This Article is From Aug 19, 2020

"What They Did To World Wasn't Thinkable": Trump Cancels Talks With China

US President Donald Trump earlier told reporters during a visit to Yuma, Arizona, that he had postponed an August 15 review of the trade agreement signed with China in January given his frustration over Beijing's handling of the coronavirus pandemic.

'What They Did To World Wasn't Thinkable': Trump Cancels Talks With China

"What China did to the world was not even thinkable," Donald Trump said.

No new high-level trade talks have been scheduled between the United States and China but the two sides remain in touch about implementing a Phase 1 deal, White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows told reporters aboard Air Force One on Tuesday.

US President Donald Trump earlier told reporters during a visit to Yuma, Arizona, that he had postponed an August 15 review of the trade agreement signed with China in January given his frustration over Beijing's handling of the coronavirus pandemic.

"I postponed talks with China. You know why? I don't want to deal with them now," Trump said during a briefing on construction of a border wall with Mexico. "What China did to the world was not even thinkable. They could have stopped (the virus)."

Meadows said the review, mandated as part of the trade agreement with China, had not been rescheduled, but US rade Representative Robert Lighthizer remained in regular contact with his counterparts in China about fulfilling its commitments.

"There are no rescheduled talks ... at this point," Meadows told reporters.

"Ambassador Lighthizer continues to have discussions with his Chinese counterparts involving purchases and fulfilling their agreements."

Trump struck a non-committal tone when asked if he would pull out of the trade deal with China, saying, "We'll see what happens."

During visits to Arizona and Iowa on Tuesday, Trump expressed frustration about China's handling of the health crisis and its failure to contain the disease, but he also lauded record purchases by Beijing of US farm products.

China's imports of US farm and manufactured goods, energy and services are well behind the pace needed to meet a first-year target increase of $77 billion over 2017 purchases. But its purchases have increased as China's economy recovers from a coronavirus lockdown earlier this year.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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