Edmonton Journal

China commits to trade talks amid ‘groundless’ Huawei suspicions

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Beijing is committed to striking a trade deal with the U.S. but it’s ready to respond with more countermea­sures, said Chinese envoy Cui Tiankai, as he called the blacklisti­ng of Huawei an “unusual” act of state power against a company.

Cui said in an interview with Bloomberg TV on Friday that China wants to continue working toward a trade agreement for U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping to finalize. There’s no official discussion­s about a meeting between the two leaders, said Cui, the Chinese ambassador to the U.S.

The two sides should have cooperatio­n and collaborat­ion, he said, adding that “trade is about mutual benefits, war is about mutual destructio­n. How can you put these two very different concepts in one term?”

Trade talks between Beijing and Washington stalled this month as Trump accused China of backing out of a deal that the U.S. said was almost completed. In response, Trump hiked the tariff rate on US$200 billion in Chinese imports.

The U.S. also released a list of about US$300 billion in Chinese goods that could face additional tariffs, including clothing, toys and mobile phones. If Trump follows through on that threat, U.S. levies imposed since last year would cover essentiall­y all imports from the Asian nation.

There are signs the trade conflict is spilling over into other areas, especially technology. The Trump administra­tion last week placed Huawei Technologi­es Co. on an export blacklist, choking off China’s biggest technology company from its U.S. suppliers.

Cui said the accusation­s against Huawei are a “groundless suspicion” and he described the U.S. action as an “unusual” move that mobilizes “state power against a private company.”

Cui’s comments underscore­d China’s efforts to defend its rights and a national prize like Huawei while avoiding red lines that might shatter hopes for a truce.

Asked about Chinese retaliatio­n to the U.S.’s Huawei moves, Cui said “we will do whatever’s necessary to protect the legitimate interests of our companies, of our people and of our country.”

“If things are moving in the wrong direction, then you could see a response very soon,” he said about the timetable for a Huawei response. “But if we could work together to push in the right direction, then things will get better of course.”

At the heart of Trump’s crackdown is the suspicion that Chinese firms help Beijing spy on foreign government­s.

Huawei’s chief financial officer was arrested in Canada last year, and the U.S. is seeking her extraditio­n on charges she helped the company defraud banks by concealing business dealings with Iran in violation of U.S. sanctions. She denies the charges.

“What are people really up to under the pretext of national security? We don’t know,” said Cui on Friday.

Trump said Thursday that Huawei could “be included in some kind of trade deal” with China, without offering any details. The president also added that “Huawei is something that’s very dangerous.”

The U.S. is also considerin­g putting at least five Chinese surveillan­ce-equipment companies on the same blacklist as Huawei.

In another move that could target China, the Commerce Department said Thursday that it was considerin­g a rule to put anti-subsidy tariffs on products from countries that undervalue their currencies.

China’s tone has become more belligeren­t since the U.S. escalated the trade war. The U.S. “continues to attack Chinese companies not because they have done anything wrong, but because they are too outstandin­g for the United States to accept,” state-run Xinhua News Agency said in a commentary on Friday.

“We still believe that talks, communicat­ion, consultati­ons on equal footing is the only way out for any dispute between us and we are still committed to that,” Cui said on Friday. “We are ready to deal with the current administra­tion and President Trump.”

“So far there’s no official discussion about a possible meeting between the two presidents,” he said when asked about the potential for a meeting between Xi and Trump next month at a G20 meeting in Osaka, Japan. “But the possibilit­y is always open.”

What are people really up to under the pretext of national security? We don’t know.

 ?? Goodney/Bloomberg Christophe­r ?? “We still believe that talks, communicat­ion, consultati­ons on equal footing is the only way out for any dispute ... we are still committed to that,” says Chinese envoy Cui Tiankai.
Goodney/Bloomberg Christophe­r “We still believe that talks, communicat­ion, consultati­ons on equal footing is the only way out for any dispute ... we are still committed to that,” says Chinese envoy Cui Tiankai.

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