China Rejects Trump Accusation That Intercepted Iran Ship Was ‘Gift From China’

BEIJING, April 24 (Reuters) – China’s ⁠foreign ⁠ministry on Friday ⁠rejected an accusation by U.S. President ​Donald Trump that an Iranian-flagged cargo ship intercepted ‌by U.S. forces was ‌a “gift from China.”

The U.S. said it ⁠fired ⁠on and seized an Iranian cargo ship that tried ​to evade its blockade of Iranian ports. Iran’s military said the ship had been travelling ​from China and vowed retaliation against what it ⁠called “armed ⁠piracy by the U.S. ⁠military.”

Trump ​on Tuesday told CNBC the ship “had some things ​on it, which ⁠wasn’t very nice. A gift from China perhaps, I don’t know.”

China’s foreign ministry rejected the comments.

“China opposes any accusations and ⁠associations that lack a factual basis,” ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun ⁠told reporters in Beijing.

“Normal international trade relations between countries should not be subject to interference and disruption,” he added.

The container ship Touska, which was boarded and seized by U.S. forces on Sunday, is likely to have what Washington deems ⁠dual-use items that could be used by the military on board, maritime security sources said on Monday.

(Reporting by Joe Cash; Writing ​by Ben Blanchard; Editing by William ​Maclean and Thomas Derpinghaus)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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