INTERNACIONAL
Guerra comercial: China presentó un informe con el que busca refutar a Trump y le reclama negociar de igual a igual

En un día en el que la guerra arancelaria iniciada por Donald Trump escaló con altas tasas aduaneras cruzadas entre las dos principales economías del mundo, China difundió un documento oficial en el que instó a EE.UU. a negociar “de igual a igual” para beneficio bilateral y del crecimiento global.
“La historia nos dice que si China y Estados Unidos trabajan juntos, ambos se beneficiarán. Si se enfrentan, ambos sufrirán”, expresó el documento llamado “Libro Blanco” sobre la posición de Beijing en las relaciones económicas y comerciales entre ambas potencias, que se publica según sus autores “para aclarar los hechos e ilustrar la postura política china sobre temas relevantes”.
Leé tambien: China anunció que aplicará aranceles del 84% a los productos de EE.UU. y escala la guerra comercial
El trabajo de la Oficina de Información del Consejo de Estado de China, al que accedió TN, repasó la conflictiva relación entre ambos países y enfatizó que “no hay ganadores en una guerra comercial y no hay salida para el proteccionismo”, por lo que llama a Trump a dialogar con Xi Jinping: “El éxito de China y Estados Unidos será una oportunidad más que una amenaza para cada uno”, sostuvo.
La versión oficial china aseguró que Washington impuso desde 2018 aranceles elevados a las importaciones chinas por más de US$500.000 millones y que “ha seguido introduciendo políticas para contener y reprimir a China”. Por eso, planteó, que Beijing “no tiene otra opción que adoptar medidas enérgicas y defender sus intereses nacionales”.
Las dos potencias, Estados Unidos y China, otra vez en guerra comercial. (Foto: Reuters)
El mensaje de China a EE.UU. en medio de la escalada de la guerra arancelaria
En el extenso documento, el gobierno de Xi Jinping expresó que la política arancelaria ahora redoblada por Trump “revela la naturaleza aislacionista y coercitiva de la conducta del país norteamericano, van en contra de los principios de la economía de mercado y el multilateralismo, y tendrán graves repercusiones para las relaciones económicas y comerciales bilaterales”.
Y amplió con que “los aranceles y otras medidas restrictivas económicas y comerciales adoptadas por Estados Unidos contra sus socios comerciales han cortado artificialmente la previamente madura cadena de suministro global y la cadena industrial, han roto las reglas de libre comercio orientadas al mercado, han perturbado gravemente el desarrollo económico de varios países, han dañado el bienestar de las personas en varios países, incluido Estados Unidos, y han dañado la globalización económica”.
Leé también: Fuerte réplica de Europa a Trump: le aplica aranceles de hasta 25% a productos estadounidenses
En su versión de los hechos, el gobierno chino, además, acusó a EE.UU. de incumplir el acuerdo bilateral firmado entre ambas naciones en 2020, a la vez que responsabilizó a Washington por el gran déficit comercial que tiene con Beijing.
Los argumentos con los que China le contestó a Donald Trump
En el Libro Blanco sobre las relaciones económicas y comerciales entre ambas potencias, China plantea a EE.UU. los siguientes argumentos:
- La esencia de las relaciones económicas y comerciales entre China y Estados Unidos es el beneficio mutuo.
- China y Estados Unidos son socios comerciales importantes en bienes, con un intercambio bilateral, según datos de la ONU, de US$688.280 millones en 2024, 275 veces más que en 1979, cuando ambo países establecieron relaciones diplomáticas.
- El comercio bilateral entre China y Estados Unidos es altamente complementario. China no busca deliberadamente un superávit comercial.
- El déficit comercial de bienes entre China y Estados Unidos es un resultado inevitable de los problemas estructurales de la economía estadounidense y está determinado por las ventajas comparativas de ambos países y la división internacional del trabajo. El déficit comercial de Estados Unidos con China como porcentaje del déficit comercial total mundial ha disminuido, mientras que su déficit comercial total mundial ha aumentado.

Para China, nadie gana con una guerra comercial, por lo que le reclamó diálogo a Donald Trump. (Foto: REUTERS/Athit Perawongmetha//File Photo)
- China adoptó una serie de medidas para ampliar activamente las importaciones, como política proactiva de país responsable y una contribución importante al desarrollo de la economía mundial.
- China amplió ordenadamente su apertura independiente y unilateral y ha seguido liberando el potencial de su mercado a gran escala, lo que ha proporcionado más oportunidades a países de todo el mundo.
- En materia agrícola, China apunta a la ampliación del acceso al mercado para los productos alimentarios y agrícolas, que son una parte importante del comercio bilateral. Pero algunos productos estadounidenses no son muy competitivos, lo que afecta la disposición de las empresas chinas a importar productos de forma orientada al mercado. En comparación con la estadounidense, la soja sudamericana tiene una ventaja de precio más evidente; El precio de la carne vacuna estadounidense es aproximadamente 50% más alto que el de América del Sur, el arroz estadounidense no es muy competitivo en comparación con los países del sudeste asiático.
- China y Estados Unidos son importantes socios de inversión bilaterales. EE.UU. es una fuente importante de inversión extranjera para China, por un total de US$98.230 millones y 1920 empresas hasta fines de 2023 en territorio asiático. Mientras, la inversión directa de empresas chinas en el país norteamericano llegó ese año a US$83.690 millones en 18 ramas industriales.
- Como parte del acuerdo bilateral de comercio, China adoptó múltiples medidas para mejorar continuamente la protección los secretos comerciales, proteger los derechos de propiedad intelectual farmacéutica, combatir las infracciones cibernéticas y reforzar la aplicación de la legislación sobre propiedad intelectual.
- China defiende el multilateralismo, respeta el consenso multilateral, siempre ha cumplido los compromisos multilaterales, no recurre a la devaluación competitiva, implementa un sistema de tipo de cambio flotante administrado basado en la oferta y la demanda del mercado y ajustado con referencia a una canasta de monedas, y ha cumplido el acuerdo.
guerra comercial, China, EE.UU., aranceles
INTERNACIONAL
Federal judge limits Trump’s ability to deport Abrego Garcia after lengthy court battle

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Greenbelt, Md. – A federal judge in Maryland issued an emergency ruling Wednesday blocking the Trump administration from immediately taking Salvadorian migrant Kilmar Abrego Garcia into ICE custody for 72 hours after he is released from criminal custody in Nashville, Tennessee — attempting to slow, if only temporarily, a case at the center of a legal and political maelstrom.
U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis said in her order that the government must refrain from immediately taking Abrego into ICE custody pending release from criminal custody in Tennessee, and ordered he be returned to the ICE Order of Supervision at the Baltimore Field Office— the closest ICE facility near the district of Maryland where Abrego was arrested earlier this year.
Xinis said at an evidentiary hearing this month that she would take action soon, in anticipation of a looming detention hearing for Abrego Garcia in his criminal case. She said she planned to issue the order with sufficient time to block the Trump administration’s stated plans to immediately begin the process of deporting Abrego Garcia again upon release — this time to a third country such as Mexico or South Sudan.
Xinis’s order said the additional time will ensure Abrego can raise any credible fears of removal to a third country, and via «the appropriate channels in the immigration process.» She also ordered the government to provide Abrego and his attorneys with «immediate written notice» of plans to transport him to a third country, again with the 72-hour notice period, «so that Abrego Garcia may assert claims of credible fear or seek any other relief available to him under the law and the Constitution.»
TRUMP HAS CUSTODY OVER JAILED CECOT MIGRANTS, EL SALVADOR SAYS, COMPLICATING COURT FIGHTS
Demonstrators gather outside the U.S. District Court in Greenbelt, Maryland, to protest the Trump administration’s deportation of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who was sent to El Salvador in March in what administration officials said was an administrative error, on July 7, 2025. (Breanne Deppisch/Fox News Digital)
Xinis said in her order Wednesday that the 72-hour notice period is necessary «to prevent a repeat of Abrego Garcia’s unlawful deportation to El Salvador by way of third-country removal.»
«Defendants have taken no concrete steps to ensure that any prospective third country would not summarily return Abrego Garcia to El Salvador in an end-run around the very withholding order that offers him uncontroverted protection,» she said.
The order from Xinis, who presided over Abrego Garcia’s civil case, was ultimately handed down on Wednesday just two minutes after a federal judge in Nashville — U.S. District Judge Waverly Crenshaw — issued a separate order, upholding a lower judge’s decision that Abrego should be released from criminal custody pending trial in January.
Crenshaw said in his order that the government failed to provide «any evidence that there is something in Abrego’s history at warrants detention.»
The plans, which Xinis ascertained over the course of a multi-day evidentiary hearing earlier this month, capped an exhausting, 19-week legal saga in the case of Abrego Garcia that spanned two continents, multiple federal courts, including the Supreme Court, and inspired countless hours of news coverage.
Still, it ultimately yielded little in the way of new answers, and Xinis likened the process to «nailing Jell-O to a wall,» and «beating a frustrated and dead horse,» among other things.
«We operate as government of laws,» she scolded lawyers for the Trump administration in one of many terse exchanges. «We don’t operate as a government of ’take my word for it.’»
FEDERAL JUDGE EXTENDS ARGUMENTS IN ABREGO GARCIA CASE, SLAMS ICE WITNESS WHO ‘KNEW NOTHING’

A person holds up a sign referencing the the CECOT prison in El Salvador during demonstration against President Donald Trump and his immigration policies in Houston, Texas, on May 1, 2025. (Photo: AFP va Getty Images) (AFP via Getty)
Xinis had repeatedly floated the notion of a temporary restraining order, or TRO, to ensure certain safeguards were in place to keep Abrego Garcia in ICE custody, and appeared to agree with his attorneys that such an order is likely needed to prevent their client from being removed again, without access to counsel or without a chance to appeal his country of removal.
«I’m just trying to understand what you’re trying to do,» Xinis said on more than one occasion, growing visibly frustrated.
«I’m deeply concerned that if there’s no restraint on you, Abrego will be on another plane to another country,» she told the Justice Department, noting pointedly that «that’s what you’ve done in other cases.»
Those concerns were echoed repeatedly by Abrego Garcia’s attorneys in a court filing earlier this month.
They noted the number of times that the Trump administration has appeared to have undercut or misrepresented its position before the court in months past, as Xinis attempted to ascertain the status of Abrego Garcia in El Salvador, and what efforts, if any, the Trump administration was making to comply with a court order to facilitate his return.
The Trump administration, who reiterated their belief that the case is no longer in her jurisdiction, will almost certainly move to immediately appeal the restraining order to a higher court.
TRUMP HAS CUSTODY OVER JAILED CECOT MIGRANTS, EL SALVADOR SAYS, COMPLICATING COURT FIGHTS

Demonstrators gather cheering and chanting slogans, during the nationwide «Hands Off!» protest against Trump in Boston, Massachusetts on April 5, 2025. (Joseph Prezioso / AFP via Getty)
The order comes two weeks after an extraordinary, multi-day evidentiary hearing in Greenbelt, Maryland, where Xinis sparred with Trump administration officials as she attempted to make sense of their remarks and ascertain their next steps as they look to deport Abrego Garcia to a third country.
She said she planned to issue the order before the date that Abrego could possibly be released from federal custody— a request made by lawyers for Abrego Garcia, who asked the court for more time in criminal custody, citing the many countries he might suffer persecution in — and concerns about what legal status he would have in the third country of removal.
Without legal status in Mexico, Xinis said, it would likely be a «quick road» to being deported by the country’s government to El Salvador, in violation of the withholding of removal order.
And in South Sudan, another country DHS is apparently considering, lawyers for Abrego noted the State Department currently has a Level 4 advisory in place discouraging U.S. travel due to violence and armed conflict.
Americans who do travel there should «draft a will» beforehand and designate insurance beneficiaries, according to official guidance on the site.
FEDERAL PROSECUTORS TELL JUDGE THEY WILL DEPORT KILMAR ABREGO GARCIA TO A THIRD COUNTRY AFTER DETENTION

Abrego Garcia’s attorneys speak to reporters outside the U.S. District Court in Greenbelt, Maryland, in July. (Breanne Deppisch/Fox News Digital) (Breanne Deppisch/Fox News Digital)
In court, both in July and in earlier hearings, Xinis struggled to keep her own frustration and her incredulity at bay after months of back-and-forth with Justice Department attorneys.
Xinis has presided over Abrego Garcia’s civil case since March, when he was deported to El Salvador in violation of an existing court order in what Trump administration officials described as an «administrative error.»
She spent hours pressing Justice Department officials, over the course of three separate hearings, for details on the government’s plans for removing Abrego Garcia to a third country — a process she likened to «trying to nail Jell-O to a wall.»
Xinis chastised the Justice Department this month for presenting a DHS witness to testify under oath about ICE’s plans to deport Abrego Garcia, fuming that the official, Thomas Giles, «knew nothing» about his case, and made no effort to ascertain answers — despite his rank as ICE’s third-highest enforcement official.
The four hours of testimony he provided was «fairly stunning,» and «insulting to her intelligence,» Xinis said.
Ultimately, the court would not allow the «unfettered release» of Abrego Garcia pending release from federal custody in Tennessee without «full-throated assurances» from the Trump administration that it will keep Abrego Garcia in ICE custody for a set period of time and locally, Xinis said, to ensure immigration officials do not «spirit him away to Nome, Alaska.»
During the July hearing, Judge Xinis notably declined to weigh in on the request for sanctions filed by lawyers for Abrego Garcia, but alluded to it in her ruling Wednesday.
«Defendants’ defiance and foot- dragging are, to be sure, the subject of a separate sanctions motion,» she said in the ruling— indicating further steps could be taken as she attempts to square months of differing statements from Trump officials.
«The Court will not recount this troubling history in detail, other than to note Defendants’ persistent lack of transparency with the tribunal adds to why further injunctive relief is warranted,» she said.
TRUMP’S REMARKS COULD COME BACK TO BITE HIM IN ABREGO GARCIA DEPORTATION BATTLE

This still from video from July 22, 2015 show Paula Xinis from US Senate Judiciary Committee (US Senate Judiciary Committee)
The Justice Department, after a short recess, declined to agree, prompting Xinis to proceed with her plans for the TRO.
Xinis told the court that ultimately, «much delta» remains between where they ended things in court, and what she is comfortable with, given the government’s actions in the past.
This was apparent on multiple occasions Friday, when Xinis told lawyers for the Trump administration that she «isn’t buying» their arguments or doesn’t «have faith» in the statements they made — reflecting an erosion of trust that could prove damaging in the longer-term.
The hearings this week capped months of back-and-forth between Xinis and the Trump administration, as she tried, over the course of 19 weeks, to track the status of a single migrant deported erroneously by the Trump administration to El Salvador—and to trace what attempts, if any, they had made facilitate his return to the U.S.
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Xinis previously took aim at what she deemed to be the lack of information submitted to the court as part of an expedited discovery process she ordered this year, describing the government’s submissions as «vague, evasive and incomplete»— and which she said demonstrated «willful and bad faith refusal to comply with discovery obligations.»
On Friday, she echoed this view. «You have taken the presumption of regularity and you’ve destroyed it, in my view,» Xinis said.
INTERNACIONAL
Russian plane carrying dozens of passengers crashes in country’s Far East

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A plane carrying nearly 50 people on board reportedly crashed in Russia’s Far East on Thursday and local emergency services have located the wreckage.
The country’s Emergency Situations Ministry said search crews found the plane’s burning fuselage on a hillside south of its planned destination in the town of Tynda, which is located near the Russia’s border with China.
Images of the reported crash site circulated by Russian state media show debris scattered among dense forest, surrounded by plumes of smoke.
LONDON-BOUND PLANE CARRYING MORE THAN 200 PEOPLE CRASHES AFTER TAKEOFF IN INDIA
An An-24 aircraft of Angara Airlines lands at the airport of Irkutsk, Russia April 13, 2014. (REUTERS/Marina Lystseva/File Photo)
An initial aerial inspection of the site suggested that there were no survivors, Russia’s Interfax news agency said, citing unnamed sources in the emergency services. Its sources also said that there were difficult weather conditions in the area.
The transport prosecutor’s office said the plane attempted a second approach while trying to land when contact with it was lost.
Forty-three passengers, including five children, as well as six crew members were on board the An-24 passenger plane as it traveled from the city of Blagoveshchensk on the Russian-Chinese border to the town of Tynda, regional Gov. Vasily Orlov said.
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Russia’s Emergency Situations Ministry reported that 48 people were on board the flight, which was operated by Siberia-based Angara Airlines. The reason for the discrepancy was not immediately clear.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
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