logo
Philippine Defense Chief Rips China Officials in Testy Exchange

Philippine Defense Chief Rips China Officials in Testy Exchange

Bloomberg3 days ago

Philippine Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro engaged in a testy back-and-forth with Chinese officials at a Singapore security forum on Sunday, accusing leaders in Beijing of grabbing territory in disputed waters and repressing their own people.
During a panel at the Shangri-La Dialogue, two senior colonels in the People's Liberation Army directed questions at Teodoro, asking whether the Philippines would serve as a US proxy in Asia or adopt a friendlier approach toward China.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump tariffs live updates: Trump pushes for trade deals with steel, aluminum duties set to double
Trump tariffs live updates: Trump pushes for trade deals with steel, aluminum duties set to double

Yahoo

time43 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump tariffs live updates: Trump pushes for trade deals with steel, aluminum duties set to double

President Trump is pushing for trade deals while he is set to sign an order doubling tariffs on steel and aluminum. Meanwhile, his trade war is causing the global economy to slow, with growth now heading for its weakest pace since the COVID-19 pandemic, the OECD warned on Tuesday. The OECD cut its forecasts for most G20 economies and warned that easing trade tensions is key to boosting investment and keeping prices stable. Álvaro Pereira, the OECD's chief economist, said countries need to lower trade barriers. 'Otherwise, the growth impact is going to be quite significant,' he said. 'This has massive repercussions for everyone.' The warning comes as the US is pushing countries to speed up trade talks. The White House confirmed Tuesday that the US had sent a letter to partners as a "friendly reminder" that Trump's self-imposed 90-day pause on sweeping "reciprocal" tariffs is set to expire in early July. White House advisers have for weeks promised trade deals in the "not-too-distant future," with the only announced agreement so far coming with the United Kingdom. Meanwhile, US tensions with two key trade partners amped up on Monday after Trump promised last weekend to double tariffs on steel and aluminum. The White House said he will sign an order to do so on Tuesday. China responded to Trump's claim on Friday that it has "totally violated its agreement" with the US, in turn accusing the US of breaching the agreement and vowing to protect its interests. The US-China detente — reached earlier this month, when each country eased sky-high tariffs on the other — looks more fragile amid both trade-related and other tensions. US trade talks with the EU have also come back into focus as an early-July deadline also looms for Trump's 50% tariffs on imports from the bloc. The EU on Monday said it "strongly" regrets Trump's hike on steel and aluminum imports, saying it undermines planned trade talks. Meanwhile, Trump's most sweeping tariffs face legal uncertainty after a federal appeals court allowed the tariffs to temporarily stay in effect, a day after the US Court of International Trade blocked their implementation, deeming the method used to enact them "unlawful." Administration officials also hinted that court rulings would not be the final say. Yahoo Finance's Ben Werschkul has an overview of the other maneuvers Trump could pursue. Here are the latest updates as the policy reverberates around the world. The White House on Tuesday confirmed that the US has sent a letter to trade partners seeking to speed up talks ahead of a self-imposed July deadline. Though Reuters reported earlier this week that the administration asked for countries' best offers by Wednesday, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt on Tuesday framed the letter, which she said was sent by the US Trade Representative, as a "friendly reminder." "I can confirm the merits in the content of the letter," she said, per Bloomberg. She sadded: "USTR sent this letter to all of our trading partners, just to give them a friendly reminder that the deadline is coming up, and they are in talks. The president expects good deals, and we are on track for that." Bloomberg cited a "recipient of the letter" who said it was "framed as a way to steer ongoing talks rather than an ultimatum. President Trump will sign an executive order doubling duties on steel and aluminum imports to 50%, the White House said Tuesday. Trump first announced plans to up the duties last Friday during an event with steelworkers in Pennsylvania. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt didn't confirm the exact timing of the escalation Tuesday. Trump's most sweeping "reciprocal" tariffs are locked in legal limbo. But duties on specific sectors or commodities, like those on steel and aluminum, are so far unaffected because Trump has imposed them under a different legal authority. President Trump and his team have touted for weeks that deals are right around the corner. But progress has been less forthcoming. Yahoo Finance Washington Correspondent Ben Werschkul reports: Read more here. The aerospace industry is urging the Trump administration to hold off on adding new tariffs, as they could risk air safety and further disrupt the supply chain. Reuters reports: A group representing major U.S. and global aeropsace companies on Tuesday warned new tariffs on imported commercial aircraft, jet engines and parts could put air safety and the supply chain at risk or have unintended consequences. The Commerce Department last month opened a "Section 232" investigation that could be used as a basis for even higher tariffs on imported planes, engines and parts. The Aerospace Industries Association, which represents Boeing, Airbus, RTX, GE Aerospace and hundreds of other companies, urged the Commerce Department to extend public comments by 90 days and impose no new tariffs for at least 180 days. They urged further consultation with industry on "any Section 232 tariffs to ensure they accurately reflect national security concerns and do not put the supply chain and aviation safety at risk." Read more here. A new survey out Tuesday by insurance brokerage Gallagher showed that a majority of US business owners see tariffs as a top risk to be worried about. Reuters reports that President Trump's trade wars have already cost companies more than $34 billion in lost sales and higher costs, according to an analysis of corporate disclosures. "Our survey showed supply chain disruptions were a concern to business owners, with 90% reporting they are concerned about the impact of tariffs on their businesses," Gallagher CEO J. Patrick Gallagher told Reuters. "Global supply chains, strained by geopolitical conflicts and extreme weather events, remain vulnerable to disruptions." The findings come as tensions with China and other key trading partners ratcheted up again after President Trump threatened to double steel and aluminum tariffs. Also on Tuesday, the OECD warned of slowing growth due to trade disputes. Read more here. Taiwan's government said on Tuesday that it is continuing to "communicate closely" with the US in order to reach a trade deal, but cannot give any more information at this point on the negotiations. Reuters reports: Read more here. Consumer-facing multinationals are moving their China supply chains as trade wars continue to add uncertainty for businesses. Yahoo Finance's Brian Sozzi broke down what he heard from three major companies: Read more here. President Trump's tariffs on steel and aluminum imports are set to double starting Wednesday. That could present a problem for the only deal the US has so far agreed to during its 90-day "reciprocal" tariff pause. From Bloomberg: Under that "economic prosperity agreement," US tariffs on UK metal imports are set to be slashed to zero. But Starmer's spokesman said he doesn't know whether the looming doubling of steel levies will apply to UK imports while the two sides work on implementing the deal. Read more here. Yahoo Finance's senior reporter Hamza Shaban looks at how the American-made company Boeing has become a tool in the US government's trade negotiations: Read more here. A survey conducted by Reuters has revealed that Trump's tariffs will likely cause a slowdown in US home construction. Reuters reports: Read more here Yahoo Finance's senior legal reporter Alexis Keenan looks at what could make or break President Trump's "Liberation Day" tariffs. Read more here. Traders are taking advantage of Trump's trade war and looking at how to ride tariff-driven sell-offs and rallies. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Reuters reports in an exclusive: Read more here. The Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda said that the country's economy can take the hit from US tariffs and sustain a cycle of rising inflation accompanied by wage growth, indicating the banks readiness to raise interest rates further. Reuters reports: Read more here. President Donald Trump is eager to land more trade deals, but talks with China and the EU are stalling amid communication breakdowns and renewed tariff threats. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Reuters reports: Read more here. Global economic growth is weakening faster than expected, the the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) said on Tuesday, as Trump's trade war starts to take a toll on the US economy. The OECD cut its outlook for global output for the US and most of the G20 leading economies and warned that agreements to ease trade barriers are key to reviving investment and avoid higher prices. Global growth is expected to be 2.9% in 2025 and 2026, the OECD said in its latest full outlook. The figure has exceeded 3% every year since 2020, when output plunged because of the pandemic. The OECD said that US growth will slow sharply, falling from 2.8% in 2024 to 1.6% in 2025 and 1.5% next year. The OECD said that the Federal Reserve likely won't cut rates this year because inflation will remain too high. The latest assessment represents a downgrade to its March interim forecasts, which preceded Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariff announcements on April 2. Even then, the OECD warned of a 'significant toll' stemming from the levies and associated uncertainty over policy. The OECD also cut 2025 forecast for G20 countries, which include China, France, Japan, India, UK, and South Africa. Álvaro Pereira, the OECD's chief economist, said countries need to strike deals that would lower trade barriers. 'Otherwise, the growth impact is going to be quite significant,' he said. 'This has massive repercussions for everyone.' Compared with the OECD's last full outlook in December, growth prospects for almost all countries have been downgraded, said Pereira. 'Weakened economic prospects will be felt around the world, with almost no exception,' the OECD said. While the Trump administration appeals a court's decision to block many wide-ranging tariffs, the small businesses that brought the case are seeking to keep the tariffs from going back into effect as the legal battle plays out. From Bloomberg Read more here. From Reuters: Read more here. Federal Reserve policymakers are debating whether they should "look through" Trump tariff effects, paving the way for lower rates, or remain cautious should tariffs prove to be more long-lasting and bump inflation higher. Yahoo Finance's Jennifer Schonberger reports: Read more here. The White House on Tuesday confirmed that the US has sent a letter to trade partners seeking to speed up talks ahead of a self-imposed July deadline. Though Reuters reported earlier this week that the administration asked for countries' best offers by Wednesday, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt on Tuesday framed the letter, which she said was sent by the US Trade Representative, as a "friendly reminder." "I can confirm the merits in the content of the letter," she said, per Bloomberg. She sadded: "USTR sent this letter to all of our trading partners, just to give them a friendly reminder that the deadline is coming up, and they are in talks. The president expects good deals, and we are on track for that." Bloomberg cited a "recipient of the letter" who said it was "framed as a way to steer ongoing talks rather than an ultimatum. President Trump will sign an executive order doubling duties on steel and aluminum imports to 50%, the White House said Tuesday. Trump first announced plans to up the duties last Friday during an event with steelworkers in Pennsylvania. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt didn't confirm the exact timing of the escalation Tuesday. Trump's most sweeping "reciprocal" tariffs are locked in legal limbo. But duties on specific sectors or commodities, like those on steel and aluminum, are so far unaffected because Trump has imposed them under a different legal authority. President Trump and his team have touted for weeks that deals are right around the corner. But progress has been less forthcoming. Yahoo Finance Washington Correspondent Ben Werschkul reports: Read more here. The aerospace industry is urging the Trump administration to hold off on adding new tariffs, as they could risk air safety and further disrupt the supply chain. Reuters reports: A group representing major U.S. and global aeropsace companies on Tuesday warned new tariffs on imported commercial aircraft, jet engines and parts could put air safety and the supply chain at risk or have unintended consequences. The Commerce Department last month opened a "Section 232" investigation that could be used as a basis for even higher tariffs on imported planes, engines and parts. The Aerospace Industries Association, which represents Boeing, Airbus, RTX, GE Aerospace and hundreds of other companies, urged the Commerce Department to extend public comments by 90 days and impose no new tariffs for at least 180 days. They urged further consultation with industry on "any Section 232 tariffs to ensure they accurately reflect national security concerns and do not put the supply chain and aviation safety at risk." Read more here. A new survey out Tuesday by insurance brokerage Gallagher showed that a majority of US business owners see tariffs as a top risk to be worried about. Reuters reports that President Trump's trade wars have already cost companies more than $34 billion in lost sales and higher costs, according to an analysis of corporate disclosures. "Our survey showed supply chain disruptions were a concern to business owners, with 90% reporting they are concerned about the impact of tariffs on their businesses," Gallagher CEO J. Patrick Gallagher told Reuters. "Global supply chains, strained by geopolitical conflicts and extreme weather events, remain vulnerable to disruptions." The findings come as tensions with China and other key trading partners ratcheted up again after President Trump threatened to double steel and aluminum tariffs. Also on Tuesday, the OECD warned of slowing growth due to trade disputes. Read more here. Taiwan's government said on Tuesday that it is continuing to "communicate closely" with the US in order to reach a trade deal, but cannot give any more information at this point on the negotiations. Reuters reports: Read more here. Consumer-facing multinationals are moving their China supply chains as trade wars continue to add uncertainty for businesses. Yahoo Finance's Brian Sozzi broke down what he heard from three major companies: Read more here. President Trump's tariffs on steel and aluminum imports are set to double starting Wednesday. That could present a problem for the only deal the US has so far agreed to during its 90-day "reciprocal" tariff pause. From Bloomberg: Under that "economic prosperity agreement," US tariffs on UK metal imports are set to be slashed to zero. But Starmer's spokesman said he doesn't know whether the looming doubling of steel levies will apply to UK imports while the two sides work on implementing the deal. Read more here. Yahoo Finance's senior reporter Hamza Shaban looks at how the American-made company Boeing has become a tool in the US government's trade negotiations: Read more here. A survey conducted by Reuters has revealed that Trump's tariffs will likely cause a slowdown in US home construction. Reuters reports: Read more here Yahoo Finance's senior legal reporter Alexis Keenan looks at what could make or break President Trump's "Liberation Day" tariffs. Read more here. Traders are taking advantage of Trump's trade war and looking at how to ride tariff-driven sell-offs and rallies. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Reuters reports in an exclusive: Read more here. The Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda said that the country's economy can take the hit from US tariffs and sustain a cycle of rising inflation accompanied by wage growth, indicating the banks readiness to raise interest rates further. Reuters reports: Read more here. President Donald Trump is eager to land more trade deals, but talks with China and the EU are stalling amid communication breakdowns and renewed tariff threats. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Reuters reports: Read more here. Global economic growth is weakening faster than expected, the the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) said on Tuesday, as Trump's trade war starts to take a toll on the US economy. The OECD cut its outlook for global output for the US and most of the G20 leading economies and warned that agreements to ease trade barriers are key to reviving investment and avoid higher prices. Global growth is expected to be 2.9% in 2025 and 2026, the OECD said in its latest full outlook. The figure has exceeded 3% every year since 2020, when output plunged because of the pandemic. The OECD said that US growth will slow sharply, falling from 2.8% in 2024 to 1.6% in 2025 and 1.5% next year. The OECD said that the Federal Reserve likely won't cut rates this year because inflation will remain too high. The latest assessment represents a downgrade to its March interim forecasts, which preceded Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariff announcements on April 2. Even then, the OECD warned of a 'significant toll' stemming from the levies and associated uncertainty over policy. The OECD also cut 2025 forecast for G20 countries, which include China, France, Japan, India, UK, and South Africa. Álvaro Pereira, the OECD's chief economist, said countries need to strike deals that would lower trade barriers. 'Otherwise, the growth impact is going to be quite significant,' he said. 'This has massive repercussions for everyone.' Compared with the OECD's last full outlook in December, growth prospects for almost all countries have been downgraded, said Pereira. 'Weakened economic prospects will be felt around the world, with almost no exception,' the OECD said. While the Trump administration appeals a court's decision to block many wide-ranging tariffs, the small businesses that brought the case are seeking to keep the tariffs from going back into effect as the legal battle plays out. From Bloomberg Read more here. From Reuters: Read more here. Federal Reserve policymakers are debating whether they should "look through" Trump tariff effects, paving the way for lower rates, or remain cautious should tariffs prove to be more long-lasting and bump inflation higher. Yahoo Finance's Jennifer Schonberger reports: Read more here. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Florida cracking down on ‘despicable' senior scams in prisons
Florida cracking down on ‘despicable' senior scams in prisons

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Florida cracking down on ‘despicable' senior scams in prisons

(NewsNation) — In Florida, authorities have warned that criminals are finding new ways to scam seniors from behind bars by using cell phones and the internet to con people out of their hard-earned money. State officials recently launched 'Operation Triple Threat,' which they said uncovered multiple instances of prison inmates scamming seniors. One of the cases found that a 92-year-old man was scammed out of $800,000 over two years. 'We've identified people who are incarcerated in the state have had cellphones smuggled in and used internet services to reach out to seniors,' said James Uthmeier, Florida Attorney General. 'We see tens of billions of dollars stolen through scam activity across the country, and Florida is currently ranked #2 as the state scammers want to target the most.' More than 1,800 arrested in crackdown on Asia-based scam operations Officials said they searched through three prisons and confiscated nearly 40 cellphones, eight SIM cards, ten batteries, 94 chargers, and four Wi-Fi hotspots. They added that some of the inmates allegedly used cryptocurrency as part of their crimes while convincing seniors to make fake purchases. 'They love to send older adults, in particular, to these cryptocurrency ATMs,' said Karen Murillo, Advocacy Manager at AARP Florida. 'They may even tell them it's a security locker or name it something other than a cryptocurrency. Once that person hits send, it's gone. Online vigilantes turn tables on scammers who victimize the elderly Florida isn't the only state fighting to stop seniors from being scammed. Some states have introduced 'temporary hold' laws, which let banks and other institutions hold transactions that they think are fraudulent. California and Michigan also have laws to protect seniors. Meanwhile, legislators in Maine voted for a bill to prevent the exploitation of seniors. Investigators acknowledged they don't know how many suspects face charges. The FBI says seniors lost $4.8 billion in 2024 from internet scams. Crypto scams for people over 60 accounted for $1 million in losses. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

‘GQuuuuuuX' Is Taking Its ‘Gundam' Remix to a Whole Other Level
‘GQuuuuuuX' Is Taking Its ‘Gundam' Remix to a Whole Other Level

Gizmodo

timean hour ago

  • Gizmodo

‘GQuuuuuuX' Is Taking Its ‘Gundam' Remix to a Whole Other Level

Last week, I said that Mobile Suit Gundam GQuuuuuuX's remixing of the original Gundam continuity was letting several of the original series' biggest characters haunt the narrative, from the absent Amuro Ray, to the slightly less absent Char Aznable, and then the one figure who's really been skirting around the edges of GQuuuuuuX's periphery in earnest, the mysterious Lalah Sune. This week, Lalah stopped skirting… and then some. To the surprise of no one after last week's setup, episode nine of GQuuuuuuX, 'The Rose of Sharon,' is indeed for the most part about Lalah Sune making her way into the series' narrative, as Machu manages to escape confinement with the GQuuuuuuX and head to Earth, where she finds Lalah forced to work at a lavish brothel. But while this Lalah is indeed a Newtype—regaling staff and Machu alike of the visions she sees in her dreams—she is not the Rose of Sharon that Machu was seeking in her hopes to be reunited with Shuji. Instead, this Lalah is almost haunted by what has come to pass, her Newtypism not really granting her a vision of the future, but what was, as GQuuuuuuX offers yet another spin on a classic scene from the 1979 anime. Floating in the cosmic glow that represents the connection forged between Newtypes, Lalah flatly explains that the future she sees is her own: the future of another Lalah, a young woman who meets a young Zeon officer in red who whisks her to the stars… a Lalah who falls in love with that man, and also his rival, as she dies in battle saving the former from the latter. What the Lalah of GQuuuuuuX sees beyond time, as she says to Machu, is the original story of Mobile Suit Gundam. The implication then that GQuuuuuuX's remixed timeline of the Universal Century co-exists alongside Gundam's original one, in some capacity, already raises a bunch of fascinating questions, but things only get more interesting in the episode's climactic moments, when we and Machu alike discover that the Lalah was right when she told them that she is not the rose neither she, nor Shuji, nor everyone else has been looking for after it went missing… Because another Lalah Sune is. The Lalah Sune, if you will. Hidden for years at the bottom of the ocean until Machu and the GQuuuuuuX find it, Lalah's mobile armor the Elmeth, locked in time from the moment of her death in the 1979 anime, has some how become an almighty object of vast psionic power, a Newtype beacon that has transitioned across this divergent timeline, calling out to the generation of Newtypes that forged it in the first place in characters like Char and Lalah, but also the generation that has grown beyond them in this new timeline, like Machu, Nyaan, and Shuji. Of course, Gundam is no stranger to the alternate reality trend that has become du jour in contemporary pop culture. It's been on it for decades at this point, when Mobile Fighter G Gundam created the first alternate Gundam universe to exist on TV outside of the stories that had been told in the Universal Century setting. Ever since we've had a bunch of other alternate realities to provide the setting to new Gundam series, we've had realities that, like GQuuuuuuX, has mirrored and riffed on the Universal Century stories to create their own echoes of its ideas. Hell, Turn A Gundam presented a vision where its setting was a far-flung future after a 'Dark History' that eradicated humanity back to a technological reset—one that touched upon every corner of Gundam continuity up to that point in some way, a comment on the cyclical nature of historical trends, while also symbolically honoring the entire metatext of the franchise up to that point, regardless of continuity. Suffice to say, the coexistence of a GQuuuuuuX timeline, with all its changes, and that potential of the original timeline alongside it, is not exactly unfamiliar territory that Gundam is wading into as it explores all this. With GQuuuuuuX having just a few more episodes to lay out what exactly it wants to say in all this remixing and meta-commentary, time will tell if all these self-referential reveals will result in the series creating something additive to that vast canon—or if its wild evocations are simply designed to spin the heads of diehard fans.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store