The Borneo Post

Trump security plan boosts case for steel, aluminium curbs – Official

-

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump’s new security strategy bolsters the case for trade actions to protect US economic interests on national security grounds, including possible import tariffs on steel and aluminium, a senior Trump administra­tion official said.

The strategy document released on Monday did not specifical­ly mention the Commerce Department’s ‘Section 232’ investigat­ions into whether rising steel and aluminium imports represent a threat to national security.

With recommenda­tions due in January, the probes could lead to broad tariffs or import quotas under a Cold War-era trade law.

The official said the document made clear that Trump considered economic strength to be an integral part of national security and “formalizes” the link between the two.

The 232 probes on steel and aluminium “are being discussed in the context of national security. The strategy highlights the importance of industrial strength, and that is also an element of the 232 analysis,” the official said.

The official said other trade-related actions that fit with the strategy document included a ‘Section 301’ investigat­ion into China’s intellectu­al property practices that also could lead to further China-focused trade enforcemen­t cases similar to the anti-dumping and anti-subsidy probe into Chinese-made aluminium sheet products recently initiated by the US government.

“I think there will be enforcemen­t actions by the US that are related to the non-market challenge from China,” the official said. “The strategy recognizes that China is a rival and that puts into context that we need to take steps to protect American interests and American workers.”

The strategy document lumped together China and Russia as competitor­s seeking to challenge US power and erode the country’s security and prosperity.

Despite meetings between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping that showcased a warm personal relationsh­ip between them, trade relations between Washington and Beijing have cooled following economic dialogue talks in July that failed to produce any steps to reduce the US trade deficit with China.

The US Treasury’s top economic diplomat, Undersecre­tary for Internatio­nal Affairs David Malpass, told the Financial Times last month there were no plans to resume the dialogue talks with Beijing.

The United States also recently joined the European Union in opposing China’s demands that the World Trade Organizati­on recognize it as a ‘market economy’ – a move that would severely weaken Western trade defences against a flood of cheap Chinese goods.

In a thinly veiled warning to China, the Trump security document said: “The United States will engage industrial­ized democracie­s and other like-minded states to defend against economic aggression, in all its forms, that threatens our common prosperity and security.”

Reacting to the document, China said Washington should accept its developmen­t and urged more cooperatio­n, adding that confrontat­ion would bring mutual losses. The Kremlin dismissed the document as ‘imperialis­t.’ — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia