Some U.S. car buyers envy what they cannot have - affordable Chinese EVs

DETROIT, March 23 (Reuters) - Sooren Moosavy wants to buy an affordable electric car in the U.S., motivated by environmental concerns and a preference for the EV's smoother ride. But the 28-year-old Baltimore resident's search has brought him to a trio of vehicles that are essentially unavailable - because they're ‌from Chinese automakers.

Reuters Workers inspect finished Zeekr 001 electric cars at Zeekr's factory in Ningbo, China, April 20, 2025. REUTERS/Nick Carey FILE PHOTO: A visitor observes an electric vehicle BYD Dholpin made by Chinese auto manufacturer BYD during Indonesia International Motor Show 2026 in Jakarta, Indonesia, February 9, 2026. REUTERS/Willy Kurniawan/File Photo FILE PHOTO: A staff member cleans the Geely Galaxy E8 electric vehicle at the Beijing International Automotive Exhibition, or Auto China 2024, in Beijing, China, April 25, 2024. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang/File Photo

FILE PHOTO: Zeekr's factory in Ningbo

"I would love the opportunity to be able to get one in or even test-drive one," said Moosavy, who has narrowed his wish ‌list to three models from BYD, Geely and Zeekr, attracted to their compactness, plush interiors, and above all, the price.

Moosavy isn't alone. As the average price of a new car in the U.S. approaches $50,000, more ​of the car-buying public is open to buying cheaper Chinese cars, despite resistance from the industry and both major U.S. political parties. While Chinese autos hit the highways of Europe, Latin America and even Canada, the U.S. government has effectively banned the cars with tariffs exceeding 100%, out of concerns over data security and protecting American jobs.

In places like Europe, a number of Chinese EVs sell at prices under $30,000. Some of those cars include amenities like advanced driving assistance software, a built-in mini fridge, and the option to sing karaoke with ‌your fellow passengers.

"The technology they offer for those lower price ⁠tags was astounding," said Clint Simone, senior features editor for car-shopping website Edmunds, who drove several Chinese vehicles while at the CES trade show earlier this year.

CHINA'S EXPORT SURGE

China has surged past Japan in recent years to become the world's top vehicle exporter. Canada became ⁠the latest country to open its doors to the cars, agreeing to cut tariffs to 6.1% on an initial allowance of 49,000 Chinese EVs annually. The cars are already being exported en masse to Mexico, where Chinese automakers are eyeing factory space.

U.S. President Donald Trump reiterated during an appearance in Detroit in January that he's receptive to Chinese automakers opening stateside, as long ​as ​they employ U.S. workers.

But earlier this month, major auto trade groups submitted a letter urging the U.S. ​government to keep Chinese carmakers out of the country, citing competitiveness ‌concerns. Republican Senator Bernie Moreno of Ohio said in January at an event at a Ford Motor plant that "as long as I have air in my body, there will not be Chinese vehicles sold in the United States of America."

China's embassy in Washington has rejected the automakers' criticism, saying Chinese-made cars are popular because of their quality and technological innovation.

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THE CURIOUS U.S. CONSUMER

Consumers have some concerns over allowing Chinese car imports, though, including over data security and protecting U.S. businesses, survey results from The Harris Poll as well as Cox show.

Rhett Ricart, an Ohio car dealer who sells several brands, including Ford, Chevrolet and Hyundai, said he has no doubt customers would snap up Chinese models ‌if they became available.

He and other dealers don't want that to happen yet, according to a ​recent Cox Automotive survey, which found that just 15% of dealers supported the entry of Chinese auto ​brands into the U.S., and just 26% trust that they would comply with ​U.S. safety standards.

Not meeting U.S. safety standards is one reason Chinese EVs cannot yet be owned permanently in the U.S.

But those obstacles ‌haven't quieted the buzz. The Cox survey polled 802 U.S. consumers ​who expect to buy a car in the ​next two years. Nearly half - 49% - rated Chinese cars as having very good or excellent value, and 40% say they support the idea of Chinese auto brands in the U.S. market.

Rich Benoit, a car enthusiast whose YouTube videos reviewing Chinese models garner millions of views, said the most compelling feature is the ​price. "That's what a lot of people are looking for: efficient, ‌quiet and low cost," he said. "They want to get to work – not everyone is a car enthusiast."

He's considering buying a BYD model in Mexico and ​driving it across the border.

"That's the only way to get one," Benoit said. "They've been selling in Mexico for years... I want to own a ​Chinese EV in America."

(Reporting by Nora Eckert; Editing by Mike Colias and David Gaffen)

Some U.S. car buyers envy what they cannot have - affordable Chinese EVs

DETROIT, March 23 (Reuters) - Sooren Moosavy wants to buy an affordable electric car in the U.S., motivated by environmen...
Iran points at tit for tat retaliation if power plants targeted, statement

DUBAI, March 23 (Reuters) - Iran will retaliate to an attack on its ‌electricity sector by targeting Israel's power ‌plants as well as power plants supplying U.S. bases ​with electricity in regional countries, a statement by the Revolutionary Guards on Monday said.

Reuters

The statement seemingly retracted earlier threats to ‌desalination plants in ⁠the region, which are crucial for providing drinking water in Gulf ⁠countries.

"The lying ... U.S. President has claimed that the Revolutionary Guards intends to attack ​the water ​desalination plants and ​cause hardship to ‌the people of the countries in the region," the statement shared on state media said.

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On Saturday, U.S. President Donald Trump warned that Iranian power plants would be ‌targeted if Tehran failed ​to "fully open" the Strait ​of Hormuz to ​all shipping within 48 hours.

"We ‌are determined to respond ​to any ​threat at the same level as it creates in terms of deterrence ... If ​you ‌hit electricity, we hit electricity," the Revolutionary ​Guards said.

(Reporting by Dubai Newsroom; ​Editing by Tom Hogue)

Iran points at tit for tat retaliation if power plants targeted, statement

DUBAI, March 23 (Reuters) - Iran will retaliate to an attack on its ‌electricity sector by targeting Israel's power ‌...
50 years after Argentina's bloody coup, families still search for and bury the disappeared

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — Beneath a leaden sky in a municipal cemetery, relatives of Eduardo Ramos and Alicia Cerrotta carry the two urns containing their remains. They lean down to kiss the wooden caskets before resting them in a mausoleum inArgentina'snorthern province of Tucuman.

Associated Press Ana Ramos cries as she holds the remains of her brother Jose Eduardo Ramos, who along with his wife Alicia Dora Cerrota was kidnapped and disappeared by the Argentine dictatorship in 1976, at the cemetery for burial in Tafi Viejo, Thursday, March 5, 2026.(AP Photo/Victor R. Caivano) Forensic anthropologist Mariella Fumagalli, left, and Gabriela Ghidini, examine the bones of murdered and missing persons from the military dictatorship era, in the lab of the Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Tuesday, March 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd) Former Army Lance Corporal and ex–Counter-Subversion Marksmen Unit Chief Juan Manuel Giraud lights a cigarette in his apartment in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Friday, March 13, 2026, as he serves a life sentence under house arrest after a 2022 conviction for the killing of members of a guerrilla group during a 1976 military operation. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko) FILE - Argentina's army troops patrol in Buenos Aires, Argentina, March 24, 1976, after a military coup overthrew President María Estela Martínez de Peron. (AP Photo/Eduardo Di Baia, File) A visitor walks in the

Argentina Dictatorship Anniversary

"We finally know where they are," one of them whispers.

The burial marked the closing of a 50-year wound. Eduardo, a 21-year-old journalist and poet, and his wife Alicia, a 27-year-old psychologist, were kidnapped byArgentine military forcesin the months following the 1976 coup that ushered in abloody dictatorship. Human rights organizations estimate 30,000 people were disappeared by the regime, while official figures place the number at around 8,000.

Following Argentina's return to democracy in 1983, the state prosecuted those responsible for the crimes. Yet, the search for victims' remains has largely fallen to relatives, activists and forensic experts.

The effort has been further hindered by the military's refusal to provide information about the victims' whereabouts and, more recently, by budget cuts to human rights programs ordered bylibertarian President Javier Milei.

"Fifty years after the coup, 'where are they?' remains a very relevant question," said Sol Hourcade, a lawyer for the Center for Legal and Social Studies representing plaintiffs in crimes against humanity trials.

Eduardo and Alicia bore the label of the "disappeared" until 2011, when an independent team of archaeologists discovered their remains together with those of another hundred people in the so-called Pozo de Vargas, a nearly 40-meter-deep (130-foot-deep) pit once used to supply water to steam locomotives.

The military had turned the well into a mass grave, dumping the bodies of students, political activists and rural workers deemed subversive, and covering them with layers of earth, stones and debris.

The exhumation and identification process took years. In early March, authorities in Tucuman handed over the incomplete remains of Eduardo and Alicia to their families.

"When I saw the urns, I realized that for us this means a final farewell," said Ana Ramos, Eduardo's sister. She was 13 when she last saw him and buried him at 63. "People have no idea what it means when the remains are returned. At first, it's very overwhelming, but it's the most liberating thing that has happened to us."

The coup and repression

Runaway inflation and escalating political violence by leftist and far-right armed groups paved the way for the coup against President María Estela Martínez on March 24, 1976. Martínez, the third wife of former populist President Juan Domingo Perón, ascended to power following his death, leading a country shaped by the populist movement he founded,Peronism.

A military junta led by Jorge Rafael Videla, Emilio Eduardo Massera and Orlando Ramón Agosti seized power. A defining feature of their rule was the forced disappearance of people deemed subversive.

"There was no other solution: we agreed it was the price to pay to win the war, and we needed it not to be evident so that society wouldn't realize," Videla told journalist Ceferino Reato in his final interview beforedying in prison in 2013while serving a life sentence for crimes against humanity.

Dissidents were abducted and taken to clandestine detention centers, where they were tortured and held in inhumane conditions. Many were later "transferred" — a euphemism for execution by firing squad or so-calleddeath flights, in which prisoners were sedated, loaded onto aircraft and thrown alive into the Río de la Plata.

Victims' bodies were buried in unmarked graves in municipal cemeteries or mass graves near military bases. Others were cremated.

Pregnant detainees were forced to give birth in captivity and then killed. Human rights groups estimate that about 500 newborns were illegally taken and adopted by military families or associates; around140 have since been identified.

Piecing the puzzle

After Argentina's return to democracy, rumors began circulating among residents living near the Pozo de Vargas, located beside a railway station, that the bodies of the disappeared might be buried there.

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Repression in this small northern province had been especially fierce, as guerrilla groups had controlled large parts of the territory before the coup. An estimated 2,000 people were killed in Tucuman.

The Pozo de Vargas is considered the largest clandestine mass grave of Argentina's last dictatorship with the remains of 149 people recovered from the site.

"The well began as a myth and today it is concrete, material evidence of what state terrorism was," said Ruy Zurita, a member of the Tucuman Archaeology, Memory and Identity Collective, which discovered the site in 2002. "It wasn't accidental or an excess — it was planned."

Although archaeologists found the first bone fragments in 2004, full-scale excavations did not begin until five years later due to a lack of state support, funding and equipment. Much of the work was unpaid.

No complete skeletons were recovered, only about 38,000 bone fragments.

Since 2011, the Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team — an independent organization founded by U.S. anthropologist Clyde Snow — has worked to piece together that complex puzzle in its Buenos Aires laboratory, successfully identifying 121 sets of remains. Twenty-eight sets of remains still remain to be identified.

Since the return of democracy, the organization has exhumed some 1,600 bodies, of which it has identified just over half.

The Ramos family was notified in 2015 about the discovery of Eduardo's tibia after the yearslong identification process. But they opted to wait to receive his remains until the team could try to reconstruct his skeleton, his sister said.

Silence and lack of state support

"I can't ask for forgiveness if I did nothing," former Army corporal Juan Manuel Giraud told The Associated Press as he lit a cigarette in his Buenos Aires apartment.

Giraud, 75, wears an electronic ankle monitor while serving a life sentence under house arrest. Convicted in 2022 for killings during a 1976 military operation, he insists he never killed, tortured or witnessed such acts.

He is not alone in his denial. Most of the 1,231 members of the security forces convicted of their actions during the dictatorship deny the charges and have not provided information on the whereabouts of the disappeared.

For Hourcade, the lawyer representing families, the answers may lie in secret state archives, though accessing them remains a "titanic task," especially without having a set of comprehensive public policies aimed at finding the remains.

As part of hisausterity plan, Milei downgraded the Human Rights Secretariat to a sub-secretariat, cut its budget and laid off staff. Technical teams working on archive analysis were dismissed, accused of political bias and of carrying out what Milei's administration described as persecution of former military personnel.

Recently built, the mausoleum at the Tafi Viejo cemetery in Tucuman has most of its niches still empty, awaiting new identifications.

"Today marks the end of one stage: receiving and … saying goodbye to Eduardo and Alicia," said Pedro, another of the Ramos siblings, during the funeral. "All I know is that grief walks with us forever."

Follow AP's coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean athttps://apnews.com/hub/latin-america

50 years after Argentina’s bloody coup, families still search for and bury the disappeared

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — Beneath a leaden sky in a municipal cemetery, relatives of Eduardo Ramos and Alicia Cerrot...
Hurricanes score 3 times on the power play in a 5-1 win over the Penguins

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Seth Jarvis scored on a power play and assisted on two other man-advantage goals as the Carolina Hurricanes beat the Pittsburgh Penguins 5-1 on Sunday.

Associated Press Pittsburgh Penguins' Bryan Rust (17) is defended by Carolina Hurricanes' Jordan Staal (11) during the second period of an NHL hockey game in Pittsburgh, Sunday, March 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar) Carolina Hurricanes' Sean Walker (26) checks Pittsburgh Penguins' Bryan Rust (17) off the puck during the second period of an NHL hockey game in Pittsburgh, Sunday, March 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar) Pittsburgh Penguins' Sidney Crosby (87) is defended by Carolina Hurricanes' Jordan Staal (11) during the second period of an NHL hockey game in Pittsburgh, Sunday, March 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar) Pittsburgh Penguins goaltender Stuart Skinner watches the puck during the first period of an NHL hockey game against the Carolina Hurricanes in Pittsburgh, Sunday, March 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar) Pittsburgh Penguins' Sidney Crosby (87) is defended by Carolina Hurricanes' K'andre Miller (19) and William Carrier (28) in front of goalie Frederik Andersen, second from right, during the first period of an NHL hockey game in Pittsburgh, Sunday, March 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

Hurricanes Penguins Hockey

Sebastian Aho and Nikolaj Ehlers also scored on power plays for the Hurricanes, who beat the league's best penalty kill team for three goals.

Aho, who scored his 25th goal of the season, became the first player in Hurricanes or Hartford Whalers history with eight 25-goal seasons.

Jalen Chatfield and Mark Jankowski also scored for the Hurricanes, who have won seven of their last 10 games. Carolina has points in 24 of its last 29 games. Frederik Andersen made 18 saves for his fifth straight win. He's 6-1 in his last seven starts.

Jarvis has a goal and six points in his last three games. Ehlers has six goals and 14 points in his last 11 games.

Egor Chinakhov scored his 16th goal for the Penguins, tying a career high. Bryan Rust assisted on the goal and has for a career-high seven-game point streak. Stuart Skinner stopped 21 shots for the Penguins, who have two regulation losses in their last nine games. Pittsburgh has points in 21 of its last 26 games overall.

Pittsburgh and Carolina played for the third time in 13 days. Carolina won the other two games, a 5-4 shootout and 6-5 overtime victory.

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The Hurricanes have power-play goals in their last three games. It's the second time Carolina scored at least three power-play goals in a game after going 4 for 5 in a home game against Florida on Jan. 16.

Aho scored on a power play 47 seconds into the game. His point shot hit Connor Dewar's stick, went between Jordan Staal's legs and past Skinner. Ehlers scored Carolina's second power-play goal at 6:24 of the second. Chatfield gave Carolina a 3-0 lead at 9:15 of the second when his point shot deflected off Chinakhov's stick and past Skinner.

Jarvis one-timed a pass from Ehlers at the top of the crease for his power-play goal at 17:20 of the second.

Up next

Hurricanes: At Montreal on Tuesday.

Penguins: Host Colorado on Tuesday.

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Hurricanes score 3 times on the power play in a 5-1 win over the Penguins

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Seth Jarvis scored on a power play and assisted on two other man-advantage goals as the Carolina Hurric...
Lindsey Vonn shows off progress in gym 1 month after 2026 Olympics crash

Lindsey Vonnis continuing to regain her strength just over a month after a major crash at the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics.

Good Morning America Good Morning America

In a new Instagrampostshared over the weekend, the athlete is seen performing six unassisted pull-ups before lowering herself onto a step stool, returning to her crutches and fist-bumping her trainer to celebrate the milestone.

"First set of pull ups post surgery," she wrote in the caption. "Slowly getting there!"

Lindsey Vonn thanks doctor she says saved her leg from amputation after Olympics crash

Earlier this year, the decorated skier suffered back-to-back injuries. Vonntore the anterior cruciate ligament, or ACL, in her left knee on Jan. 30 during a World Cup race in Switzerland. Then, on Feb. 8 at the Milan Cortina Games, shecrashedabout 13 seconds after starting the women's downhill event -- one of her specialties -- on the Olympia delle Tofane slope in Cortina d'Ampezzo.

Following the Olympics crash, Vonn was airlifted by helicopter from the course to an Italian hospital. She also documented her return home, flying from Italy back to the United States before being transferred by ambulance to another hospital.

Stefano Rellandini/AFP via Getty Images - Lindsey Vonn inspects the slope before the second official training for the women's downhill event during Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games in Cortina d'Ampezzo on February 6, 2026.

Vonn later shared that she suffered multiple serious injuries, including a complex tibia fracture, fibular head fracture, tibial plateau fracture and compartment syndrome in her leg. She said she underwent a six-hour surgery, including a fasciotomy, and later credited her doctor with saving her leg from amputation.

She said at the time that the injuries and recovery came with significant pain.

"I was really struggling. Pain was a little bit out of control, and I had a blood transfusion, and that helped me a lot," she said, adding that "it was definitely not the way I wanted to end my Olympics."

In aposton X last month, Vonn acknowledged the difficult days of recovery but said she is determined to push forward.

"Today was a hard day… my physical battle began the second I got hurt but the mental battle started today," she wrote. "...I do know hard days are coming but I will find a way back to the top of the mountain of life."

Lindsey Vonn shows off progress in gym 1 month after 2026 Olympics crash

Lindsey Vonnis continuing to regain her strength just over a month after a major crash at the Milan Cortina Winter Olympi...

 

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