In a stark and chilling warning, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent didn’t mince words when he told European leaders that aligning with China over the United States would be akin to cutting their own throat. His message, delivered from behind the cold podium of a press briefing, wasn’t just policy talk—it was a shot across the Atlantic.
The remark came just hours after Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, speaking on a diplomatic tour in Asia, suggested that the European Union should reconsider its relationship with China. With U.S. trade policy lurching in unpredictable directions—driven by President Trump’s sweeping new tariffs—Sanchez floated the idea of closer cooperation with Beijing.
But Bessent’s response was blunt—and dark.
“Maybe we should align more with China? That would be cutting your own throat,” he said grimly.
The warning wasn’t metaphorical. According to Bessent, the EU’s potential pivot to Beijing threatens to destabilize not only its own economy but the fragile balance of the global trading system. He painted China’s trade practices as relentless and ruthless—an unstoppable flood of cheap goods, overproduction, and market manipulation.
“The Chinese business model doesn’t stop. It just keeps producing and dumping,” he said.
And the U.S. is fighting back—hard.
Just hours before, Trump had launched another volley in the escalating global trade war, slamming China with a jaw-dropping 125% tariff. He framed it as retaliation for Beijing’s own recent hikes, which pushed tariffs on American goods up to 84%. Nearly every other trade partner got a break—a temporary 90-day pause, with duties reduced to a flat 10%—but not China.
“The biggest offender in the global trading system is China,” Bessent declared. “And they’re the only one escalating.”
The U.S. now seeks to rally its allies—Japan, Vietnam, and others—for what appears to be the beginning of a coordinated economic containment strategy. The message is simple: side with us, or risk being crushed between giants.
China, as expected, has fired back. The Chinese Finance Ministry condemned the tariff escalation as a “mistake on top of a mistake,” accusing the U.S. of violating international trade laws and damaging the fragile global order.
But beneath all the headlines, what’s forming is something darker than a simple trade dispute. The world is splitting—fracturing—under economic pressure. Alliances are being tested. Old partnerships are crumbling.
And now the EU stands at a crossroads, with a blade held to its own throat.
Whether it pulls back—or leans into the edge—remains to be seen.
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