Miscellaneous News

Ringsword

Senior Member
Registered Member

Case in point today. Modi despite being invited to G7 was not given a photo op like last year. This shows the westerner dissatisfaction with India much like a boss is dissatisfied with a underperforming worker.

You know what makes a Jew really angry? Losing money. And given a lot of them are behind the west's financing, you can imagine how they feel about India right now.
India has always wanted to be the West's "sepoy" especially against other Asians notably China(Boxer Rebellion,various Chinese campaigns under GB)China hasn't forgotten and May7 ass-whipping was only a taste of payback.Doesn't Modi have any awareness that the G7 invitation was more of an insulting dressing-down of an inept servant then an honour??
 
Last edited:

Breadbox

Junior Member
Registered Member
Can't hide, can you. Everyone knows they are in US payroll
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

‘Donald is right’ and China is the problem, EU chief says​

Beijing’s subsidies should be a reason to work together, not tariff each other, Ursula von der Leyen argues.
They are not on the US payroll, they are plain pathetic. Remember when Trump gives exactly 0 shit about Ukraine and Zelensky did the "Uhhhh CHYNA!!! CHINESE TROOPS in Ukraine111" to get Trump's attention? She's trying to do the exact same shit now. It didn't work then and it didn't work now because they all bore Trump to tears.

They are out of options to get him to talk to them so they bend over backward to live the same delusion as him, but the buzzword loving bureaucrat don't understand the fact that it's not the buzzword itself that interests Trump, so it naturally falls flat everytime.
 

tokenanalyst

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

US pushes Vietnam to decouple from Chinese tech, sources say​


HANOI, June 16 (Reuters) - The United States is pushing Vietnam in tariff talks to reduce the use of Chinese tech in devices that are assembled in the country before being exported to America, three people briefed on the matter said.

Vietnam is home to large manufacturing operations of tech firms such as Apple, opens new tab and Samsung (005930.KS), opens new tab, which often rely on components made in China. Meta (META.O), opens new tab and Google (GOOGL.O), opens new tab also have contractors in Vietnam that produce goods such as virtual reality headsets and smartphones.

The Southeast Asian nation has been organising meetings with local businesses to boost the supply of Vietnamese parts, with firms showing willingness to cooperate but also warning they would need time and technology to do so, according to one person with knowledge of the discussions.

The Trump administration has threatened Vietnam with crippling tariffs of 46% which could significantly limit access for Vietnam-made goods to their main market and upend the Communist-run country's export-oriented growth model.

Vietnam has been asked "to reduce its dependency on Chinese high-tech," said one person familiar with the discussions. "That is part of the restructuring of supply chains and would in turn reduce U.S. dependency on Chinese components," the person added.

The ultimate objective is to speed up U.S. decoupling from Chinese high-tech while increasing Vietnam's industrial capacity, a second person said, citing virtual reality devices as an example of Vietnam-assembled products that are too dependent on Chinese technology.

All sources declined to be identified as the discussions were confidential. Reuters was not able to learn if the U.S. has proposed numerical targets such as caps on Chinese content for "Made in Vietnam" goods or different tariff rates based on the amount of Chinese content.

Apple, Samsung, Meta and Google did not reply to Reuters requests for comment.

As the U.S.-imposed deadline of July 8 nears before the tariffs take effect, the timing and scope of a possible deal remain unclear.

All sources stressed that while the U.S. has made broader requests for Vietnam to reduce its reliance on China, tackling the issue of Chinese high-tech content in exports was a key priority.

Last year, China exported around $44 billion of tech such as electronics components, computers and phones to Vietnam, about 30% of its total exports to the country. Vietnam shipped $33 billion of tech goods to the United States or 28% of the U.S.-bound exports. Both flows are on the rise this year, according to Vietnam's customs data.

Vietnam's trade ministry did not reply to Reuters requests for comment. Separate sources have previously said that U.S. demands were seen as "tough" and "difficult" by Vietnamese negotiators.

The U.S. also wants Vietnam to crack down on the practice of shipping Chinese goods to America with misleading "Made in Vietnam" labels that draw lower duties - which Vietnam is also trying to heed.

The ministry said on Sunday that a third round of talks last week in Washington ended with progress, but critical issues remain unresolved.

Vietnam's ruling Communist Party chief To Lam intends to meet U.S. President Donald Trump in the United States, possibly in late June, officials with knowledge of the matter said. No date has been announced for the trip.

The White House and Vietnam's foreign ministry did not respond to requests for comment on the possible visit.

NOT TOO FAST

Local firms attending meetings organised by the trade ministry in recent weeks expressed a general willingness to adapt, but many warned that instant changes "would destroy business", according to one of the sources.

Vietnam has been slowly developing an industrial ecosystem with local suppliers but it has a long way to go before it can match China's advanced supply chains and cheaper pricing, industry executives say.

"Vietnam is about 15–20 years behind China in somewhat fully replicating its supply chain scale and sophistication, but it's catching up fast, especially in key sectors like textiles and electronics," said Carlo Chiandone, a Vietnam-based supply chain expert.
Abrupt changes to existing practices may hurt Vietnam's delicate relationship with China, which is both a major investor in its Southeast Asian neighbour and a source of security concerns.
The economic dependency that the Vietnamese have with the US market is extremely dangerous. Is basically a time bomb with Trump in power.
 
Top