Hong Kong’s postal service says it will no longer accept products to the United States in response to the ‘intimidation’ of the United States.
The president of the United States, Donald Trump, believes that China must make the first movement to resolve commercial tensions among their countries, said the White House, since its administration directs its attention to possible tariffs on critical minerals.
In a statement delivered hours before Trump ordered a national security review of rare earth imports and other minerals on Tuesday, the White House Secretary, Karoline Leavitt, cited the president of the United States that “the ball is in the China court.”
“China needs to make a deal with us, we don’t have to make a deal with them,” Leavitt said at a media conference in the comments that he said directly from Trump.
“There is no difference between China and any other country, except that they are much larger. And China moves what we have: each Tryy moves what we have: the US consumer. Or otherwise, Mythyyyyyye had money,” “” “” money “,” of course “that is open to a commercial agreement with China.
In his executive order, Trump ordered the United States Secretary of Commerce, Howard Lutnick, to launch a national security investigation under section 232 of the Commercial Expansion Law, which its administration has previously used to analyze copper, steel and aluminum imports.
“The industrial manufacturing and defense bases of the United States continue to depend on foreign sources for processed critical products,” Trump said in the order.
“Many of these foreign sources run the risk of serious supply chain shocks, already sustained long term. If the United States loses access to critical minerals processed from foreign sources, the commercial base manufacture of the United States and for the derivation and derivation and derivation of the derivation and the inability of the influence to meet the demand.”
Although Trump’s order did not specifically mention China, the country is the largest producer of 30 of the 50 minerals considered critical for the United States geological service.
On Tuesday, Trump accused China on Tuesday or in an agreement with the manufacturer of American aircraft Boeing, after a Bloomberg report that Beijing had ordered the Chinese airlines to stop the deliveries of the Boeing aircraft.
Boeing’s shares fell 2.36 percent after the report, which cited “people familiar with the matter.” Boeing and Chinese authorities have not confirmed or commented on the report.
“They simply breached the great Boeing agreement, saying that” they will not take possession “or completely committed to the airplanes,” Trump said in Truth Social.
The United States and China have been locked in a growing commercial war since Trump’s return to the White House.
Despite stopping most of its “reciprocal” tariffs at commercial partners Didens, Trump has increased import taxes in most Chinese products to 145 percent.
China, in turn, has affected US exports with a 125 percent tariff.
In China’s last save on Wednesday, Hong Kong’s postal service said it would stop carrying US mail in response to tariffs.
“The United States is unreasonable, intimidating and imposing abusively tariff.
He added that he would stop taking mail surface with immediate effect and stopped accepting by air mail from April 27.
China has said that it opposes protectionism, but is willing to “fight until the end” if the United States continues to increase its commercial savages.
In an opinion article published in the Nhan Dan newspaper of Vietnam on Monday, Chinese President Xi Jinping said that wars trade “does not produce winners” and protectionism “does not offer solutions.”
“There is a need to resolutely protect the multilateral trade system, maintain the stability of global production and supply chains, and maintain an open and cooperative international environment,” XI said in the opinion article, which was published to coin the Chinena.