US President Donald Trump on Friday announced an additional 100 percent tariff on China and threatened to cancel a summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平), reigniting his trade war with Beijing in a row over export curbs on rare earth minerals.
Trump said the extra levies, plus US export controls on “any and all critical software,” would come into effect from Nov. 1 in retaliation for what he called Beijing’s “extraordinarily aggressive” moves.
“It is impossible to believe that China would have taken such an action, but they have, and the rest is History,” he said on Truth Social.
Photo: EPA
Stock markets fell as the simmering trade war between the US and China reignited, with the NASDAQ down 3.6 percent and the S&P 500 down 2.7 percent.
Chinese goods currently face US tariffs of 30 percent under tariffs that Trump imposed due to Beijing’s alleged aiding the fentanyl trade and unfair trade practices.
China’s retaliatory tariffs are currently at 10 percent.
Trump had threatened the tariffs hours earlier in a lengthy post on Truth Social that said China had sent letters to countries around the world detailing export controls on rare earth minerals.
Rare earth elements are critical to manufacturing everything from smartphones and electric vehicles to military hardware and renewable energy technology. China dominates global production and processing of these materials.
“There is no way that China should be allowed to hold the World ‘captive,’” Trump wrote, describing China’s stance as “very hostile.”
The US president called into question his plans to meet Xi at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit later this month.
“I was to meet President Xi in two weeks, at APEC, in South Korea, but now there seems to be no reason to do so,” he wrote.
Trump later told reporters in the Oval Office that he had not canceled the meeting.
“I haven’t canceled, but I don’t know that we’re going to have it, but I’m going to be there regardless, so I would assume we might have it,” he said.
The US president said he did not understand why China was choosing to act now.
“Some very strange things are happening in China! They are becoming very hostile,” he wrote.
Trump said other countries had contacted the US expressing anger over China’s “great Trade hostility, which came out of nowhere.”
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