US says reached deal with Taiwan to lower tariffs, boost investments

The United States said Thursday that it has signed a deal with Taiwan to reduce tariffs on goods from the democratic island, while increasing Taiwanese semiconductor and tech companies’ investments in America.The agreement, the US Commerce Department said, “will drive a massive reshoring of America’s semiconductor sector.”Under the deal, Washington will lower tariffs on Taiwanese goods to 15 percent, down from a 20 percent “reciprocal” rate meant to address US trade deficits and practices it deems unfair.Sector-specific tariffs on Taiwanese auto parts, timber, lumber and wood products will also be capped at 15 percent, while generic pharmaceuticals and certain natural resources will face no “reciprocal” duties, the Commerce Department added.Meanwhile, Taiwanese chip and tech businesses are set to make “new, direct investments totaling at least $250 billion” in the United States to build and expand capacity in areas like advanced semiconductors and artificial intelligence.Taiwan will also provide “credit guarantees of at least $250 billion to facilitate additional investment by Taiwanese enterprises,” to support the growth of the US semiconductor supply chain, the department said.Taiwan’s government said the new tariff will not stack on top of existing duties, which had been a major concern for local industries.The department’s announcement did not mention names, but the deal has key implications for Taiwanese chipmaking titan TSMC, the world’s biggest contract maker of microchips used in everything from Apple phones to Nvidia’s cutting-edge AI hardware.In an interview with CNBC, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said TSMC has bought land and could expand in Arizona as part of the deal.”They just bought hundreds of acres adjacent to their property. Now I’m going to let them go through it with their board and give them time,” he said.Taiwanese producers who invest in the United States will also be treated more favorably when it comes to future semiconductor duties, the Commerce Department said.Firms building new US chip capacity may import up to 2.5 times their planned capacity without paying sector-specific duties during construction. The quota lowers to 1.5 times once projects are completed.A day prior, US officials held off imposing wider chip tariffs, instead announcing a 25 percent duty on certain semiconductors meant to be shipped abroad — a key step in allowing Nvidia to sell advanced AI chips to China.Ryan Majerus, a former US trade official, told AFP that although chip tariffs are currently narrowly targeted, Washington “signaled there is certainly potential for it to grow.”Majerus, now a partner at law firm King & Spalding, added that the deal had parallels to those with other US partners. The European Union and Japan, for example, both also secured a 15-percent tariff rate.- ‘Self-sufficient’ -“The objective is to bring 40 percent of Taiwan’s entire supply chain and production, to domestically bring it into America,” Lutnick told CNBC.”We’re going to bring it all over, so we become self-sufficient in the capacity of building semiconductors,” he added.The agreement comes after months of negotiations.Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te had pledged to boost investments in the United States and increase defense spending as his government tried to lower US duties, and avoid a toll on its semiconductor chip exports.Taiwan is a powerhouse in the manufacturing of semiconductor chips, which are the lifeblood of the global economy, as well as other electronics.But US President Donald Trump previously accused Taiwan of stealing the US chip industry, and his administration had made clear it wants more of the critical technology made on American soil.Taiwan’s trade surplus in goods with the United States was around $74 billion in 2024. More than half of its exports to the United States are information and communications technology products — including semiconductors.

Groenland: le Danemark en désaccord avec Trump, envoi d’une mission militaire européenne

En “désaccord fondamental” avec les Etats-Unis, le Danemark a obtenu jeudi l’envoi d’une mission militaire européenne au Groenland, territoire autonome danois convoité par Donald Trump, qui a fait savoir que ce déploiement n’avait “aucun impact” sur son “objectif”.Traditionnel allié des Américains au sein de l’Otan, le Danemark a annoncé renforcer sa présence militaire au Groenland, …

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Trump menace d’invoquer une loi d’exception après de nouveaux heurts à Minneapolis

Donald Trump a menacé jeudi d’invoquer une loi d’exception qui lui permettrait de déployer l’armée à Minneapolis, au lendemain de nouveaux heurts entre forces de l’ordre et manifestants faisant suite à un nouvel incident impliquant la police de l’immigration (ICE).Alors que la ville est sous tension depuis la mort la semaine dernière d’une femme abattue …

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Grèce: acquittement de la militante syrienne Sarah Mardini accusée de trafic de migrants

La militante et réfugiée syrienne Sarah Mardini, qui a inspiré avec sa sœur nageuse olympique une fiction, et 23 autres bénévoles ont été acquittés jeudi soir par la justice grecque d’accusations de trafic de migrants, un verdict salué par Amnesty International et d’autres ONG de défense des droits humains.Le jugement intervient presque un mois après …

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Colombie: un important groupe armé soutient l’union des guérillas pour contrer les Etats-Unis (commandant à l’AFP)

Le commandant de l’ELN, l’un des plus importants groupes armés de Colombie, a assuré jeudi à l’AFP soutenir une union des guérillas afin de repousser toute action militaire des Etats-Unis dans le pays sud-américain.S’il s’agit d’une initiative “pour défendre la Patrie contre l’agresseur étranger”, “nous nous retrouverons dans la lutte”, a affirmé jeudi dans un …

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Au Niger, une embarrassante cargaison d’uranium toujours bloquée à l’aéroport de Niamey

Une importante cargaison de concentré d’uranium qui a quitté fin novembre le nord nigérien est bloquée à l’aéroport de Niamey depuis plusieurs semaines, un enjeu diplomatique et stratégique pour la junte au pouvoir dans ce pays sahélien qui a tourné le dos à la France pour se rapprocher de la Russie. Voici ce que l’on sait …

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Entre peine et patriotisme, les Cubains rendent hommage aux 32 militaires morts au Venezuela

“Nous ne voulons pas la guerre”, mais “nous n’allons pas nous rendre”: entre peine et ferveur patriotique, les Cubains ont répondu jeudi aux menaces du président Donald Trump, en rendant hommage aux 32 militaires morts au Venezuela lors de la capture de Nicolas Maduro.Après avoir reçu les honneurs militaires à l’aéroport international de La Havane …

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Venezuela’s Machado says she ‘presented’ her Nobel medal to Trump

Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado said Thursday she “presented” her Nobel Peace Prize medal to US President Donald Trump, who has openly coveted the award that the Nobel committee says cannot be transferred.”I presented the president of the United States the medal of the Nobel Peace Prize,” Machado told reporters outside the US Capitol following her White House meeting with Trump.Machado, whom Trump had earlier dismissed as unfit to lead Venezuela, did not clarify if Trump kept it.She drew a comparison to the Marquis de Lafayette, the French officer who helped the United States in the Revolutionary War against Britain, saying he handed a medal with the image of first US president George Washington to Simon Bolivar, the Venezuelan who led a wave of successful independence fights against Spain.”Two hundred years in history, the people of Bolivar are giving back to the heir of Washington a medal — in this case, the medal of the Nobel Peace Prize as a recognition for his unique commitment with our freedom,” she said.The Norwegian Nobel Committee earlier wrote in a statement on X that the prestigious prize “cannot be revoked, shared or transferred to others” and that the name of the winner “stands for all time” even if the medal physically changes hands.Trump — who has relished military action and on Thursday was threatening greater force against protesters in the US state of Minnesota — has loudly said he deserves the Nobel Peace Prize and was dismissive of Machado when she won it.Trump on January 3 ordered a deadly military raid into oil-rich Venezuela that removed Nicolas Maduro, the leftist president long described as illegitimate by the United States and several other countries due to elections riddled with reported irregularities.But after the operation, Trump said that Machado — whose opposition forces were considered by Washington to have won the last election — does not command the “respect” to lead Venezuela.Machado offered a positive account of their closed-door conversation, saying, “We are counting on President Trump for freedom in Venezuela.””President Trump knows the situation in Venezuela; he cares about how the people of Venezuela are suffering,” she said.She said she told him that Venezuelans “want to live with freedom, with dignity, with justice, we want our children back home, and for that to happen, there has to be democracy in Venezuela.”Trump has previously vowed to work not with Machado but with Maduro’s vice president turned interim president, Delcy Rodriguez, by threatening her with force if she does not comply on key US demands starting with benefitting US oil firms.

Venezuelan interim leader vows oil sector reform after Maduro ouster

Venezuela’s interim president on Thursday announced pending legal reforms to the country’s critical fossil fuel sector, as she seeks to recalibrate ties with Washington following the US military ouster of her predecessor, Nicolas Maduro.Since the January 3 capture of Maduro, US President Donald Trump has asserted that the United States essentially controls Venezuela, while making clear that accessing its vast oil reserves is a key goal of the intervention.Sanctioned by Washington since 2019, Venezuela sits on about a fifth of the world’s oil reserves and was once a major crude supplier to the United States.But it produced only around one percent of the world’s total crude output in 2024, according to OPEC, having been hampered by years of underinvestment, sanctions and embargoes.Without providing details, interim president Delcy Rodriguez told parliament Thursday there would be reforms to Venezuela’s Hydrocarbons Law, which limits the involvement of foreign entities in exploiting the nationalized resources.The changes would also touch on so-called anti-blockade provisions which give the government tools to counteract US sanctions in place since 2019.Trump has recently pressed top oil executives to invest in Venezuela.Exxon Mobil and ConocoPhillips exited in 2007 after refusing demands by then-president Hugo Chavez to cede majority control to the state. They have been fighting to recoup billions of dollars they say Venezuela owes them.Chevron is the only US firm operating in Venezuela, under a special sanctions exemption license.The US Department of Energy has unveiled a plan to develop Venezuela’s oil industry and has begun marketing Venezuelan crude.US Energy Secretary Chris Wright has said Washington will control the sales of Venezuelan oil “indefinitely.”Rodriguez said the envisioned legal reform would result in money for “new fields, to fields where there has never been investment, and to fields where there is no infrastructure.”The South American country produced over one million barrels of oil per day (bpd) in 2025 — up from a historic low of about 360,000 — but still far from the three million bpd it was pumping 25 years ago.Oil exports are Venezuela’s main source of revenue.