US President Donald Trump said the US will have a "great relationship" with China and emphasized he will not use actions that could destroy the country. He added that while both nations have powerful "cards," he does not intend to play them.
US President Donald Trump has signed an executive order "further modifying reciprocal tariff rates to reflect ongoing discussions with the People's Republic of China (PRC)."
"There very few countries. I mean, we are not permanent enemies with anyone. Pakistan has made us its permanent enemy using the terrorism as its only weapon. But that's an unusual factor for different reasons," he said in conversation with ANI.
Speaking to ANI on Tuesday, Shrinate said, '...PM Modi spoke for 1 hour and 42 minutes, in which he mentioned Nehruji 15 times, Congress 50 times, but he did not mention Donald Trump or China even once."
Speaking on the government's reluctant behaviour to hold a special session of the Parliament on the Operation Sindoor, Chidambaram stated that it would take time to tell whether the operation was "decisive".
China rejected Trump's threat of extra tariffs on BRICS supporters, calling BRICS a positive and inclusive force. Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said China opposes trade wars and using tariffs as coercion, adding that arbitrary tariffs harm all parties and do not serve anyone's inter
US President Donald Trump announced that China can resume oil purchases from Iran and expressed hope it buys more from the US. As he heads to the NATO summit, Trump carries a fragile Israel-Iran ceasefire he helped broker, urging both sides to uphold it despite fresh missile tensions.
While speaking to reporters, Leavitt said that the readout of the call would be provided if the two leaders hold talks. Earlier on Sunday, the White House National Economic Council Director, Kevin Hassett, had said that there was an expectation for Trump and Xi to hold talks this week.
South Korean exporters are expected to see a 4.9 per cent decline in exports during 2025 on a year-on-year basis, if US President Donald Trump goes ahead with his current tariff policies, revealed a new survey released on Monday, reports the Korean Herald.
Gold are prices likely to rise back again, helped by the plethora of factors defying softening safe-haven assets demand and expectations of fewer rate cuts this year by the US federal reserve bank, reported by Gulf news on Wednesday.