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US using tariffs to exert 'maximum pressure,' says China as ties slide over trade war

Beijing reduces imports of US movies, other measures after Trump raised tariffs on Chinese imports to 125%

Saadet Gokce and Riyaz ul Khaliq  | 10.04.2025 - Update : 10.04.2025
US using tariffs to exert 'maximum pressure,' says China as ties slide over trade war

ISTANBUL

The US is exerting “maximum pressure” and using tariffs as a "weapon,” China said Thursday, vowing not to give into Washington's trade moves amid deteriorating ties.

Beijing will not fear the US’ “selfish” moves, Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian told reporters in the Chinese capital, adding that Beijing's response “will continue until the end.”

He said US President Donald Trump’s “reciprocal” tariffs of 125% on China are “against the whole world” and “undermined” the multilateral trading system.

“The US threat and blackmail against the rest of the world with tariffs is a real attempt to hold the world by the throat and coerce them into making a compromise or concessions," said Lin.

"Threatening, pressuring, extorting is not the right way to deal with China,” he said. “If the US surely wants talks, it should show an attitude of equality and respect.”

Beijing's reaction comes after Trump, angered by China's additional tariffs of 84% on US imports, raised tariffs on Chinese imports to 125%.

Trump's wide-ranging tariffs on allies and rivals have roiled global markets but the US president gave a reprieve of 90 days to nations that did not retaliate against Washington, with instead a base 10% tariffs for all.

"Tariff wars and trade wars have no winners. China does not want to fight them, but will not fear when they come our way,” Lin vowed.

“We will not sit by and watch the legitimate rights and interests of the Chinese people be infringed upon, nor will we stand by and watch the international economic and trade rules and the multilateral trading system be undermined.”

As Trump has refused to back down from his tariffs policy, Beijing has responded in kind.

In its latest measures against the US market, the China Film Administration announced that Hollywood movie imports into the world's second-largest film market will be "moderately" reduced.

It said the world's second-largest economy plans to introduce more movies from the rest of the world to meet domestic demand.

Earlier, Beijing issued a travel advisory for Chinese traveling to the US and a risk alert for students traveling there to study in higher education institutions.

China has also filed a lawsuit with the World Trade Organization against the US for its "unilateral" tariffs.

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