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China is Ready:  Supply-Chain Warfare

China is Ready: Supply-Chain Warfare

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https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/27/business/china-retaliation-skydio.html

China Has a New Playbook to Counter Trump: ‘Supply Chain Warfare’

A series of swipes at American companies show how China could take the initiative in a new trade war, using its economic dominance to exact pain.

In the world of cheap drones, Skydio was the great American hope. Its autonomous flying machines gave the U.S. defense and police agencies an alternative to Chinese manufacturers, free from the security concerns tied to dependence on Chinese supply chains.

But Skydio’s vulnerabilities came into sharp focus days before the U.S. presidential election, when the Chinese authorities imposed sanctions and severed the company’s access to essential battery supplies.

Overnight, the San Mateo, Calif.-based Skydio, the largest American maker of drones, scrambled to find new suppliers. The move slowed Skydio’s deliveries to its customers, which include the U.S. military.

“This is an attack on Skydio, but it’s also an attack on you,” Adam Bry, the chief executive, told customers.

Behind the move was a message from China’s leaders to Donald J. Trump, who would go on to win the election with a promise of new China sanctions and tariffs: Hit us and we’ll strike back harder.

From the campaign trail to his cabinet appointments, Mr. Trump has made it clear that he believes a confrontation with China over trade and technology is inevitable. In the first Trump administration, the Chinese government took mostly symbolic and equivalent measures after U.S. tariffs and trade restrictions. This time, China is poised to escalate its responses, experts say, and could aim aggressive and targeted countermeasures at American companies.

“During Trade War 1.0, Beijing was fairly careful to meet the tariffs that the U.S. put in place,” said Jude Blanchette, a China scholar at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. “Now they are signaling their tolerance for accepting and dishing out pain,” he said. “It’s clear for political reasons that Beijing is not willing to stand by and watch as significant new waves of tariffs come in.”

China has had time to prepare. During Mr. Trump’s first term, officials in Beijing began drafting laws that mirror U.S. tactics, allowing them to create blacklists and impose sanctions on American companies, cutting them off from critical resources. The goal has been to use China’s status as the world’s factory floor to exact punishment.

Since 2019, China has created an “unreliable entity list” to penalize companies that undermine national interests, introduced rules to punish firms that comply with U.S. restrictions on Chinese entities and expanded its export-control laws. The broader reach of these laws enables Beijing to potentially choke global access to critical materials like rare earths and lithium — essential components in everything from smartphones to electric vehicles.

Collectively, the strategy marks a calculated shift to counter Mr. Trump’s expected policies when he takes office. The fallout could significantly disrupt operations for American companies.

That raises the stakes for businesses and the economy as the new U.S. administration readies its first salvo in what could become a more ruthless second round of trade conflict between the United States and China.

Washington’s relationship with Beijing was already fraught. President Biden has largely continued Mr. Trump’s confrontational policies, punishing some Chinese companies with sanctions and restricting others from the U.S. market. This month, the U.S. government announced a ban on 29 Chinese companies over connections to forced labor in the country’s western region of Xinjiang.

On Monday, Mr. Trump went further. The president-elect said he would impose an additional 10 percent tariff on all products coming into the country from China.

China has given a preview of the lengths it is willing to go to counter U.S. government sanctions.

In September, the Chinese authorities accused PVH, the owner of Calvin Klein and Tommy Hilfiger, of “discriminating” against products in Xinjiang, putting it onto its “unreliable entities list.” It was the first time that Beijing punished a foreign company for removing Xinjiang cotton from its supply chain to meet U.S. trade rules.

A few weeks later, a think tank with ties to China’s internet regulatory agency called for a review of Intel, the American chip company, for selling products that “constantly harmed” China’s national security and interests. The last company subject to a cybersecurity review, the American chip maker Micron, was ultimately cut off from supplying chips to a significant portion of the Chinese market.

etc. etc.

After the sanctions by China, there is no quick fix. It can take months to make the necessary design changes and secure new suppliers. In a statement, Skydio said it would be forced to ration batteries. That means its customers, which include fire departments, can get only one battery per drone, severely limiting how long a craft can fly. The company said it planned to have new supplies by spring.

“If there was ever any doubt, this action makes clear that the Chinese government will use supply chains as a weapon to advance their interests over ours,” Skydio wrote.

An editorial in Global Times, a Chinese Communist Party tabloid, celebrated the success of the sanctions on Skydio, noting in a headline, “U.S. company sanctioned by China ‘cries out in pain,’ revealing their American mask.” The article said the reprisal was merited because Skydio was a part of U.S. government efforts to create a “non-red supply chain” outside China.

The solution for Skydio was simple, Global Times continued. Don’t “serve as a tool for the United States to contain China” or “be prepared to bear the consequences of such actions.”


"Mott synopsis": The US needs China more than China needs the US.


@Soothfast said
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/27/business/china-retaliation-skydio.html

China Has a New Playbook to Counter Trump: ‘Supply Chain Warfare’

A series of swipes at American companies show how China could take the initiative in a new trade war, using its economic dominance to exact pain.

In the world of cheap drones, Skydio was the great American hope. I ...[text shortened]... nces of such actions.”


"Mott synopsis": The US needs China more than China needs the US.
a queer rooting for china…whodathunkit

Hey dumbass, before you fall for nyt propaganda, biden INCREASED Trumps tarriffs on china.

https://www.cnn.com/2024/09/13/politics/china-tariffs-biden-trump/index.html



@Mott-The-Hoople said
a queer rooting for china…whodathunkit

Hey dumbass, before you fall for nyt propaganda, biden INCREASED Trumps tarriffs on china.

https://www.cnn.com/2024/09/13/politics/china-tariffs-biden-trump/index.html
The article mentions Biden's role in continuing with tariffs. Don't you read?

I'm not "rooting for China," but I am a stickler for pointing out certain realities. I know reality isn't really a "thing" in MAGAstan.


@Soothfast said
The article mentions Biden's role in continuing with tariffs. Don't you read?

I'm not "rooting for China," but I am a stickler for pointing out certain realities. I know reality isn't really a "thing" in MAGAstan.
Magastan has only one reality, the cantaloupe caligula is always right.


@Soothfast said
The article mentions Biden's role in continuing with tariffs. Don't you read?

I'm not "rooting for China," but I am a stickler for pointing out certain realities. I know reality isn't really a "thing" in MAGAstan.
You misspelled MAGAstain.


-Removed-
Why?

Trump is still the same person, you know.


@Soothfast said
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/27/business/china-retaliation-skydio.html

China Has a New Playbook to Counter Trump: ‘Supply Chain Warfare’

A series of swipes at American companies show how China could take the initiative in a new trade war, using its economic dominance to exact pain.

In the world of cheap drones, Skydio was the great American hope. I ...[text shortened]... nces of such actions.”


"Mott synopsis": The US needs China more than China needs the US.
Ask Mott why he's backing off his promise of 100-200% tariffs.


1 edit

-Removed-
Please take entire conversations into account before spewing out some random question designed to show your disdain for the author.

Why might your foreign secretary have to eat "humble pie" after truthfully calling Trump a KKK supporter and a misogynistic Nazi white supremacist? I said, "Why? Trump's still the same person."

Don't you read your own posts?


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@Suzianne said
Ask Mott why he's backing off his promise of 100-200% tariffs.
he never said that…why are you lying about it?

its clear you dont understand negotiating


@Mott-The-Hoople said
he never said that…why are you lying about it?

its clear you dont understand negotiating
You call it 'negotiating', we call it BULLYING.


@sonhouse said
You call it 'negotiating', we call it BULLYING.
you call men women too 😂

1 edit

@Mott-The-Hoople said
you call men women too 😂
No me, you have me confused with republicans. And I notice you did not defend actual bullying which is the MO of republicans now that they have been destroyed as an actual party to be taken over by Trump. Maybe you remember, but most likely do not, that the republican party was previously known as the party of law and order.
What could POSSIBLY go wrong.

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