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Donald Trump threatens sanctions against China, warn ally South Korea

Donald Trump threatens sanctions against China, warn ally South Korea

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump threatened retaliatory action againsttwo major Asian trading partners Tuesday, warning of sanctions againstChina while vowing to revise or scrap a free trade deal with South Korea.

Accusing Beijing of decimating American steel and aluminum industries,Trump said he was “considering all options,” including tariffs and quotas.

Trump recently received two Commerce Department reports concerning allegedChinese subsidies for steel and aluminum exports — materials that arevital for industries from construction to autos.

He has another two months to decide on possible retaliatory action, butstrongly indicated that he is leaning toward hitting back at Beijing.

“I will make a decision that reflects the best interests of the UnitedStates, including the need to address overproduction in China and othercountries,’ he said.

Experts believe any US sanctions would prompt China to respond withsanctions of its own, raising the specter of a trade war between theworld’s two largest economies.

China produces around half of the world’s steel and is accused of floodingthe market in order to keep the economic wheels turning at home.

For decades Chinese leaders have been consumed with the need to — asformer president Hu Jintao once put it — create “25 million jobs a year.”

But Trump also is under domestic pressure. He came to office vowing to be achampion of America’s rust belt and said Monday he had to act to save the”empty factories” he saw on the campaign trail.

– Widening trade deficit –

The US trade deficit — which Trump has vowed repeatedly to fix — widenedeven further during his first year in office, up 12 percent to $566 billion.

“They’re dumping and destroying our industry, and destroying the familiesof workers, and we can’t let that happen,” Trump told a group of Republicanand Democratic lawmakers at the White House.

Trump received some support from the group, but also warnings that actionagainst China could drive up prices and hurt US manufacturing outside thesteel and aluminum sectors.

“Mr. President, I think we do need to be careful here, that we don’t starta reciprocal battle on tariffs,’ said Republican Senator Roy Blunt.

“You know, we make aluminum and we make steel” he said. “But we buy a lotof aluminum and we buy a lot of steel as well.”

Daniel Ikenson of the pro-trade CATO institute said that Trump may beforced moderate his actions, if not his tone.

“Despite the rhetoric, Trump doesn’t want to subvert ‘his’ economy,”Ikenson wrote this week.

“Trump is today more aware that the impulsive actions he has threatened totake would carry some very significant economic and political costs.”

That is also true for relations with South Korea, which are alreadystrained over Trump’s saber rattling over North Korea’s nuclear program.

Taking aim at Seoul, Trump complained that America’s 2012 free trade dealwith South Korea “was a disaster,” vowing the United States wouldrenegotiate a “fair deal” or scrap it altogether.

The Trump administration initiated talks to renegotiate the UnitedStates-Korea (KORUS) trade agreement in July last year, arguing it waslopsided because American’s bilateral trade deficit had ballooned under it.

“We have a very, very bad trade deal with Korea,” Trump said. “For us itproduced nothing but losses.”

Trump’s comments came a day after he singled out South Korea and China,along with Japan, over their trade surpluses with the United States,accusing them of “getting away with murder.” – APP/AFP