logo
Taiwan says tariff talks with US enter 'crucial moment'

Taiwan says tariff talks with US enter 'crucial moment'

ISTANBUL: Talks between Taipei and Washington over "reciprocal tariffs" imposed by United States (US) President Donald Trump are at a "crucial moment," a top Taiwanese politician said, Anadolu Ajansi (AA) reported, citing local media on Sunday.
"We are now entering a crucial moment -- like the final inning of a ball game," lead negotiator for Taiwan Cheng Li-chiun said on Sunday in a statement issued by the Cabinet, Focus Taiwan reported.
Cheng reiterated Taiwan's commitment to protecting national and industrial interests, while aiming to enhance trade and deepen ties with the US.
Cheng returned to Taiwan early Saturday after completing a third round of in-person tariff talks with US officials, according to the statement.
Both sides reached consensus on "several key topics," though no details were provided, and a fourth round of talks has been tentatively scheduled.
Trump had announced a 32 per cent blanket import tax on most Taiwanese goods in early April, along with similar measures targeting over 170 countries. Although he initially paused the duties for 90 days, the deadline was extended to Aug 1.
Earlier, Taiwan's leader Lai Ching-te said Taipei will not retaliate and instead increase imports from the US and boost investments there to help reduce the trade deficit.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump's ostensible five conditions for visiting Malaysia in October 2025 — Phar Kim Beng
Trump's ostensible five conditions for visiting Malaysia in October 2025 — Phar Kim Beng

Malay Mail

timean hour ago

  • Malay Mail

Trump's ostensible five conditions for visiting Malaysia in October 2025 — Phar Kim Beng

JULY 16 — If diplomacy is akin to dexterous manoeuvres, then President Donald J. Trump is both the creative director and the post-modern impresario. One who demands the stage be set before he even enters the theatre that is Asean and East Asian. With the Asean and East Asian Summits scheduled for October 25 to 26 in Kuala Lumpur, speculation is mounting: will Trump show up? The answer, it seems, depends entirely on whether Asean is prepared to meet what are now widely viewed as Trump's ostensible five conditions. These demands are not just about North Korea; they reflect Trump's worldview — coercive, hierarchical, and intensely performative. One of Trump's key expectations is that Asean formally designates North Korea as a serious regional and strategic threat. He is no longer content with Asean's customary diplomatic expressions of concern. asean is too staid. He wants the language sharpened, the tone unequivocal, and the verdict clear: the Democratic People's Republic of Korea is not just a problem — it is the problem. Such a public rebuke would send a powerful message to both Pyongyang and Moscow. For Trump, this would be a strategic framing victory, reinforcing his belief that leadership means forcing clarity into ambiguity, even at the expense of consensus. Another precondition is that Asean aligns itself with US efforts to restore the relevance of the International Atomic Energy Agency in its dealings with North Korea. In a self-serving manner, Trump wants to resuscitate the IAEA's investigative clout—not in Vienna or Geneva, but in the Korean Peninsula, through Asean and East Asian Summit. Russia is, after all, a member of East Asian Summit too. As is the US. In Trump's second term, multilateralism is welcomed only when it operates under American primacy. Here, Asean is expected to echo Washington's call for full, verifiable inspections, even if it risks alienating member states who prefer the status quo of quiet diplomacy. At the heart of Trump's nuclear agenda is a warning he believes Chairman Kim Jong Un must understand that deeply buried nuclear facilities in North Korea are not beyond reach. Iran has had a foretaste of American power when in the words of Trump, "Iran nuclear facilities were obliterated." Although doubts linger if the bunker buster bombs had indeed got the job done at Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan in Iran, this does not prevent Trump from wanting to deliver the same message to Chairman Kim Jong Un via ASEAN and East Asian Summit. The United States wants to reinforce the image that it continues to possess Bunker Buster Bombs capable of penetrating fortified subterranean sites. Hence, North Korea is now in the sight of Trump. Asean and East Asian Summit have to up its ante to match Trump. If diplomacy is akin to dexterous manoeuvres, then President Donald J. Trump is both the creative director and the post-modern impresario. — Reuters pic Trump views the successful prevention of open war between Israel and Iran during his second term as evidence of his coercive deterrence strategy. He does not mind showing this brand of diplomacy to North Korea via Asean and East Asian Summit. He expects Kim Jong-un to comprehend the credibility of that deterrent. In turn, Chairman Kim is likely to push back with his own narrative: that unlike Iran, which has been portrayed as a nuclear threshold or breakout state, North Korea is already a full-fledged nuclear weapons state. He will emphasise that its deterrent is real, deliverable, and not easily dismantled. The contrast with Iran — whose nuclear programme has suffered setbacks through sabotage, sanctions, and cyber interference — will form the core of North Korea's argument that it cannot and will not be treated the same. Yet Trump's expectations go beyond military strategy. He is demanding that Asean exert influence to halt North Korea's covert support for Russia's war in Ukraine. This condition stretches Asean's diplomatic imagination. For a regional bloc that prefers balancing over band wagoning, the idea of confronting Pyongyang over its links to Moscow's artillery logistics is both unprecedented and uncomfortable. Still, Trump insists that this war, fought in Europe, has reverberations in Asia — and that Asean's silence would equate to complicity. Equally important to Trump is his desire for a diplomatic spectacle: a sidebar meeting with Chairman Kim Jong-un in Kuala Lumpur; provided the latter is willing to come to Kuala Lumpur as he once did to Singapore and Hanoi. Trump views such encounters not merely as dialogues but as geopolitical theatre, validating his theory of leader-to-leader deal-making; even if they failed. The key is Trump's muscular foreign policy to match North Korea's Sparta-like approach. Kuala Lumpur or otherwise, the setting is less important than the optics. Trump believes that in bypassing conventional diplomatic channels, breakthroughs become possible. Asean's role here is to act as discreet facilitator, a stagehand behind the curtain. But even in facilitating such a meeting, Asean risks becoming complicit in a heavily personalized diplomacy that often sidelines collective norms. Especially when Malaysia is the Chief Coordinator of Asean China relations 2025. Perhaps most controversially, Trump expects Asean to ensure that its Northeast Asian partners, namely Japan and South Korea, refrain from using the summit to criticize his escalating tariff regimes. In Trump's view, the East Asia Summit is no place for complaints about American protectionism. He wants a disciplined forum — one that does not devolve into lectures on economic multilateralism. For Asean, this means managing not only its own internal cohesion but the external optics of alliance politics. The price of Trump's presence may well be the silencing of dissent, at least in public view. The art of the possible, or the price of admission? Trump's ostensible five conditions are not unachievable — but meeting all of them would require Asean to surrender elements of its foundational ethos. Non-alignment, non-interference, and regional consensus may all be strained under the weight of Trump's coercive choreography. Still, this moment also reveals how Trump views Asean: not as an equal partner in shaping global affairs, but as a pliable platform for amplifying his strategic ambitions. The stakes are not just about Trump's appearance in Kuala Lumpur, but whether Asean can uphold its role as a convenor of competing powers without becoming a stage for their rivalry. If diplomacy is truly about creative manoeuvring, then Asean's greatest test now lies not in managing Trump — but in ensuring it doesn't lose itself while doing so. * Phar Kim Beng is a professor of Asean Studies and director of the Institute of Internationalization and Asean Studies at the International Islamic University of Malaysia ** This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of Malay Mail.

EU suspends retaliation as Trump's tariff deadline looms
EU suspends retaliation as Trump's tariff deadline looms

Malaysia Sun

timean hour ago

  • Malaysia Sun

EU suspends retaliation as Trump's tariff deadline looms

BRUSSELS, Belgium: The European Union has delayed retaliatory tariffs on American goods in a final push to reach a trade agreement with the Trump administration before an August 1 deadline, EU officials confirmed. The bloc had been set to impose countermeasures at midnight Brussels time on Monday, but opted to suspend them after President Donald Trump announced plans to raise tariffs to 30 percent on imports from the EU and Mexico starting next month. "This is now the time for negotiations," said European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. "We have always been clear that we prefer a negotiated solution." She added that if talks fail, the EU would still be "fully prepared" to implement its planned countermeasures. Trump's letter to EU officials, which cited the U.S. trade deficit as a national security threat, has added urgency to talks. The EU negotiates trade deals on behalf of all 27 member states and is the U.S.'s largest trading partner. Europe's biggest exports to the U.S. include cars, pharmaceuticals, aircraft, chemicals, and wine. Any tariffs on these products could affect companies across both continents and create ripple effects throughout the global economy. Italy's Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani is expected in Washington on Monday for meetings with U.S. officials and members of Congress. Tajani's office said he emphasised the need to "negotiate with one's head held high" in recent conversations with EU allies. Trump adviser Kevin Hassett said the president was dissatisfied with current trade drafts and wanted "better" deals. "To basically put a line in the sand, he sent these letters out," Hassett told ABC News. EU trade ministers will meet on Monday to coordinate their approach. Von der Leyen also cited the need to diversify trade partners, announcing closer ties with Indonesia during a press conference in Brussels.

Russia attacks Ukraine with hundreds of drones, energy infrastructure hit
Russia attacks Ukraine with hundreds of drones, energy infrastructure hit

The Star

timean hour ago

  • The Star

Russia attacks Ukraine with hundreds of drones, energy infrastructure hit

KYIV (Reuters) -Russia attacked cities across Ukraine overnight with hundreds of drones and a missile strike, hitting energy infrastructure and wounding at least 15 people. Ukraine's air force said Russia launched 400 drones and one ballistic missile, primarily targeting Kharkiv, Kryvyi Rih and Vinnytsia -- three cities in different parts of Ukraine. Earlier, Ukrainian officials reported two people killed in a drone strike on the frontline city of Kupiansk. The large-scale long-range attacks targeted energy infrastructure, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy wrote on Telegram. "We are now doing our best to restore everything in Kryvyi Rih, and power supply will be restored over the course of the day," The air force said it had shot down most of the drones, but that 12 targets were hit by 57 drones and the missile. Russia has stepped up attacks on cities across Ukraine this summer, regularly sending several hundred drones accompanied by ballistic missiles. The attacks were cited by U.S. President Donald Trump this week as a reason for his decision to approve more weapons for Ukraine, including air defences. "Russia does not change its strategy, and to effectively counter this terror we need a systemic strengthening of defences: more air defences, more interceptor (drones), more determination to make Russia feel our response," Zelenskiy wrote on Wednesday. The head of the military administration in the southeastern city of Kryvyi Rih, Oleksandr Vilkul, said Russian forces conducted an extended attack with a missile and 28 drones. He said power and water supplies had been disrupted in some areas. A 17-year-old boy had been severely injured in the attack and was fighting for his life in hospital, Vilkul added. In Vinnytsia and the surrounding region, eight people were wounded, according to Ukraine's interior ministry. In Kharkiv, a frequent target of Russian attacks, regional Governor Oleh Syniehubov said at least 17 explosions were recorded in a 20-minute drone attack in which three people were injured. Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko said air defence units had gone into action for a time in the capital, but there were no reports of casualties or damage there. Russia has killed thousands of civilians in attacks on Ukrainian cities since launching its full-scale invasion more than three years ago. Moscow says civilian infrastructure such as energy systems are legitimate targets because they help Ukraine's war effort. Ukraine also launches long-range strikes on targets in Russia, although on a more limited scale. (Reporting by Ron Popeski and Max Hunder; Editing by Leslie Adler and Saad Sayeed)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store