On April 12, institutional analysts said that the U.S. Customs failure may be much more than a software failure. The so-called “failure” rhetoric may be a strategic smokescreen, not to fix a system that has gone wrong, but to buy time at a time of major adjustment when global trade and capital flows are at high risk. As Trump’s blockbuster tariffs sent shockwaves through global supply chains, a sudden “glitch” led to a pause in tariff data processing, which gave key stakeholders – clearinghouses, freight forwarders, the U.S. Treasury Department, and Customs a chance to pause and re-price and redeploy before any new tariffs were enforced. It could also be a form of information jamming similar to the strategy of transient fog in wartime. By freezing the tracking of tariff exclusions and reducing transparency about who is exempt and who is not, this gives the U.S. executive branch and the Treasury some relatively quiet time (hours or days) to assess market reaction and intervene if necessary, without headlines exposing their actions. Think of it as a pre-emptive firewall against a liquidity crisis or geopolitical panic, rather than a system-level failure. ( gold ten )
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Analyst: The malfunction at U.S. Customs may be a "strategic smoke screen"
On April 12, institutional analysts said that the U.S. Customs failure may be much more than a software failure. The so-called “failure” rhetoric may be a strategic smokescreen, not to fix a system that has gone wrong, but to buy time at a time of major adjustment when global trade and capital flows are at high risk. As Trump’s blockbuster tariffs sent shockwaves through global supply chains, a sudden “glitch” led to a pause in tariff data processing, which gave key stakeholders – clearinghouses, freight forwarders, the U.S. Treasury Department, and Customs a chance to pause and re-price and redeploy before any new tariffs were enforced. It could also be a form of information jamming similar to the strategy of transient fog in wartime. By freezing the tracking of tariff exclusions and reducing transparency about who is exempt and who is not, this gives the U.S. executive branch and the Treasury some relatively quiet time (hours or days) to assess market reaction and intervene if necessary, without headlines exposing their actions. Think of it as a pre-emptive firewall against a liquidity crisis or geopolitical panic, rather than a system-level failure. ( gold ten )