
Trump says US will get magnets and rare earth minerals in China trade deal
In return, Mr Trump said the US will provide China 'what was agreed to', including allowing Chinese students to attend American colleges and universities.
The new 55% tariff rate would mark a meaningful increase from the 30% levy set in Switzerland during talks in May.
'OUR DEAL WITH CHINA IS DONE, SUBJECT TO FINAL APPROVAL WITH PRESIDENT XI AND ME,' Mr Trump wrote on his social media site.
He said full magnets and any necessary rare earths will be supplied up front by China.
'WE ARE GETTING A TOTAL OF 55% TARIFFS, CHINA IS GETTING 10%. RELATIONSHIP IS EXCELLENT!' Mr Trump wrote.
Several global brands are among dozens of companies at risk of using forced labour through their Chinese supply chains because they use critical minerals or buy minerals-based products sourced from the far-western Xinjiang region of China, an international rights group said on Wednesday.
The report by the Netherlands-based Global Rights Compliance says companies including Avon, Walmart, Nescafe, Coca-Cola and paint supplier Sherwin-Williams may be linked to titanium sourced from Xinjiang, where rights groups allege the Chinese government runs coercive labour practices targeting predominantly Muslim Uyghurs and other Turkic minorities.
The report found 77 Chinese suppliers in the titanium, lithium, beryllium and magnesium industries operating in Xinjiang.
It said the suppliers are at risk of participating in the Chinese government's 'labour transfer programmes,' in which Uyghurs are forced to work in factories as part of a long-standing campaign of assimilation and mass detention.
Commercial paints, thermos cups and components for the aerospace, auto and defence industries are among products sold internationally that can trace their supply chains to minerals from Xinjiang, the report said.
It said that companies must review their supply chains.
'Mineral mining and processing in (Xinjiang) rely in part on the state's forced labour programmes for Uyghurs and other Turkic people in the region,' the report said.
The report came as China and the United States, the world's two largest economies, said that they have agreed on a framework to get their trade negotiations back on track after a series of disputes that threatened to derail them.
The two sides on Tuesday wrapped up two days of talks in London that appeared to focus on finding a way to resolve disputes over mineral and technology exports that had shaken a fragile truce on trade reached in Geneva last month.
Asked about the report, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said that 'no-one has ever been forcibly transferred in China's Xinjiang under work programmes'.
'The so-called allegation of forced labour in China's Xinjiang region is nothing but a lie concocted by certain anti-China forces. We urge the relevant organisation to stop interfering in China's internal affairs and undermining Xinjiang's prosperity and stability under the guise of human rights,' ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said.
The named companies did not immediately comment on the report.
A UN report from 2022 found China may have committed crimes against humanity in Xinjiang, where more than one million Uyghurs are estimated to have been arbitrarily detained as part of measures that the Chinese government said were intended to target terrorism and separatism.
The Chinese government has rejected the UN claims and defended its actions in Xinjiang as fighting terror and ensuring stability.
In 2021, then-US president Joe Biden signed a law to block imports from the Xinjiang region unless businesses can prove the items were made without forced labour.
The law initially targeted solar products, tomatoes, cotton and apparel, but the US government recently added new sectors for enforcement, including aluminium and seafood.
Many of China's major minerals corporations have invested in the exploration and mining of lithium, a key component for electric vehicle batteries, in Xinjiang, Global Rights Compliance said.
Xinjiang is also China's top source of beryllium, a mineral used for aerospace, defence and telecommunications, its report said.
A recent report by the International Energy Agency said that the world's sources of critical minerals are increasingly concentrated in a few countries, notably China, which is also a leading refining and processing base for lithium, cobalt, graphite and other minerals.
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Reuters
11 minutes ago
- Reuters
ADM sets off 'frenzy' in US soybean market ahead of new biofuel blend rule
CHICAGO, June 12 (Reuters) - Archer-Daniels-Midland (ADM.N), opens new tab, a major U.S. soybean crusher and biofuel producer, slashed its bids to buy the oilseed this week ahead of an expected Trump administration announcement on biofuel blending requirements, a primary driver of demand for soybean oil. Processors such as Chicago-based ADM have been waiting for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's decision on blending requirements for months as they grapple with slumping crush margins and abundant soybean stocks. Reuters reported on Thursday that the EPA is expected to propose blending requirements below industry recommendations on Friday, leading to lower-than-expected demand for soyoil to be used in biofuels. ADM said in an emailed statement to Reuters on Thursday that it does not have insight around the pending blending announcement beyond publicly available information and that it independently sets its basis bids, which is the difference between futures and a local cash price to take possession of the grain immediately. The company on Wednesday rolled its cash basis bid at its flagship Decatur, Illinois, facility to 20 cents below the Chicago Board of Trade November soybean futures price from 22 cents over July futures . The roll to November futures, which closed at a 15-cent discount to July on Thursday, lowered the local cash price by about 60 cents a bushel, representing an unusually sharp 6.5% drop in the price offered to farmers. ADM also rolled basis bids at its other crushing facilities, and some rival processors, including Cargill, followed ADM on Thursday. Other processors kept their basis bids against the July futures contract, but lowered basis values by up to 15 cents. "ADM Decatur put the bean market in a frenzy," agriculture trading company John Stewart and Associates said in a note. Falling basis values reflect expectations for a large autumn harvest and weak demand that has eroded processing margins for companies that crush beans into soymeal livestock feed and soyoil used for cooking and producing biofuels. Crush margins have struggled as a recent jump in U.S. processing capacity has swelled available supplies of meal and oil and pressured prices for the soy products. Tariff worries and unclear U.S. biofuels policies have stoked further unease among crushers and biofuel makers, and some biodiesel producers have scaled back or idled plants. ADM said in April it would permanently close a South Carolina soybean processing plant to cut costs. "Cash crush margins stink, and there is a bunch of downtime scheduled for July," said Charlie Sernatinger, executive vice president for Marex Capital Markets. Diana Klemme, vice president of Grain Service Corp in Atlanta, which serves agricultural hedgers in the futures markets, sent an alert to customers after seeing ADM's bid adjustments. She said that she had never seen a move to new-crop basis levels in June in more than 50 years in the grain business. "I said check your markets carefully because ADM just dropped all their bids 40-75 cents a bushel and went to new-crop values," Klemme said. The November futures contract represents the autumn harvest price, or the new crop. Farmers have been reluctant to sell crops to processors because they want higher prices, while processors avoided raising bids to protect their thin margins.


Times
13 minutes ago
- Times
Trump: Israeli strike on Iran ‘could very well happen'
President Trump has said that an Israeli strike on Iran 'could very well happen' after Washington scaled back its diplomats in neighbouring countries in anticipation of Iranian retaliation. Speaking at the White House on Thursday, the president said that Omani-brokered negotiations between American and Iranian officials were making progress and that Israel should show restraint because a deal could be 'close'. The comments came a day after the US said that non-essential staff working at embassies in Baghdad, Kuwait and Bahrain could leave. Washington fears that a lack of progress in talks with Iran could prompt an Israeli strike. Tehran denies having ambitions to build a bomb, but has enriched uranium to just short of the level needed to make a viable nuclear warhead. 'I'd love to avoid the conflict,' Trump said. 'Iran's going to have to negotiate a little bit tougher, meaning they're going to have to give us something they're not willing to give us right now.' On the possibility of an Israeli strike, he added, 'I don't want to say imminent, but it looks like it's something that could very well happen. Iran cannot have a bomb. Whether we get there or not [in the talks], they can't have nuclear weapons.' Asked about whether a fresh round of talks due to begin this weekend could yield a breakthrough, Trump added: 'As long as I think there will be an agreement, I don't want them [the Israelis] going in.' Doing so could 'blow it', he said. MURTADHA AL-SUDANI/ANADOLU The US thinks Israel is 'fully ready' to launch an operation against Iran's nuclear sites, the country's media reported. Tehran had threatened to target American bases in the region if it came under attack from Israel. On Thursday, the Trump administration told the Israeli government that the US would not be directly involved in any military strike against Iran's nuclear facilities, Axios reported. Steve Witkoff, the US's lead negotiator, who is expected to arrive in Oman for the next round of talks on Sunday, warned that an Iranian retaliation could overwhelm Israeli defences and inflict mass casualties. Witkoff made the warning during a closed session with Republican senators, the US news site Axios reported. The US and its Arab allies fear a conflict with Iran could turn into a regional war that threatens oil supplies and shipping. During a visit to the Middle East last month, Trump heard pleas from Arab leaders to avoid war with Iran, but he has been frustrated by the pace of the talks and Tehran's rejection of a US proposal to curb its uranium enrichment. Hossein Salami, the commander of Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps, threatened that retaliation to an Israeli attack would be 'more forceful and destructive' than last year's Iranian missile attacks on Israel. Separately, Iran announced it would build a new uranium enrichment site and upgrade centrifuges used in the process at its Fordow enrichment plant. The measure came in response to a vote by the UN International Atomic Energy Agency condemning Iran for failing to meet its non-proliferation obligations. Iran had sought to keep Fordow, which was built inside a mountain near the northern city of Qom, a secret for years. The UN discovered uranium enriched to 83 per cent — just shy of the 90 per cent needed for a bomb — at the plant in 2023. Israel denounced the move as 'an imminent threat to regional and international security and stability'. Iran has said it would hold the US culpable for an Israeli attack, raising the spectre of a repeat of its attack on a US military base in Iraq in 2020, after the assassination of its commander Qassem Soleimani in a drone strike. Pro-Iran militias in Iraq also attacked the American embassy in Baghdad. Iran's foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, said on Thursday that his government would defend the rights of its citizens in a sixth round of nuclear talks with the US at the weekend in Muscat. He also said that the UN nuclear watchdog's decision to censure Iran added 'to the complexity of the discussions'. Israel had been preparing for a strike this year before Trump blocked it. He warned Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, against attacking Iran again in a phone call on Monday. Israeli patience is wearing thin, however, and western officials said this week that the country was preparing to launch strikes soon, according to The New York Times and CBS. Mike Huckabee, Washington's ambassador to Israel, told the Israeli media that it was unlikely Netanyahu would order a strike on Iran without a 'green light' from the White House. The nuclear negotiations stumbled over a US insistence that Iran no longer enrich uranium, even for civilian purposes, as part of a deal that would lift sanctions on Tehran. Iran insists on its 'right' to produce the material and has publicly rejected an initial US proposal that was presented by Omani mediators this month. Iran came into the talks weaker than ever, after Israel decimated its Hamas and Hezbollah allies in Gaza and Lebanon. Much of its air defences were also wiped out in retaliatory Israeli strikes last year. Israel believes it now has a historic opportunity to finish off the country's nuclear programme, but sceptics question whether airstrikes could destroy the deeply fortified and scattered facilities across Iran. Trump had previously asked Israel for guarantees that it would not attack Iran while the negotiations continued, but Israel could seize the opportunity if the scheduled talks for Sunday fail. The US may hope that the threat will make Tehran more flexible in the talks.


BBC News
17 minutes ago
- BBC News
Los Angeles is latest in Trump's calls to use military at protests
Donald Trump has long spoken of using military force to suppress protesters demonstrating against his policies and presidency. This week, Los Angeles gave him the some protests against federal immigration sweeps grew chaotic, Trump overrode the wishes of California Governor Gavin Newsom and activated the state's National Guard – a move former military leaders told the BBC was an escalation of Trump's previous pledges to use troops to quash protests and set a new with Trump's penchant for military optics – he has planned a military parade in Washington, DC on Saturday to mark the Army's 250th anniversary – the president's intervention in Los Angeles has raised fears that he is "politicizing the military," said Major General Randy Manner, US Army Retired."He escalated immediately for reasons that are only political reasons. They are not reasons that are justifiable," said General Manner, who served as the acting vice chief of the National Guard the Trump administration maintains it took over California's National Guard to restore order, and protect Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers as they conducted sweeps for undocumented immigrants in Los "has the right to safely conduct operations in any state, in any jurisdiction in the country", Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth said at a congressional hearing on also posted that Newsom "was unable to provide protection in a timely manner" for ICE officers."If our troops didn't go into Los Angeles, it would be burning to the ground right now," he wrote on TruthSocial on Wednesday. But Newsom - a Democrat and outspoken critic of Trump - maintained that the state could handle protesters on its own. He called Trump's intervention a "brazen abuse of power" that inflamed a "combustible situation." The protests have continued for nearly a week and Los Angeles police have made hundreds of arrests, mainly for failure to disperse, but also for breaking curfew around downtown Los Angeles, posession of a firearm and assaulting a police officer. Trump's decision to wrest control of the Guard from Newsom goes beyond past tough stances on protests, particularly in states led by the death of George Floyd in 2020 sparked nationwide demonstrations for police reform and racial justice, Trump called for a militarized had criticised his death, which occurred in police custody in Minneapolis, Minnesota. But as protests broke out and some devolved into looting, Trump later called for Democratic governors to get "much tougher", warning "the Federal Government will step in and do what has to be done, and that includes using the unlimited power of our Military and many arrests."When protesters marched in Washington, DC, Trump tweeted that they would "have been greeted with the most vicious dogs, and most ominous weapons, I have ever seen" if they had breached the White the DC protests, National Guard helicopters flew low over crowds to disperse them. A subsequent investigation by the US Army concluded the incident was a misuse of military medical aircraft, the Washington Post reported."What we're seeing in Los Angeles is a perfect storm," said John Acevedo, an associate dean at Emory Law School who studies free speech and protests in the US. "There are protesters, they are violent. A perfect setup situation for President Trump, where he can use his goal of using troops against protesters."The president does have the power to federalise National Guard troops, and will do so when they are needed overseas or states request additional assistance. But under normal domestic circumstances, the request for their assistance starts at the local level. The governor then can activate the state's Guard, or ask the president for federal presidents have not taken control of a state's National Guard against a governor's wishes since the Civil Rights era, when President Dwight Eisenhower intervened to aid school integration in Arkansas, and President Lyndon B Johnson later called on Alabama's troops to protect demonstrators."We have, over the decades, developed statutes and regulations and protocols that govern how we handle civil disturbances for very solid reasons," said Major General (Ret.) William Enyart, a former congressman who also led the Illinois National Guard from 2007 to chose to "ignore all that hard-earned experience," General Enyart saw the president's actions in Los Angeles as "political theatre" and referenced a small number of protesters who burned Waymo self-driving cars over the weekend. "Trump is the master of reality television. He understands this is great TV. What is more exciting than seeing a couple self-driving cars burning in the street?" said General Enyart.