China raises US trade tensions with warning of 'new cold war'
Foreign minister accuses Washington of damaging relationship with Beijing
Simon Goodley and Dan Sabbagh
Sun 24 May 2020 14.17 EDT
The prospects of a trade war between China and the western economies ratcheted up on Sunday as Beijing accused the US of pushing relations towards a new cold war.
China has no intention to change, still less replace the United States, Chinas foreign minister, Wang Yi, said on Sunday in the latest escalation in tensions between the worlds two largest economies. Its time for the United States to give up its wishful thinking of changing China and stopping 1.4 billion people in their historic march toward modernisation.
He said US political attacks on China over the coronavirus and global trade matters are taking China-US relations hostage and pushing our two countries to the brink of a new cold war.
Relations between the UK and the US have also soured as a string of Conservative politicians pressed on Sunday for tighter controls to protect struggling UK companies from Chinese takeovers, and the UK announced an emergency review of the deal to allow the Chinese telecoms firm Huawei to help run the forthcoming 5G mobile network.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/may/24/china-raises-us-trade-tensions-with-warning-of-new-cold-war