China says it never backs down in the face of threats
after trade salvos with U.S.
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[April 05, 2018]
BEIJING (Reuters) - China has
never surrendered to external pressure and it will win any trade war
with the United States, the nation's state media stressed in a series of
editorials and columns in the hours after the world's two top economies
targeted each other with steep tariffs.
While China'a Ambassador to the United States Cui Tiankai stressed in
comments to reporters in Washington that Beijing's preference was to
resolve the trade dispute through negotiations, Beijing's official
mouthpieces were taking a more belligerent line.
The ruling Communist Party's People's Daily newspaper said Beijing's
quick counter-move had caught the Americans off guard.
"Within 24 hours of the U.S. publishing its list, China drew its sword,
and with the same strength and to the same scale, counterattacked
quickly, fiercely and with determination," the paper said in a
commentary on Thursday.
"The confidence to know that [China] will win the trade war comes from
the scale of [China's] consumer market," the paper said, noting that
China's market potential is incomparable to other economies.
Many American consumer product and industrial companies see the Chinese
market as a big source for future growth given the continued rise in the
number of people joining both the middle class and the wealthier levels
of Chinese society.
The United States' proposed list of $50 billion in duties on Chinese
goods is aimed at forcing Beijing to address what Washington says is
deeply entrenched theft of U.S. intellectual property and forced
technology transfer from U.S. companies.
China hit back within hours with its own threatened tariffs on U.S.
imports including soybeans, planes, cars, whiskey and chemicals.
The official Xinhua news agency said late on Wednesday that the U.S.
tariffs proposal would cost the United States "dearly".
"China will not be afraid or back down if a trade war is unavoidable.
The country has never surrendered to external pressure, and it will not
surrender this time either," Xinhua said.
The apparent determination not to retreat is at the polar opposite of
comments by White House National Economic Council Director Larry Kudlow,
who told Fox News Channel on Wednesday: "I believe that the Chinese will
back down and will play ball."
"BULLYING TACTICS"
Shortly after U.S. President Donald Trump's administration issued its
list, China's ambassador to the World Trade Organization urged all of
the trade body's members to join with China to counter U.S. trade
abuses.
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Workers transport imported soybeans at a port in Nantong, Jiangsu
province, China April 4, 2018. REUTERS/Stringer
"China's counter tariffs are a spectacular way of standing up to America's
bullying tactics, not only for itself, but for other countries threatened by the
United States' new trade policies," the nationalist Global Times said in an
editorial on Thursday.
While Beijing's claims that Washington is the aggressor and spurring global
protectionism, China's trading partners for years have complained that it abuses
WTO rules, and practices unfair industrial policies at home that lock foreign
companies out of crucial sectors with the intent of creating domestic champions.
China has repeatedly pledged that it would open up sectors such as financial
services, including promises to the Trump administration last year that it would
give "full and prompt market access" to U.S. payment network operators.
But despite a 2012 WTO ruling that China was discriminating against foreign
payment card companies, no U.S. firm has yet been granted a license.
Trump has said in speeches that the United States will no longer let China take
advantage of it on trade, and bipartisan support has been steadily building in
Washington to address what are seen as Chinese abuses.
Washington's some 1,300-product long list was focused on Chinese industrial
technology, transport and medical products and tailored to do the least damage
to U.S. consumers.
China appeared to be angling to inflict political costs on Trump by striking at
signature U.S. exports, including soybeans, frozen beef, cotton and other
agricultural commodities produced in states from Iowa to Texas that voted for
him in the 2016 presidential election.
Neither lists have gone into effect. Washington will hold public comment period
expected to last around two months, and Chinese officials have said its
implementation will depend on U.S. action.
Cui met with Acting U.S. Secretary of State John Sullivan in Washington on
Wednesday, and later told reporters that the two countries should avoid a trade
war.
"Negotiation would still be our preference, but it takes two to tango," Cui
said.
(Reporting by Michael Martina and Engen Tham; Editing by Martin Howell)
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