
Trump says ‘getting along well' with China, downplays hostile acts
WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump on Sunday dismissed the importance of aggressive actions linked to Beijing including recent arrests of two Chinese nationals accused of smuggling a dangerous pathogen into the United States, saying 'that's the way the world works.'
Trump told Fox News that Washington behaves in a similar way.
'You don't think we do that to them? We do, we do a lot of things,' he said on the 'Sunday Morning Futures with Maria Bartiromo' show.
'That's the way the world works. It's a nasty world.'
Trump was responding to a question about how he viewed Chinese intellectual property theft, hacking of the US telecoms system and controversy around the Covid-19 pandemic.
He likewise dismissed concerns over a case in which two Chinese nationals were accused last month of smuggling in a toxic fungus.
Yunqing Jian, 33, and Zunyong Liu, 34, are charged with conspiracy, smuggling, false statements, and visa fraud.
The US Justice Department said the pair conspired to smuggle into the United States a fungus called Fusarium graminearum that causes 'head blight,' a disease of wheat, barley, maize, and rice.
Trump downplayed this saying, 'you don't know where that came from, though. I mean, did that come from the country, or is that three wackos that happened to carry something?'
Referring to the ongoing US-China trade war, Trump appeared to signal he was satisfied, saying 'We're getting along well with China.'
He added: 'I think getting along with China is a very good thing, but they are paying substantial tariffs.'
This past week the White House signaled trade progress with China, with an official saying both sides have reached an understanding on issues including expediting rare earth shipments to the United States.
After talks in Geneva in May, Washington and Beijing agreed to temporarily lower steep tit-for-tat tariffs on each other's products.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
34 minutes ago
- The Star
South Korea's Lee names Koo Yun-cheol finance minister, makes other picks
South Korean President Lee Jae Myung has announced his picks for several positions across the goverenment. - Photo: Reuters SEOUL: South Korea President Lee Jae Myung has chosen a former vice finance minister, Koo Yun-cheol, to be his finance minister, his office said on Sunday (June 29). Koo is widely known as a policy expert, serving different positions across the government and authoring books on South Korea's innovation and growth, most recently on artificial intelligence, Lee's chief of staff, Kang Hoon-sik, told a briefing. Among other ministerial positions, Lee named Kim Jung-kwan, president of power plant builder Doosan Enerbility and a veteran bureaucrat in economics, energy and public policy, to be industry minister. Kim fits the role to realise President Lee's "energy mix philosophy", Kang said, referring the new leader's aim to balance nuclear power and renewable energy. The former head of South Korea's disease control agency, Jeong Eun-kyeong, was nominated for health minister. She was highly praised for her response to the Covid-19 pandemic, becoming one of the Time Magazine's 100 most influential people of 2020. Cabinet nominations in South Korea must be vetted by hearings in parliament. But presidents may appoint their nominees even without parliament approval, and Lee's Democratic Party has a majority in parliament. - Reuters


The Star
34 minutes ago
- The Star
China's envoy urges Australia to resist US pressure on military spending
FILE PHOTO: This handout photograph taken on March 30, 2022, and released by the Australian Defence Force shows Australian Army soldiers in Bushmaster protected mobility vehicles are on standby to conduct evacuation tasks with the local State Emergency Services due to rising flood waters in the New South Wales town of Lismore. Australia spends a little over two per cent of its gross domestic product on defence and is under pressure from the US to raise that to 3.5 per cent. - Australia Defence Force/AFP CANBERRA: China's envoy to Canberra urged Australia not to be "incited' by NATO's support for US demands to sharply raise defence spending and instead cooperate with Beijing to resolve regional disputes. Ambassador Xiao Qian, in an opinion article published in The Australian newspaper Monday, wrote that both Australia and China rely on the same trade routes and have a major stake in safeguarding maritime security. He emphasised their roles as key trade partners with "highly complementary' economies. "Dramatically increasing military spending places a heavy fiscal burden on the countries involved, undermining their efforts to boost economies and improve livelihoods, and further straining a global economy already struggling with weak recovery,' Xiao said. He added some countries at events such as the Group of Seven summit and the recent North Atlantic Treaty Organisation meeting have "hyped up the so-called China threat narrative,' to increase defence spending "and even incited Australia to follow suit.' Australia spends a little over two per cent of its gross domestic product on defence and is under pressure from the US to raise that to 3.5 per cent. The centre-left government has pushed back, pointing out it has already increased outlays. At a higher level, Canberra is trying to balance the increasingly confrontational relationship between the US and China, which are respectively Australia's historic security ally and its biggest trading partner. Australia likely wants to avoid raising defence spending excessively and antagonising Beijing. "As I often hear from Australian friends, 'we have hundreds of reasons to be friends, and none to be enemies',' Xiao said. NATO leaders last week agreed to increase defence spending to five per cent of GDP and renewed their "ironclad commitment' to mutual security as they aim to push back against an increasingly belligerent Russia. The US wants allies to take up more of the fiscal burden for their own defense so it can focus more heavily on China. Australia's Labor government has managed to rebuild ties with Beijing after they plunged into a deep freeze, which included punitive trade actions against some Australian goods in 2020. The fallout was triggered by the then centre-right government calling for a probe into the origins of Covid-19. "China and Australia are friends, not foes. This should never have been in question,' Xiao said. "China has been always developing bilateral friendship and co-operation with the utmost sincerity and patience, and we hope Australia will work with us in the same direction.' - Bloomberg


The Star
34 minutes ago
- The Star
South Korea halts digital currency project, pausing talks with banks
SEOUL: South Korea's central bank halted its digital currency testing project, telling participating banks it will temporarily pause discussions related to the initiative. The Bank of Korea (BOK) has temporarily suspended preparations for the second phase of its pilot initiative testing programme for a central bank digital currency which had been scheduled for the fourth quarter, a BOK official told Bloomberg News. The decision comes as the trajectory of the market for stablecoins has emerged as a key agenda item for South Korean President Lee Jae Myung, who took office earlier this month. Lee has sought to make it possible for a broad range of companies to get involved in stablecoins. A proposed bill by the ruling party would allow firms with equity as low as 500 million won (US$370,000) to issue won-based stablecoins. BOK Senior Deputy Governor Ryoo Sangdai last week said that any introduction of stablecoins should be done in stages and led by regulated banks, with safeguards to prevent market disruption and to protect consumers. South Korea has one of the world's most active digital-asset markets, which has driven massive gains in shares of companies linked to stablecoins. South Korea is already a hotbed for crypto activity. More than a third of the population, or around 18 million people, are active in digital-asset markets. On some days, trading volume on local crypto exchanges surpasses turnover on the Kospi and Kosdaq stock indexes. - Bloomberg