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						Exclusive: China backtracked on nearly all aspects of 
						U.S. trade deal - sources
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		 [May 08, 2019]   
		By David Lawder, Jeff Mason and Michael Martina 
 WASHINGTON/BEIJING (Reuters) - The 
		diplomatic cable from Beijing arrived in Washington late on Friday 
		night, with systematic edits to a nearly 150-page draft trade agreement 
		that would blow up months of negotiations between the world's two 
		largest economies, according to three U.S. government sources and three 
		private sector sources briefed on the talks.
 
 The document was riddled with reversals by China that undermined core 
		U.S. demands, the sources told Reuters.
 
 In each of the seven chapters of the draft trade deal, China had deleted 
		its commitments to change laws to resolve core complaints that caused 
		the United States to launch a trade war: theft of U.S. intellectual 
		property and trade secrets; forced technology transfers; competition 
		policy; access to financial services; and currency manipulation.
 
 U.S. President Donald Trump responded in a tweet on Sunday vowing to 
		raise tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods from 10 to 25 
		percent on Friday – timed to land in the middle of a scheduled visit by 
		China's Vice Premier Liu He to Washington to continue trade talks.
 
 The stripping of binding legal language from the draft struck directly 
		at the highest priority of U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer - 
		who views changes to Chinese laws as essential to verifying compliance 
		after years of what U.S. officials have called empty reform promises.
 
		
		 
		
 Lighthizer has pushed hard for an enforcement regime more like those 
		used for punitive economic sanctions – such as those imposed on North 
		Korea or Iran – than a typical trade deal.
 
 "This undermines the core architecture of the deal," said a 
		Washington-based source with knowledge of the talks.
 
 "PROCESS OF NEGOTIATION"
 
 Spokespeople for the White House, the U.S. Trade Representative and the 
		U.S. Treasury Department did not immediately respond to requests for 
		comment.
 
 Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang told a briefing on 
		Wednesday that working out disagreements over trade was a "process of 
		negotiation" and that China was not "avoiding problems".
 
 Geng referred specific questions on the trade talks to the Commerce 
		Ministry, which did not respond immediately to faxed questions from 
		Reuters.
 
 Lighthizer and U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin were taken aback 
		at the extent of the changes in the draft. The two cabinet officials on 
		Monday told reporters that Chinese backtracking had prompted Trump's 
		tariff order but did not provide details on the depth and breadth of the 
		revisions.
 
 Liu last week told Lighthizer and Mnuchin that they needed to trust 
		China to fulfil its pledges through administrative and regulatory 
		changes, two of the sources said. Both Mnuchin and Lighthizer considered 
		that unacceptable, given China's history of failing to fulfil reform 
		pledges.
 
 One private-sector source briefed on the talks said the last round of 
		negotiations had gone very poorly because "China got greedy".
 
 "China reneged on a dozen things, if not more ... The talks were so bad 
		that the real surprise is that it took Trump until Sunday to blow up," 
		the source said.
 
 "After 20 years of having their way with the U.S., China still appears 
		to be miscalculating with this administration."
 
		
            [to top of second column] | 
            
			 
            
			Chinese Vice Premier Liu He, right, looks as U.S. Treasury Secretary 
			Steven Mnuchin, center, swaps places with his Trade Representative 
			Robert Lighthizer during a photograph session before they proceed to 
			their meeting at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing, 
			Wednesday, May 1, 2019. Andy Wong/Pool via REUTERS 
            
			 
FURTHER TALKS THIS WEEK
 The rapid deterioration of negotiations rattled global stock markets, bonds and 
commodities this week. Until Sunday, markets had priced in the expectation that 
officials from the two countries were close to striking a deal.
 
 Investors and analysts questioned whether Trump's tweet was a negotiating ploy 
to wring more concessions from China. The sources told Reuters the extent of the 
setbacks in the revised text were serious and that Trump's response was not 
merely a negotiating strategy.
 
 Chinese negotiators said they couldn't touch the laws, said one of the 
government sources, calling the changes "major."
 
Changing any law in China requires a unique set of processes that can't be 
navigated quickly, said a Chinese official familiar with the talks. The official 
disputed the assertion that China was backtracking on its promises, adding that 
U.S. demands were becoming more "harsh" and the path to a deal more "narrow" as 
the negotiations drag on.
 Liu is set to arrive in Washington on Thursday for two days of talks that just 
last week were widely seen as pivotal – a possible last round before a historic 
trade deal. Now, U.S. officials have little hope that Liu will come bearing any 
offer that can get talks back on track, said two of the sources.
 
 To avert escalation, some of the sources said, Liu would have to scrap China's 
proposed text changes and agree to make new laws. China would also have to move 
further towards the U.S. position on other sticking points, such as demands for 
curbs on Chinese industrial subsidies and a streamlined approval process for 
genetically engineered U.S. crops.
 
 The administration said the latest tariff escalation would take effect at 12:01 
a.m. Friday, hiking levees on Chinese products such as internet modems and 
routers, printed circuit boards, vacuum cleaners and furniture.
 
 The Chinese reversal may give China hawks in the Trump administration, including 
Lighthizer, an opening to take a harder stance.
 
 
 
Mnuchin - who has been more open to a deal with improved market access, and at 
times clashed with Lighthizer – appeared in sync with Lighthizer in describing 
the changes to reporters on Monday, while still leaving open the possibility 
that new tariffs could be averted with a deal.
 
 Trump's tweets left no room for backing down, and Lighthizer made it clear that, 
despite continuing talks, "come Friday, there will be tariffs in place."
 
 (Additional reporting by Chris Prentice in NEW YORK, and Jing Xu and Ben 
Blanchard in BEIJING; Editing by Simon Webb and Brian Thevenot)
 
				 
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