US President Donald Trump on Tuesday (local time) stated that Washington would continue with their plans to impose a 155 per cent tariff on Chinese goods imported into the US beginning November 1, despite expressing his desire to maintain amicable ties with Beijing.
"If they don't want to do business with us, China is in big trouble," Trump said. "I don't want them to be in trouble. I want them to thrive. We want to thrive together. It is a two-way street," Trump said while addressing reporters.
US President Donald Trump on Monday (local time) issued a stern warning to China on the possibility of imposing a steep tariff of up to 155 percent starting November 1 if a trade deal is not reached between the two countries.
China's Transport Ministry has initiated an investigation into how the US Section 301 investigation affects the security and development interests of its shipping and shipbuilding sectors, as well as related industrial and supply chains. South Korea, is China's biggest rival in the shipbuild
Indian stock market opened in the positive territory on Tuesday, though investors remained cautious as the India-US trade deal continues to progress with talks moving ahead.
The Dialogue is being held on the occasion of the 75th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between India and China. A 9-member delegation led by Ambassador Sujan R Chinoy, Director-General, MP-IDSA, will travel to Chengdu for the dialogue.
China has pushed back against US President Donald Trump's decision to impose new tariffs on Chinese goods, calling the move hypocritical and defending its own export restrictions on rare earth materials and related equipment.
In his National Day address Lai said, " "We will accelerate our building of the T-Dome, establish a rigorous air defence system in Taiwan with multi-layered defence, high-level detection, and effective interception, and weave a safety net for Taiwan to protect the lives and property of citiz
External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Sunday underlined the increasing influence of US-China relations on the global political landscape and warned of a growing trend of competition and risk in international affairs.
"At the moment with the drive towards normalisation on the border, that is disengagement, patrolling, grazing if not de-escalation and de induction, there is a path that has been laid down since October 21. We have to see whether this will be fulfilled", professor Kondapalli told ANI in a
"If Trump's ire is on the trade surpluses, it should actually be directed at China, not at India. India is a sideshow for all these, and it probably got activated due to personal egoistic reasons, on the Nobel Prize or the ceasefire. So we were in a very strange situation", the professor