White House officials fanned out on Sunday to support Donald Trump’s planned imposition of tariffs on aluminium and steel imports, describing it as a national security issue.
Amid international consternation, and with the British prime minister, Theresa May, expressing “deep concern”, critics said the move was a needless provocation of allies and enemies alike.
May tells Trump of 'deep concern' over US trade tariff plansRead moreOne Democratic senator said targeting China could damage attempts to reduce tensions with nuclear-armed North Korea. A senior Chinese official said the tariffs could “damage bilateral relations and bring about consequences that neither country wants to see”.
Peter Navarro, director of the White House National Trade Council, confirmed that China was the focus of Trump’s surprise decision, announced at the White House this week.
“China is at the root of the problem,” Navarro told CNN’s Face the Nation. “China has tremendous overcapacity in both aluminium and steel. They flood the world market and this whittles down to our shores.”
Trump’s announcement triggered deep divisions in his own economic team. It was also condemned by World Trade Organisation (WTO) and US allies including Canada and South Korea, which between them account for a quarter of US steel imports. China accounts for just 2%.
Navarro insisted Trump’s decision, which could be brought into effect as soon as next week, was “quintessential and great”.
Trump aides defend tariffs move as Europe and China decry 'trade war'
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