After Huawei blow, China says U.S. must show sincerity
for talks
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[May 17, 2019]
By Ben Blanchard and Liangping Gao
BEIJING (Reuters) - The United States must
show sincerity if it is to hold meaningful trade talks, China said on
Friday, after U.S. President Donald Trump dramatically raised the stakes
with a potentially devastating blow to Chinese tech giant Huawei.
China has yet to say whether or how it will retaliate against the latest
escalation in trade tension, although state media has taken an
increasingly strident tone, with the ruling Communist Party's People's
Daily publishing a front-page commentary that evoked the patriotic
spirit of past wars.
China's currency slid to its weakest in almost five months, although
losses were capped after sources told Reuters that the central bank
would ensure the yuan did not weaken past the key 7-per-dollar level in
the immediate term.
The world's two largest economies are locked in an increasingly
acrimonious trade dispute that has seen them level escalating tariffs on
each other's imports in the midst of negotiations, adding to fears about
risks to global growth and knocking financial markets.
Foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang, asked about state media reports
suggesting there would be no more U.S.-China trade talks, said China
always encouraged resolving disputes between the two countries with
dialogue and consultations.
"But because of certain things the U.S. side has done during the
previous China-U.S. trade consultations, we believe if there is meaning
for these talks, there must be a show of sincerity," he told a daily
news briefing.
The United States should observe the principles of mutual respect,
equality and mutual benefit, and they must also keep their word, Lu
said, without elaborating.
On Thursday, Washington put telecoms equipment maker Huawei Technologies
Co Ltd, one of China's biggest and most successful companies, on a
blacklist that could make it extremely difficult for the telecom giant
to do business with U.S. companies.
That followed Trump's decision on May 5 to increase tariffs on $200
billion worth of Chinese imports, a major escalation after the two sides
appeared to have been close to reaching a deal in negotiations to end
their trade battle.
'WHEEL OF DESTINY'
China can be expected to make preparations for a longer-term trade war
with the United States, said a Chinese government official with
knowledge of the situation.
"Indeed, this is an important moment, but not an existential,
live-or-die moment," the official said.
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A worker cycles past containers outside a logistics center near
Tianjin Port, in northern China, May 16, 2019. REUTERS/Jason Lee
"In the short term, the trade situation between China and the United States will
be severe, and there will be challenges. Neither will it be smooth in the long
run. This will spur China to make adequate preparations in the long term."
The impact of trade friction on China's economy is "controllable", the state
planner said on Friday, pledging to take countermeasures as needed, Meng Wei, a
spokeswoman for the National Development and Reform Committee (NDRC), told a
media briefing.
The South China Morning Post, citing an unidentified source, reported that a
senior member of China's ruling Communist Party said the trade war with the
United States could reduce China's 2019 growth by 1 percentage point in the
worst-case scenario.
Wang Yang, the fourth-most senior member of the Communist Party's seven-member
Standing Committee, the top decision-making body, told a delegation of Taiwan
businessmen on Thursday that the trade war would have an impact but would not
lead to any structural changes, the paper said, citing an unidentified source
who was at the meeting.
One company that says it has been making preparations is Huawei's Hisilicon
unit, which purchases U.S. semiconductors for its parent.
Its president told staff in a letter on Friday that the company had been
secretly developing back-up products for years in case Huawei was one day unable
to obtain the advanced chips and technology it buys from the United States.
"Today, the wheel of destiny has turned and we have arrived at this extreme and
dark moment, as a super-nation ruthlessly disrupts the world's technology and
industry system," the company president said in the letter.
The letter was widely shared on Chinese social media, gaining 180 million
impressions in the few hours after it was published on the Weibo microblogging
site.
"Go Huawei! Our country's people will always support you," wrote one Weibo user
after reading the letter.
(Reporting by Ben Blanchard and Gao Liangping; Additional reporting by Jing Xu,
Lusha Zhang, Yawen Chen, Huizhong Wu and Ryan Woo; Writing by Tony Munroe;
Editing by Kim Coghill, Robert Birsel)
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