Wednesday, 4 June 2025

CHINA PREPARES TO CRUSH THE US ECONOMY, BRING PRODUCTION LINES TO A HALT AFTER TRUMP AND HIS WEF CRONIES MISCALCULATE IN THEIR TRADE CHAOS

 TRUMP HAS CAUSED ECONOMIC RUIN TO AMERICA

HIS ILL JUDGED TRADE WAR AGAINST CHINA HAS EXPOSED THAT AMERICA NEEDS CHINESE IMPORTS FAR MORE THAN CHINA NEEDS US EXPORTS

THIS FACT HAS BEEN CENSORED USING CRIMINAL MEANS ALSO BY TRUMP, KUSHNER E 17 449

THE RESULT WILL BE RECESSION


Trump said Xi Jinping was “extremely hard to make a deal with” as China is preparing to destroy much of what is left of America s manufacturing base by withholding key products as part of a trade war initiated by Trump.

Trump said the Chinese leader was “very tough” in a post on his Truth Social account  sent at around 2am Washington time.

This , as the threat of factory production lines grinding to a halt  in the USA  highlighting " the immense power of China in this crucial market, and the power of its hand in negotiations," as The Telegraph reports.

He may have been kept awake by the prospect of prison due to economic malpractice  after he and his cronies, 9 11 insider Howard Lutnik and ex Soros staffer Scott Bessent were radically wrong to assume the Chinese economy need a deal with the USA or America s export market.

"Trump has a tough pill to swallow: it is his arch-rival who looks to have the better negotiating hand," and as his MAGA supporters may decide they want to see Trump and his family and cronies in prison for economic crimes.

China’s near-total dominance of the world’s supply of rare-earth metals – which are used in the manufacture of everything from cars and computer chips to F-35 fighter jets and nuclear-powered submarines – means Xi can squeeze the US where it hurts.

“Critical minerals are one of the most important bargaining chips for China in its negotiations with Washington. China will really hold on to this, as a significant point of leverage,” says Matilda Buchan, a senior analyst at Asia House, a London think tank.

What incentive does China have to deliver products to a government which declares openly China its biggest enemy, makes thinly veiled threats to destroy China, attac China, overthrow the CCP just for gowing their own economy.

China has a central bank which can print free money to make virtually limitless investments in business while Trump refuses to renationalie the Fed.

Trump seems trying to destroy the American econony to impose a tyranny by the oligarchs.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2025/06/04/trump-tariffs-china-xi-trade-deal-deadline-ftse-100-markets/


From The Telegraph

Trump cornered


The threat of factory production lines grinding to a halt highlights the immense power of China in this crucial market, and the power of its hand in negotiations.

China’s mines churn out about 61pc of the world’s rare earths, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA). Chinese refiners and manufacturers also hoover up most of the rare earths from elsewhere, processing 92pc of the world’s supply.

It is refining that is key, as this is the process that turns the material into a usable product.

The country has a particular stranglehold on the manufacture of magnet alloys containing rare earths, which have near-ubiquitous application in computing, vehicular and electrical systems.

“Particularly as you move further down the supply chain, from mined products towards downstream highly engineered products, China’s market share only grows,” Merriman says. “Its grip only gets tighter.”

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2025/06/04/trump-cornered-china-weaponises-rare-earths-dominance/

Trump has a tough pill to swallow: it is his arch-rival who looks to have the better negotiating hand.

China’s near-total dominance of the world’s supply of rare-earth metals – which are used in the manufacture of everything from cars and computer chips to F-35 fighter jets and nuclear-powered submarines – means Xi can squeeze the US where it hurts.

“Critical minerals are one of the most important bargaining chips for China in its negotiations with Washington. China will really hold on to this, as a significant point of leverage,” says Matilda Buchan, a senior analyst at Asia House, a London think tank.

...

willingness to weaponise the rare-earths supply chain is so potent a threat to the US economy and military that it has already pushed the White House into de-escalating its planned trade war with China.

After Trump’s April 2 “liberation day” announcement raised tariffs on US imports from China to an eventual peak of 145pc, Beijing’s retaliation included a ban on exports to the US of magnet alloys containing key rare-earth materials.

The impact was quickly felt. On May 9, some of the biggest carmakers in the US – including General Motors, Toyota, Volkswagen and Hyundai – wrote to the White House warning that unless China’s export ban was lifted, they would soon have to start cutting back production.

...

Beijing did not just slap a ban on exports, it built a new bureaucratic structure to underpin future rare-earths trade.

China-based companies wanting to export metal alloys containing more than a trace of seven key rare earths – samarium, gadolinium, terbium, dysprosium, lutetium, yttrium and scandium – now need to apply for a licence from the commerce ministry.



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