←back to thread

499 points perihelions | 5 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
mitjam ◴[] No.42193017[source]
It was crossing right on time for the interruptions, a Russian officer was on board, it slowed down while crossing, no other ships were slowing down in that area during that time (rulingnout headwinds) - it cannot get much clearer. China is now participating in hybrid warfare against Europe (unless they present stronger evidence against this assumption)
replies(6): >>42193083 #>>42193168 #>>42193187 #>>42193273 #>>42194394 #>>42194583 #
greener_grass ◴[] No.42193187[source]
So if Trump is against China, and China aligns with Russia, will Trump then support Ukraine? Interesting (and choppy) times ahead.
replies(5): >>42193323 #>>42193482 #>>42194819 #>>42195620 #>>42196134 #
duxup ◴[] No.42193323[source]
Trump didn’t do anything with regards to China the first time around. I think there’s reason to doubt he is opposed to China in any significant way.
replies(2): >>42194575 #>>42194603 #
lysace ◴[] No.42194575[source]
He did impose tariffs on imports from China.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/China%E2%80%93United_States_tr...

China–United States trade war

An economic conflict between China and the United States has been ongoing since January 2018, when U.S. President Donald Trump began setting tariffs and other trade barriers on China with the goal of forcing it to make changes to what the U.S. says are longstanding unfair trade practices and intellectual property theft.

replies(2): >>42194656 #>>42198012 #
duxup ◴[] No.42194656[source]
That reads like token efforts and then he just moved on ... quit on the whole thing.
replies(1): >>42194824 #
1. lysace ◴[] No.42194824[source]
By late 2019, the United States had imposed approximately US$350 billion in tariffs on Chinese imports, while China had imposed approximately US$100 billion on US exports.

Then the Biden admin happened.

The Joe Biden administration kept the tariffs in place and added additional levies on Chinese goods such as electric vehicles and solar panels. In 2024, the Trump presidential campaign proposed a 60 percent tariff on Chinese goods.

It will be interesting to see what happens. 60% all at once would be too disruptive, I think.

replies(2): >>42195194 #>>42195563 #
2. throwawaymaths ◴[] No.42195194[source]
Well Biden put Catherine Tai in as the chief trade negotiator, who has been hard on China. Tariffs were expanded. And the de minimis exemption was rescinded in august.

So hardly "nothing further".

replies(1): >>42195269 #
3. lysace ◴[] No.42195269[source]
Sorry - just edited away the "nothing further" part as it was incorrect - a minute before reading your comment.
replies(1): >>42199795 #
4. duxup ◴[] No.42195563[source]
Trade conflicts all seem like a test of wills.

But if you're not testing, you're not doing anything.

5. throwawaymaths ◴[] No.42199795{3}[source]
No worries! Thanks for the correction