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Australia upbeat about 'ultimate professional' Perry's fitness for World Cup final
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Dutch FA to sue over racist slurs after World Cup exit
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Ukraine backers to vow major support at NATO summit
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Mercedes demos set stage for wave of German auto protests
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Ayuso happy to fly under radar at Tour de France
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Iran leaders pay last respects to Khamenei as mourners gather
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Curran ready to fill England gap left by Stokes exit
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UN issues 'red alert' over 'catastrophe' in Sudan's El-Obeid
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Tour de France to start with team time-trial 'bang'
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Hamilton sparkles in Silverstone sunshine
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Swift and Kelce set to tie the knot in glitzy arena extravaganza
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Bayern sign Germany defender Brown until 2031
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Madonna returns to form with dancefloor filler "Confessions II"
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Iranian leaders pay respects to supreme leader as Tehran prepares for funeral
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Dean says Australia final a 'fresh start' for England
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Wimbledon giving Serena 'as much time' as possible for doubles
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Chinese investors flock to Hong Kong as trading curbs tighten
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Surging real estate development divides opinion on Athens' riviera
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UN warns of strong looming El Nino
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France deaths rose by 30% during heatwave
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Hunt for last signs of life in Venezuela quake zone
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Drones spot sharks 73 times in two days off Sydney beaches
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Asian markets rise as beaten-down tech stocks enjoy bounce
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Supreme leader's body arrives at Tehran religious complex for funeral
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David v Goliath as Cape Verde face Messi's Argentina at World Cup
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Mbappe's French juggernaut face Paraguay, eye World Cup quarter-finals
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With tariff war, Trump also reshapes how US treats allies
Japan and Taiwan promised billions in investment. Britain offered an invitation from the king. In the end, even US allies failed to dissuade President Donald Trump from hitting them with tariffs, which threaten to remake not just the global economy but the foundations of US foreign policy.
Trump, in what he called "Liberation Day," on Wednesday unleashed across-the-board global tariffs on US friends and foes alike with some of the most punishing rates hitting longstanding US allies.
"This is a huge change in how we deal with the world," said Danielle Pletka of the conservative American Enterprise Institute.
Trump, seeing himself as a master dealmaker, believes he can gain leverage when effectively "you take exports hostage, and then you start negotiating the price of their release."
"That's not usually how America does business. Sometimes it will do business this way with our adversaries," she said. "It is very rarely how we do business with our allies."
Heather Hurlburt, who was chief of staff to the US trade representative during former president Joe Biden's administration, said the United States traditionally has put security ties first.
"What you now have is the people around Trump saying we want to fix our economic relationships and the security relationships can follow where we approve of the economic relationships.
"That's a complete inversion in how US policy has worked," said Hurlburt, now an associate fellow at think tank Chatham House.
- Flattery fails -
In his first term, Trump confounded US allies, but many found combinations of flattery and incentives to prevent drastic actions.
Japan's late prime minister Shinzo Abe, whom Trump singled out for praise at Wednesday's event, had gifted the Republican mogul a golden golf club, building a rapport that helped shield Japan.
French President Emmanuel Macron, in office during both Trump terms, has feted him with an Eiffel Tower dinner and a seat of honor at a military parade. Macron notched up some successes, including persuading Trump to reverse course on pulling out of Syria.
In the White House Rose Garden on Wednesday, Trump instead basked in praise from a blue-collar worker who declared Trump the greatest president ever as he was invited to the podium.
Ahead of the tariffs, some US partners tried to woo Trump with big announcements. Chipmaking giant TSMC of Taiwan, which counts on the United States for security against China, last month said it would invest $100 million in the United States.
Trump acknowledged the investment in his remarks but said that Taiwan "took all of our computer chips and semiconductors" and announced 32 percent tariffs on its exports.
A Washington-based diplomat of one country hit by heavy tariffs said his government decided on a quiet approach, reaching out to Trump officials to plead for cooperation.
"It didn't work at all. The tariffs are much higher than anything we were expecting," he said on condition of anonymity.
- 'Nationalism' on two fronts -
Trump, in sharp contrast to Biden, has piled pressure on allies. He has demanded Europe spend more on its own defense and take the lead in arming Ukraine.
Vice President JD Vance, in an interview with Breitbart News, said the United States would no longer be the "piggy bank of the world" and drew a link between economic and security policies.
"In a word, it's nationalism," he told the right-wing outlet. "In our economic policy, we're going to fight back against ridiculous trade practices. In our foreign policy, we're going to stop starting stupid wars."
Trump has vowed to generate "trillions of dollars" from tariffs to reduce taxes and stimulate domestic manufacturing.
Most mainstream economists dismiss Trump's logic, noting that tariff costs will be passed on to consumers. Wall Street on Thursday suffered its worst fall in five years.
Hurlburt, the Chatham House expert, said that policymakers around Trump consider tariffs an "opening move" to reshape the economic order, with tariffs eventually stabilizing at a "reciprocal level" and a weaker dollar boosting US exports.
To achieve such a long-term transformation, she said, "you need at least some level of cooperation with other countries" -- which will need to be certain that they can make deals that the United States will honor.
"It's a little unclear that other countries will indeed conclude that negotiating with us is a good investment," she said.
J.Gomez--AT