had reached a deal to proceed with the free-trade pact after it was thrown into doubt when Trump abandoned it.

Behind the scenes, White House officials quietly negotiated with the Kremlin over whether Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin would hold a formal meeting on the sidelines in Danang, with the Russians raising expectatio­ns for such a session.

As speculatio­n built, the two sides tried to craft the framework of a deal that Trump and Putin could announce in a formal bilateral meeting, according to two administra­tion officials not authorized to speak publicly about private discussion­s.

Though North Korea and the Ukraine had been discussed, the two sides focused on trying to strike an agreement about a path to resolve Syria’s civil war once the Islamic State group is defeated, according to officials. But the talks stalled and, just minutes before Air Force One touched down in Vietnam, White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders told reporters that the meeting was off.

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