(AFP) – US President Donald Trump will seek trade wins during final meetings with Xi Jinping on Friday at a superpower summit overshadowed by the Chinese leader’s uncharacteristically sharp warning on Taiwan. The US leader is hoping to seal business deals in sectors including agriculture, aviation, and artificial intelligence, but will also look for geopolitical progress in areas including the Middle East war.
Trump’s overtures to Xi, whom he described as a “great leader” and “friend,” have so far been met with more muted tones by the Chinese leader. The warm handshakes and pomp a day earlier were overshadowed by a blunt warning from Xi that missteps on the sensitive issue of Taiwan could push their two countries into “conflict.” Trump did not comment on Taiwan to reporters on Thursday, but US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told CNBC that the president would say more “in the coming days.”
The 79-year-old Trump did discuss another critical subject, however, the war against Iran, telling Fox News in an interview that Xi effectively assured his counterpart that China was not preparing to militarily aid Tehran. “He said he’s not going to give military equipment… he said that strongly,” Trump told Fox after the leaders met, adding that Xi would “like to see the Hormuz Strait open” for maritime transport of oil and other critical products.
Trump also responded to a comment by Xi referring to the “Thucydides Trap,” a political theory that war becomes more likely when a rising new power competes with an established great power. Xi, however, said the United States and China could “transcend” this danger. In a social media post in the early hours of Friday, Trump said Xi “very elegantly referred to the United States as perhaps being a declining nation.” Trump claimed that Xi was not referring to the United States under his watch, which he said was experiencing an “incredible rise,” but rather the country under his predecessor Joe Biden.
“Two years ago, we were, in fact, a Nation in decline,” Trump posted on his Truth Social site. “Now, the United States is the hottest Nation anywhere in the world, and hopefully our relationship with China will be stronger and better than ever before!” He said that Xi “congratulated me on so many tremendous successes.”
Trump on Friday is expected to turn discussions to trade. He is accompanied by a host of US business leaders, including Tesla’s Elon Musk and Nvidia’s Jensen Huang. Trump, in his Fox appearance, appeared to announce one of the big business deals by saying China had agreed to purchase “200 big” Boeing jets. Shares of the US aviation giant fell after Trump’s comments, indicating that the market had expected a more robust purchase from China.
Trump and Xi were discussing setting up “guardrails” for the use of artificial intelligence, Bessent told CNBC. Bessent said the world’s “two AI superpowers are going to start talking,” though US export controls on the advanced technology to China remain a sore point in relations. The two sides are embroiled in a number of outstanding disputes and areas of contention, not least the US-Israeli war in the Middle East, which has seen Tehran close the vital Strait of Hormuz, hitting Chinese and global oil supplies.
In its brief readout, the White House said the leaders had “agreed that the Strait of Hormuz must remain open to support the free flow of energy,” an issue that analysts have said could weaken Trump’s position, having already forced him to postpone this trip, originally planned for late March. Trump’s visit to Beijing is the first by an American president in nearly a decade.
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