WASHINGTON, United States
United States President, Donald Trump warned Sunday that no country would be "getting off the hook" on tariffs, as his administration suggested exemptions seen as favoring China would be short-lived.
The world's two largest
economies have been locked in a fast-moving, high-stakes game of brinkmanship
since Trump launched a global tariff assault that particularly targeted Chinese
imports.
Tit-for-tat exchanges have
seen US levies imposed on China rise to 145 percent, and Beijing setting a
retaliatory 125 percent band on US imports.
The US side had appeared to
dial down the pressure slightly on Friday, listing tariff exemptions for
smartphones, laptops, semiconductors and other electronic products for which
China is a major source.
Trump and some of his top
aides said Sunday that the exemptions had been misconstrued and would only be
temporary as his team pursued fresh tariffs against many items on the list.
"NOBODY is getting 'off
the hook'... especially not China which, by far, treats us the worst!" he
posted on his Truth Social platform.
Earlier, Beijing's Commerce
Ministry had said Friday's move only "represents a small step" and
insisted that the Trump administration should "completely cancel" the
whole tariff strategy.
Chinese President Xi Jinping
warned Monday -- as he kicked off a tour of Southeast Asia with a visit to
manufacturing powerhouse Vietnam -- that protectionism "will lead
nowhere".
Writing in an article
published in a Vietnamese newspaper, Xi urged the two countries to
"resolutely safeguard the multilateral trading system, stable global
industrial and supply chains, and open and cooperative international
environment."
He also reiterated Beijing's
line that a "trade war and tariff war will produce no winner."
Asian stock markets rose
Monday after Trump's announcement of the tariff exemptions.
Washington's new exemptions
will benefit US tech companies such as Nvidia and Dell as well as Apple, which
makes iPhones and other premium products in China.
The relief could, however, be
short-lived with some of the exempted consumer electronics targeted for
upcoming sector-specific tariffs on goods deemed key to US national defense
networks.
On Air Force One Sunday, Trump
said tariffs on the semiconductors -- which powers any major technology from
e-vehicles and iPhones to missile systems -- "will be in place in the not
distant future."
"Like we did with steel,
like we did with automobiles, like we did with aluminum... we'll be doing that
with semiconductors, with chips and numerous other things," he said.
"We want to make our
chips and semiconductors and other things in our country," Trump
reiterated, adding that he would do the same with "drugs and
pharmaceuticals."
The US president said he would
announce tariffs rates for semiconductors "over the next week," while
his commerce secretary, Howard Lutnick, said they would likely be in place
"in a month or two."
The US president sent
financial markets into a tailspin earlier this month by announcing sweeping
import taxes on dozens of trade partners, only to abruptly announce a 90-day
pause for most of them.
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