Trump states that China “totally violated” the commercial agreement with us

President Donald Trump accused China in the morning of violating a recent commercial agreement with the United States.
The strong criticism seemed to question the power of permanence of the agreement, establishing the possibility of a commercial war revived between the two largest economies in the world.
“China, perhaps not surprisingly for some, has totally violated its agreement with us,” Trump said in a Publication of social networks on Friday morning. “Both for being Mr. Nice Guy!”

President Donald Trump talks to journalists at the Oval Office of the White House, on May 23, 2025, in Washington.
EVAN VUCCI/AP
Trump did not identify the action taken by China that had violated the agreement.
The comments arrived hours after the United States Secretary of the United States, Scott Besent, expressed pessimism about commercial conversations between the United States and China in an interview with Fox News on Thursday night.
“I would say they are a bit stagnant,” Besent said when asked about the state of commercial conversations. “I think we will have more conversations with them in the coming weeks, and I think that at some point we can have a call between the president and the president of the XI party [Jinping]”
American actions fell slightly in the first operations on Friday morning after Trump and Besent’s comments.
A commercial agreement between the United States and China at the beginning of this month cut the TIT rates per eye imposed by the two countries, causing an increase in the stock market and softening the recession forecasts on Wall Street.
The United States agreed to reduce tariffs to Chinese products from 145% to 30%, while China promised to reduce tariffs in US products from 125% to 10%. The low tariffs are established to remain in place for 90 days, while the two parties negotiate a broader commercial agreement.
However, the remaining 30% tariffs for Chinese products faced a great setback this week, when a panel of federal judges annulled the legal justification of the encumbrances.
The ruling of the United States International Trade Court invalidated China’s tariffs, along with a large number of other taxes in dozens of countries presented at a Rosas garden ceremony that Trump had called “day of release.”
A Federal Court of Appeals moved to temporarily restore rates on Thursday, leaving the final destination of uncertain policy.