Chinese Vice-Premier Hu Chunhua has cancelled trade talks with Britain’s Finance Minister Philip Hammond after Defense Secretary Gavin Williamson threatened to deploy an aircraft carrier in Beijing’s backyard, a report said. Hu was due to hold trade talks with Hammond this weekend. Instead, The Sun newspaper report said, Hu cancelled the talks in protest at […]
Chinese Vice-Premier Hu Chunhua has cancelled trade talks with Britain’s Finance Minister Philip Hammond after Defense Secretary Gavin Williamson threatened to deploy an aircraft carrier in Beijing’s backyard, a report said.
Hu was due to hold trade talks with Hammond this weekend.
Instead, The Sun newspaper report said, Hu cancelled the talks in protest at Mr. Williamson’s speech on Monday.
Williamson had said in a fiery speech that Britain must be prepared to boost its “lethality” and threatened to send the warship to the Pacific in response to Beijing’s military ambitions, The Straits Times reported.
The speech appears to have been seen by both No. 10 Downing Street and the Treasury before Williamson gave it, a defense source said.
“There is huge anger across Cabinet. Gavin was partially inciting a war – the team knew China wouldn’t be happy,” another source told the newspaper.
China had been expected to lift bans on British poultry and cosmetics which have not been tested on animals during the planned trade talks, opening up access to markets worth an estimated £10.2 billion over five years.
However, China only offered junior officials for the trade talks, ending hopes that two Memorandums of Understanding would be signed.
British officials have embarked on frantic diplomacy to try and get the talks back on track for this weekend.
The deals would have been a much-needed boost for Prime Minister Theresa May’s government, which is scrambling to drum up trade ahead of Britain’s departure from the European Union.