Lahore, Aug. 22 -- The day after the 12th round of Sino-US trade talks concluded on July 31 in Shanghai, the United States administration announced it would impose 10 percent tariffs on another $300 billion of Chinese goods starting Sept 1, ignoring the fact that the two sides had called the talks "constructive" and agreed to hold the next round of talks in Washington. Not content with that, the US administration later labeled China a "currency manipulator" to put "maximum pressure" on China in order to achieve its selfish, narrow goals. To begin with, judging by the three standards the US Trade Facilitation and Trade Enforcement Act of 2015 sets to define a "currency manipulator", China is certainly not one. Changes in the yuan's exchange ...