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China’s US envoy urges end to trade war, but warns Beijing ready to fight

China’s US envoy urges end to trade war, but warns Beijing ready to fight
China's ambassador to the United States Xie Feng. (AFP)
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Updated 20 April 2025

China’s US envoy urges end to trade war, but warns Beijing ready to fight

China’s US envoy urges end to trade war, but warns Beijing ready to fight
  • The trade war has all but frozen the mammoth trade between the world's two largest economies
  • Trump said on Friday the U.S. is having good conversations privately with China amid the two countries' trade war.

DUBAI: China’s ambassador to the United States, Xie Feng, has urged Washington to seek common ground with Beijing and pursue peaceful coexistence while warning that China stood ready to retaliate in the escalating trade war.
Speaking at a public event in Washington on Saturday, details of which were posted on the Chinese embassy’s web site, Xie said tariffs would devastate the global economy and drew a parallel between the Great Depression and tariffs imposed by the US in 1930.
Referring to concepts in traditional Chinese medicine like the need to balance the opposing forces of yin and yang, Xie said harmony should guide relations between the world’s two largest economies.
“A good traditional Chinese medicine recipe usually combines many different ingredients which reinforce one another and creates the best medical effect,” he said.
“Likewise, the earth is big enough to accommodate both China and the US,” he said. “We should pursue peaceful coexistence rather than collide head-on, and help each other succeed rather than get caught in a lose-lose scenario.”
The trade war has all but frozen the mammoth trade between the world’s two largest economies with tariffs over 100 percent in each direction and a suite of trade, investment and cultural restrictions.
China’s top shipbuilding association on Saturday attacked a US plan to apply port fees on China-linked ships.
While Japan, Taiwan and others are already in talks or preparing to negotiate with Washington over President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs, there is currently no high-level dialogue planned with China.
Trump said on Friday the US is having good conversations privately with China amid the two countries’ trade war.
“By the way, we have nice conversations going with China,” he told reporters at the White House. “It’s, like, really very good.” He did not offer additional details.
China has said the US should show respect before any talks can take place.
Xie said China opposed the trade war and would retaliate to any country imposing tariffs on it.


Polish President Nawrocki to meet Trump in early September

Polish President Nawrocki to meet Trump in early September
Updated 19 sec ago

Polish President Nawrocki to meet Trump in early September

Polish President Nawrocki to meet Trump in early September
WARSAW:US President Donald Trump has invited new Polish President Karol Nawrocki to Washington at the beginning of September, the chief of Nawrocki’s cabinet said on Saturday.
Nawrocki, sworn in as Polish president on Wednesday, has on many occasions emphasized the importance of good Polish-US relations.
The new president, whose campaign was backed by Poland’s main nationalist opposition party Law and Justice, met Trump in the Oval Office shortly before the Polish election in May and got the US leader’s support for his candidacy.
“In an official congratulatory letter delivered on the inauguration day, US President Donald Trump invited Polish President Karol Nawrocki to the White House for an official working meeting on September 3, 2025,” Pawel Szefernaker wrote on X.

New Zealand and Australia seek closer military ties following Chinese live-fire naval exercise

New Zealand and Australia seek closer military ties following Chinese live-fire naval exercise
Updated 1 min 14 sec ago

New Zealand and Australia seek closer military ties following Chinese live-fire naval exercise

New Zealand and Australia seek closer military ties following Chinese live-fire naval exercise
  • Leaders’ summit follows a Chinese naval flotilla firing weapons in February in the Tasman Sea, which separates Australia and New Zealand

MELBOURNE: The leaders of New Zealand and Australia on Saturday discussed closer cooperation between they their expanding militaries against the backdrop of a recent extraordinary Chinese live-fire exercise near their shores.

New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon hosted his Australian counterpart Anthony Albanese at the tourist city of Queenstown for their second annual bilateral leaders’ meeting.

Luxon said his country wanted closer military cooperation with Australia, a country he describes as New Zealand’s “only ally.”

“A big focus for us has been interoperability with Australia. We want to be a force multiplier,” Luxon told reporters.

“We want to be one, sort of, essential Anzac force essentially operating within our region,” he added, referring to the Australian New Zealand Army Corps in which the two nations’ soldiers first fought together during World War I.

The summit follows a Chinese naval flotilla firing weapons in February in the Tasman Sea, which separates Australia and New Zealand. The exercise forced commercial airlines to divert flights.

The Chinese navy rarely ventures so far south and the mission that partially circumnavigated Australia was seen as a demonstration of China’s growing military reach.

Albanese said last month that he complained to China’s President Xi Jinping during a state visit to Beijing about the lack of notice the Chinese had given of the live-fire exercise. Xi replied that Australia also engaged in exercises, referring to freedom of navigation missions conducted by Australian military in the disputed South China Sea.

Albanese and Luxon recognized their countries face the most unpredictable and dangerous strategic environment in decades and their alliance plays a critical role in protecting and advancing their shared interest in the region, they said in a joint statement.

The prime ministers also commended progress over the past year to intensify defense cooperation and integration.

While the statement did not mention China, the prime ministers confirmed their most important trading partner was discussed.

“Of course, the geostrategic competition, in particular between the great powers, is something that countries like Australia and New Zealand do discuss together and we cooperate politically,” Albanese said.

Luxon said “both countries have followed pretty much the same playbook” in their bilateral dealings with China.

“China’s an important world power. It’s important that we can engage,” Luxon said.

“We genuinely are able to have a conversation – I think a very mature one now – to say, look, we do have very different histories, we do have different systems, we do have different values, that does mean we do have differences. Good partners should be not afraid to talk about those things,” Luxon added.

Luxon announced in April a plan to make the New Zealand Defense Force more combat capable that would double defense spending to more than 2 percent of GDP. He described the rise from around 1 percent over the past two decades as “a big step up for us.”

In a demonstration of Tokyo seeking deeper strategic ties in the South Pacific, Japanese warships docked in New Zealand on Friday for the first time in almost 90 years.

Australia announced this week Japan’s Mitsubishi Heavy Industries will build a fleet of 11 Australian naval frigates with a contract expected to be worth $6.5 billion.

Australia’s most expensive defense expansion is a submarine deal with the United States and Britain that is expected to cost up to $245 billion. Under the trilateral partnership known by the acronym AUKUS, Australia will acquire a fleet of eight submarines powered by US nuclear technology.

US President Donald Trump has urged western countries to increase their defense budgets and rely less on the US for their security.

Albanese told reporters on Saturday: “If people argue that we should increase our defense spending, we are.”


Two soldiers, suspected militant killed in drawn-out gunfight in Indian-administered Kashmir

Two soldiers, suspected militant killed in drawn-out gunfight in Indian-administered Kashmir
Updated 12 min 30 sec ago

Two soldiers, suspected militant killed in drawn-out gunfight in Indian-administered Kashmir

Two soldiers, suspected militant killed in drawn-out gunfight in Indian-administered Kashmir
  • Militants in the Indian-administered portion of Kashmir have been fighting New Delhi’s rule since 1989
  • The region has simmered in anger since New Delhi ended it semi-autonomy in 2019, curbed civil liberties

SRINAGAR: Two Indian soldiers and a suspected militant have been killed in one of longest gunfights in Indian-administered Kashmir, officials said Saturday.

The fighting began on Aug. 1 after Indian troops laid a cordon in southern Kulgam district’s Akhal forested area following a tip that a group of insurgents was operating there, officials said.

Multiple search operations in the area by soldiers triggered a series of firefights with militants, initially leaving one militant dead and seven soldiers wounded, officials said. Since then, intermittent fighting continued in the area as troops deployed helicopters and drones to combat an unspecified number of militants in the vast, forested area.

According to officials, two army soldiers were killed and two others injured on the eighth day, late Friday.

The Indian army in a statement on social media said the operation continued in the area on Saturday.

Officials did not give any other details. The Associated Press couldn’t independently verify the details.

Nuclear-armed rivals India and Pakistan each administer part of Kashmir, but both claim the territory in its entirety. Militants in the Indian-administered portion of Kashmir have been fighting New Delhi’s rule since 1989. Many Muslim Kashmiris support the rebels’ goal of uniting the territory, either under Pakistani rule or as an independent country.

India insists the Kashmir militancy is “Pakistan-sponsored terrorism.” Pakistan denies the charge, and many Kashmiris consider it a legitimate freedom struggle. Tens of thousands of civilians, rebels and government forces have been killed in the conflict.

Last month, India’s powerful home minister Amit Shah said in parliament that three suspected militants killed in a gunbattle in the disputed region were responsible for a shooting massacre in which more than two dozen people died and that led to a military clash between India and Pakistan earlier this year.

Before the April gun massacre in the Kashmiri resort town of Pahalgam, the fighting had largely ebbed in the region’s Kashmir Valley, the heartland of anti-India rebellion, and mainly shifted to mountainous areas of Jammu in the past few years.

The massacre increased tensions between India and Pakistan, leading to the worst military confrontation in decades and the death of dozens of people, until a ceasefire was reached on May 10 after USmediation.

The region has simmered in anger since New Delhi ended the region’s semi-autonomy in 2019 and drastically curbed dissent, civil liberties and media freedoms while intensifying counterinsurgency operations.


EU welcomes Armenia-Azerbaijan peace deal

EU welcomes Armenia-Azerbaijan peace deal
Updated 32 min 24 sec ago

EU welcomes Armenia-Azerbaijan peace deal

EU welcomes Armenia-Azerbaijan peace deal
  • Christian-majority Armenia and Muslim-majority Azerbaijan have long feuded over their border
  • They went to war twice over the disputed Karabakh region, which Azerbaijan recaptured from Armenian forces in a lightning 2023 offensive

BRUSSELS: EU chiefs Ursula von der Leyen and Antonio Costa have hailed a US-brokered deal to end decades of fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan and called for its speedy implementation.

Christian-majority Armenia and Muslim-majority Azerbaijan have long feuded over their border and the status of ethnic enclaves within each other’s territories.

They went to war twice over the disputed Karabakh region, which Azerbaijan recaptured from Armenian forces in a lightning 2023 offensive, sparking the exodus of more than 100,000 ethnic Armenians.

The agreement signed Friday in the White House is “a major development... paving the way to lasting, sustainable peace for both countries and across the entire region,” the European Commission and Council presidents said in a joint statement late Friday.

“It will now be important to ensure the timely implementation of the agreed steps to guarantee steady and uninterrupted progress toward full-fledged normalization,” they added.

US President Donald Trump said Armenia and Azerbaijan committed “to stop all fighting forever, open up commerce, travel and diplomatic relations and respect each other’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.”


Families of Air India crash victims demand release of flight recorders

Families of Air India crash victims demand release of flight recorders
Updated 09 August 2025

Families of Air India crash victims demand release of flight recorders

Families of Air India crash victims demand release of flight recorders
  • 241 people on board the London-bound Boeing 787 jet were killed when the plane crashed on June 12
  • A preliminary investigation report said fuel to the jet’s engines was cut off moments before impact

Ahmedabad: Families of the victims of June’s deadly Air India crash demanded on Friday the immediate release of the aircraft’s two flight recorders, saying delays were eroding their trust in the investigation.

A total of 241 people on board the London-bound Boeing 787 Dreamliner were killed when the plane crashed shortly after take-off from Ahmedabad in western India on June 12.

Another 19 people were killed on the ground.

A preliminary investigation report by India’s Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau said fuel to the jet’s engines was cut off moments before impact.

The report did not offer any conclusions or apportion blame for the disaster, but indicated, based on the cockpit voice recording, that one pilot asked the other why he cut off fuel. The second pilot responded that he had not.

“We are formally demanding the immediate release of the Cockpit Voice Recorder and Flight Data Recorder — the black box,” said Imtiaz Ali Sayed, a family member of several victims.

“These devices contain vital information that can reveal the truth behind this horrific tragedy,” he said in a media statement.

Sayed, whose younger brother, his wife and their two children were killed in the crash, said he was speaking on behalf of 60 families “who share the same pain and unanswered questions.”

“Every day without answers deepens the pain of our loss and erodes public trust in aviation safety,” he said.

Some of the families are exploring legal action against Air India and Boeing, the plane’s US manufacturer, their lawyer said.

Mike Andrews of the US-based Beasley Allen Law Firm, representing 65 families from India and Britain, met relatives in Vadodara city, south of Ahmedabad, on Friday after visiting the crash site.

“Suppose the flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder indicate that there is a defect with the aircraft... in that case, the options are to bring a defective product or a product liability claim in the United States for those claims,” he told reporters.