May 1, 2026

Volume 6

Issue 9

ICAS Trade ‘n Tech Dispatch (online ISSN 2837-3863, print ISSN 2837-3855) is published about every two weeks throughout the year at 1919 M St NW, Suite 310, Washington, DC 20036.
The online version of ICAS Trade ‘n Tech Dispatch can be found at chinaus-icas.org/icas-trade-technology-program/tnt-dispatch/.

What's Been Happening

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Trade and Tech Jostling as Trump’s China Visit Approaches

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In One Sentence

  • U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer on April 22 told Congress that the U.S. is seeking a broad Chinese commitment to purchase American agricultural goods beyond soybeans as a key deliverable from Trump’s planned May visit to China.
  • The U.S. Treasury Department on April 24 sanctioned 40 shipping firms and vessels and a major Chinese oil refinery, Hengli Petrochemical, in the largest such tranche of Iran-related sanctions since the war began, targeting what officials described as a shadow network of Chinese-linked ships delivering Iranian crude oil in violation of U.S. sanctions.
  • The House Foreign Affairs Committee approved over a dozen export control bills, including the MATCH Act and STRIDE Act, which would require the State Department to pressure U.S. allies to align their semiconductor export controls with U.S. restrictions on China, with BIS authorized to extend U.S. jurisdiction over foreign-made products containing American components if allies fail to comply within 150 days.
  • China’s National Development and Reform Commission blocked Meta’s acquisition of AI startup Manus, ordering all parties to withdraw the deal, in what analysts said signals Beijing’s intent to treat AI talent and capabilities as a core national security asset amid intensifying U.S.-China technology rivalry.
  • Peterson Institute Senior Fellow Mary Lovely on April 15 said the goals of the Trump-Xi summit remain “wide open,” with China likely prioritizing a continued tariff truce while the U.S. side has floated possibilities ranging from no concrete outcomes to a potential investment deal, and USTR Greer has identified a bilateral “Board of Trade” as a possible deliverable.
  • China’s Ministry of Justice on April 13 issued regulations creating a formal framework to retaliate against foreign entities that comply with U.S. export controls, trade remedy proceedings, or congressional subpoenas, including potential visa restrictions, property seizures, trade prohibitions, fines, and criminal liability for those placed on a new “Malicious Entity List.”

 

Mark the Essentials

  • USTR held hearings on April 28 and 29 related to its Section 301 investigation into whether 60 economies are adequately blocking imports made with forced labor, a probe launched after the Supreme Court invalidated Trump’s IEEPA tariffs and intended to replicate those duties under a different legal authority before the temporary Section 122 replacement tariffs expire in July.
  • The Trump administration requested a $215 million budget increase for the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security, including funding for 290 additional domestic export enforcement agents and 40 more overseas export control officers, which BIS described as a “structural overhaul” to expand enforcement against export control violations.
  • In public comments submitted on April 15, the Labor Advisory Committee for Trade Negotiations and Trade Policy told USTR it should revive and broaden an expired China-specific import surge mechanism to cover all countries, and recommended using tariffs, stronger rules of origin, and anti-circumvention measures to address structural overcapacity across 16 economies, while urging a phased, benchmark-based approach to enforcing bans on goods made with forced labor.
  • Switzerland, Cambodia, and the Philippines pushed back against USTR’s Section 301 overcapacity and forced labor probes, with Switzerland rejecting claims that its trade surplus reflects structural excess capacity, Cambodia attributing its export growth to market demand shifts rather than distortive practices, and the Philippines acknowledging it lacks an explicit forced labor import ban while pointing to existing legal protections.

 

Keeping an Eye On…

With the Trump–Xi meeting fast approaching, the battle lines on technology ties are being drawn and boldened. It seems there must be no Chinese-owned or -controlled vehicles allowed to enter the U.S. market. Earlier this January, Trump flirted with the prospect of inviting Chinese automakers to the U.S., so long as they build their vehicles in the country. There must be a clampdown on the sale of all AI chips to China, critics demand. Prior, Trump green-lit the sale of advanced-node—although not cutting-edge—AI chips to China. Beyond their mere sale, Chinese companies must also be blocked from accessing export-controlled chips through the cloud, as well as from access to U.S. AI models themselves. Third parties are not being spared either. Some are floating the argument that the Trump administration should use the Foreign Direct Product Rule to pressure the Netherlands to halt ASML’s EUV (extreme ultraviolet) lithography shipments to China. Semiconductor manufacturing tools are deemed to be the most significant controllable factor in ensuring U.S. leadership vis-à-vis China in the AI race. A slew of bills to compel allies to bolster export controls has also been winding its way forward on Capitol Hill.

China has not been quiescent either. With a one-sentence dismissal, it killed Meta’s acquisition of the Singapore-domiciled Chinese AI startup Manus this week. A few days earlier, it issued an “Anti-Improper Extraterritorial Jurisdiction” regulation that comes with a name-shame-and-punish “Malicious Entities List.” The list is an upgrade over its existing “Blocking Rules” and “Unreliable Entities List.” And earlier this April, after studying the text of the U.S. Trade Representative’s Agreements on Reciprocal Trade (ART), it bolstered its supply chain-specific countermeasures authority, which will impact Beijing’s trade relations with the U.S.’ third-party trading partners. Beijing’s “Security of Industrial Supply Chain” regulation comes on the heels of its revised Foreign Trade Law, which elevates security objectives alongside trade promotion objectives. Clearly, trade decoupling and technology competition, backed by ample sanctions, are baked into the bilateral economic relationship.

Having said that, could policy coordination and cooperation in the AI space nevertheless be a somewhat surprising deliverable from the Trump–Xi meeting? Don’t count it out. The landmark breakthrough in AI-enabled cybersecurity—and, by extension, cyber warfare—headlined by Anthropic’s newest model, Claude Mythos Preview, has added a new urgency to preventing the spread of the technology to ill-intentioned third-party actors, including non-state actors. And the two sides are edging toward a conversation in this regard (think of U.S. conversations with the Soviets on nonproliferation once both sides had detonated their atomic devices). A Trump–Xi conversation on AI will look nothing like the predecessor conversation that the Chinese side had with the Biden administration. The primary focus of that conversation had been on AI safety—that is, on reining in high-risk AI frontier models from an ethical risks and algorithmic harms perspective. National security-linked conversations will dominate this time. To be fair, the Biden team had sought to establish certain bilateral rules of the road to ensure that unsupervised AI would not be allowed to dictate command and control of critical weapons systems. But that said, the purpose of those conversations had been much more expansive from a thematic standpoint—just as Biden’s domestic regulatory intent on AI had been all-encompassing. This time around, the U.S.–China conversation is expected to be narrower, shaped by national security and geopolitical considerations rather than ethics, transparency, and safety, and geared toward countering the mutually destructive attributes of the technology.

China may be an existential competitor, but it can also be a manageable and useful counterpart, at times. The Trump-Xi discussions on AI in Beijing will hopefully capture this essential duality.   

Expanded Reading

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IEEPA Refunds Begin, Uncertainty and Legal Battles Remain

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In One Sentence

  • On April 20, the Trump administration began processing refunds for more than $160 billion of ‘reciprocal tariffs’ after launching a system to repay importers following a February ruling by the US Supreme Court and a March order from the US Court of International Trade. 
  • U.S. Customs and Border Protection on April 27 told a federal judge it expects to issue its first IEEPA tariff refunds on or around May 11, though importers’ lawyers raised concerns that the agency had not fully stopped collecting the overturned duties and that users were experiencing technical problems accessing the refund system.
  • Although more than 50,000 importers completed the steps to apply for reimbursements by early April, consumers who ultimately bore the cost of tariffs may not benefit, as some companies remain noncommittal about passing on the refunded duties. 
  • Although the system has been rolled out, the claims process remains highly technical, requiring importers to navigate a multi-step portal, submit detailed entry data in prescribed formats, and meet strict eligibility and filing requirements through U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s (CBP) online portal. 
  • The CBP portal indicates that disbursement could take about 60–90 days if no additional review is required, though timelines may extend as claims undergo manual verification and approval. 
  • According to CBP’s April 28 filing with the Court of International Trade, in its first week of operation, the tariff refund system received over 75,000 claims covering more than 10 million shipments, with about 1.74 million entries cleared for payments, while it rejected around 15% of the claims.

 

Mark the Essentials

  • As the refund process moves forward, the Trump administration is also facing multiple legal challenges from importers, including an Illinois-based importer’s case over Section 232 steel and aluminum derivative tariff calculations, which the Justice Department argues in an April 17 Court of International Trade filing rests on the wrong statute.
  • A Michigan-based importer, Detroit Axle, told the Court of International Trade in an April 23 filing that the Justice Department’s attempt to preserve President Trump’s repeal of the de minimis tariff exemption ignores the Supreme Court’s IEEPA ruling, as the president had cited IEEPA as the basis for removing de minimis
  • Earlier, on April 13, the Justice Department had argued that the Supreme Court’s IEEPA ruling did not address whether the president can eliminate the de minimis provision and therefore has no bearing on his authority to end duty-free status for low-value imports. 
  • The U.S. International Trade Commission is seeking $134 million for fiscal year 2027, up from $122 million in 2026, citing a surge in workload from complex tariff updates, trade remedy cases, and other responsibilities.

 

Keeping an Eye On…

Listen up, y’all—it’s payback time. As in, paying back the mountain of “reciprocal tariffs,” totaling in excess of $160 billion, that was levied and collected by the Trump administration, and which now needs to be returned to the American people. The Supreme Court judged those tariffs to have been unlawfully collected in its February 20 ruling. To the administration’s credit, the Treasury Department has already made headway in processing these refunds. On April 20, the first phase of the Consolidated Administration and Processing of Entries (CAPE) tool on the U.S. Customs and Border Protection portal went live. CAPE Phase 1 is expected to process 60% of the shipments over the past year that triggered the duties, with the first refunds being issued on or about May 11.

From a political standpoint, the refund process is tilted in favor of big businesses and shareholders, and at the expense of small- and mid-sized (SME) businesses, consumers, and foreign exporters. Legally, only the importer of record or an authorized customs broker can serve as the designated point of refund. Given that big businesses enjoy the luxury of maintaining large legal teams, as well as customs brokers on retainer, their administrative capacity to file and pursue claims is infinitely superior to that of SMEs. Little wonder, then, that a fair share of small businesses with tight cash-flow operations have already opted to sell their rights to refunds to Wall Street investment firms—some as low as 25 cents on the dollar—rather than submit to an uncertain, time-consuming, and complex process. The CAPE system allows importers to designate third parties to receive refunds on their behalf.

As for consumers, the outcome, on the surface, appears to be just as raw, given that they are estimated to have absorbed roughly 90 percent of the cost of the tariffs. That said, consumers have already begun to lawyer up, as reflected in class action complaints that plan to accuse importers of unjust enrichment and failure to pass on the refunds. Significant derivative consumer litigation is almost a certainty. Quick to spot an opportunity, national and statewide politicians have piled onto big-box retailers, such as Walmart, Amazon, Home Depot, Target, and Costco, and their ilk, demanding that these retailers ensure that the tariff relief reaches end consumers rather than pad corporate balance sheets. No such luck or recourse awaits foreign exporters, though, including Chinese exporters, who lack both legal standing and a domestic political champion. They will likely have to walk away from the process empty-handed.

Almost exactly thirteen months after “Liberation Day” was declared with bombast in the Rose Garden, the reciprocal tariffs have degenerated into an ignominious spectacle. The refunds ordered are just the start of a long, winding, and litigious—but thankfully final—phase. The tariffs, of course, are not disappearing; they will live on under different guises (Section 122, Section 232, Section 301, etc.). The abuse of emergency power to impose them on exporters, importers, and consumers alike, however, will now be a thing of the past.

Expanded Reading

On the Hill

Legislative Developments

  • House Appropriations Committee Republicans released a bill on April 29 that would nearly double the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security’s (BIS) budget from $235 million to $450 million and increase USTR’s funding to $95 million for FY2027, with the BIS increase earmarked for hundreds of new export enforcement agents, overseas control officers, and Section 232 investigation staff.

 

Hearings and Statements

  • The White House’s annual Council of Economic Advisers report highlighted that China’s share of U.S. imports fell to 9.3% in 2025, nearly matching its 8.9% share in 2000 before joining the WTO, while touting trade deals and tariff policies as having opened foreign markets and attracted investment to the U.S.
  • Senate Finance Committee ranking member Ron Wyden (D-OR) and 17 Senate Democrats introduced the Drug Deal Disclosure Act, which would require the Trump administration to publicly release all documentation related to its most-favored-nation drug pricing agreements with 16 pharmaceutical companies, arguing the deals offer uncertain savings for patients while delivering substantial benefits to drugmakers in exchange for tariff relief.
  • House Select Committee on the CCP Chair John Moolenaar (R-MI) urged Secretary of State Rubio to press the Netherlands to block ASML from shipping its NXT:1965i deep-ultraviolet lithography system to China, arguing the tool was specifically revived to circumvent existing Dutch export controls and would support Huawei’s AI chipmaking.
  • As the U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC) conducts a congressionally mandated study on revoking China’s permanent normal trade relations (PNTR) status, stakeholders including battery industry groups called for a phase-in period of at least 10 years tied to verified domestic supply capacity milestones, while trade hawks like the Coalition for a Prosperous America argued for immediate revocation.
  • A bipartisan group of 41 senators, including the chairs and ranking members of the Finance and Agriculture Committees, urged USTR Greer to preserve and strengthen agricultural market access under USMCA ahead of the pact’s July six-year review, and called on him to consult Congress on its negotiating posture before the talks begin.

 

Expanded Reading