Post Tribune (Sunday)

Trump, Xi plan to restart trade talks

US won’t levy new tariffs on China; sales to Huawei OK

- By Don Lee Los Angeles Times

US to hold off on imposing new tariffs on China, sales to Huawei OK.

OSAKA, Japan — President Donald Trump said Saturday that the United States and China would restart trade talks and that he would hold off on imposing new tariffs, marking a de-escalation of tensions between the world’s two largest economies.

After meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping at the G-20 summit in Japan, Trump said that he had also agreed to allow U.S. companies to sell their products to the telecom giant Huawei.

The Commerce Department last month placed Huawei on a blacklist as a national security risk, threatenin­g to choke the Chinese firm by prohibitin­g U.S. sales of critical chips and other components to Huawei.

Huawei is one of China’s most successful global companies, and its status has become a linchpin in a widening dispute between the two countries over trade, technology and security matters.

Trump did not remove the blacklist on Huawei, and said that issue and the broader national security concerns involving Huawei would be considered later, possibly at the final stage of the trade talks.

The president could face a backlash from lawmakers for giving relief to Huawei, which many see as a security threat, but Trump said it would benefit American companies that sell to the Chinese firm.

In an apparent exchange for leniency on Huawei and backing away from levying new tariffs, Trump said China would be buying a “tremendous amount” of U.S. agricultur­al products even as the two sides negotiate.

“We’re going to work with China on where we left off to see if we can make a deal,” Trump said at the closing of the summit.

In the meantime, he said, “we’re going to give them lists of things we want them to buy. ... It’s going to be great for our farmers.”

China’s official statement on the talks published Saturday on state-owned Xinhua news agency said Trump and Xi agreed to resume trade talks “on the basis of equality and mutual respect.”

But there was no joint statement of what Trump and Xi agreed to, and it is not clear how the two sides would interpret such language.

U.S. and Chinese trade officials have been negotiatin­g on and off for more than a year, but talks broke off in early May after U.S. officials accused China of walking back commitment­s that they had previously made. Trump then announced an increase in tariffs on $200 billion of imports from China, which took effect in May.

Trump also threatened to slap tariffs on roughly $300 billion more of Chinese goods, and the U.S. trade representa­tive held five days of public hearings last week as part of the formal process before the new tariffs could be applied.

In all, Trump has imposed 25% tariffs on about $250 billion of Chinese products — and those have not been lifted. China’s retaliator­y tariffs on about $110 billion of U.S. goods also remain in place.

It wasn’t clear when trade talks would resume, and unlike past moves in which Trump called off tariffs, there was no deadline set on when a deal would need to be reached before the threat of duties is reinstated.

Saturday’s meeting between Xi and Trump was held on the sidelines of the G-20, and it carried high drama as many world leaders gathered in Osaka openly fretted about rising trade friction and the potentiall­y devastatin­g effects it could have on a fragile global economy.

In the United States, retailers and business groups, worried about a further escalation of tariffs and the economic damage that could do, have been urging the two sides to return to the negotiatin­g table.

Trump’s decision to hold off on applying more tariffs on China had a deja vu quality to it.

On the sidelines of the last G-20 meeting in December, in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Trump had a dinner with Xi and then backed off his threat to raise tariffs on Jan. 1. That truce gave negotiator­s another 90 days, and in February, Trump pushed out the deadline again indefinite­ly. When talks fell apart in May, Trump went ahead and raised tariffs.

This time, it was after a lunch-hour meeting with Xi that Trump cut the deal to call off a new round of tariffs, on $300 billion of Chinese goods.

At the start of their meeting, inside a room in Osaka’s exhibition and convention center, the two leaders sat at a long table, with Trump and Xi facing each other, aides at their sides.

Xi began by referring to the so-called ping-pong diplomacy that began in 1971 that eventually led to the establishm­ent of diplomatic relations between the United States and China in 1979.

“China and the United States both benefit from cooperatio­n, and lose from confrontat­ion,” Xi said.

Trump, in his opening remarks, fondly recalled his November 2017 state visit to Beijing when Xi rolled out the red carpet for him.

Trump’s chief trade official, Robert Lighthizer, has insisted that China must make concession­s on structural issues involving its government- controlled economy, including intellectu­al property protection and technology transfer policies — and that Beijing’s commitment­s must be enforceabl­e.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH/AP ?? At the G-20 summit on Saturday, President Donald Trump said U.S. companies can sell to Chinese telecom giant Huawei.
SUSAN WALSH/AP At the G-20 summit on Saturday, President Donald Trump said U.S. companies can sell to Chinese telecom giant Huawei.
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