Thu, 28 May 2026 · LIVE
Updated May 28, 2026 · 11:25
World News Updated May 28, 2026

China Says Trump-Xi Summit Opens New Phase in Bilateral Ties

China's Deputy Ambassador to the US, Qui Wenxing, described the Trump-Xi summit as "historic and successful," marking a new phase in bilateral ties. The summit produced tangible results, including discussions on reciprocal tariff reductions and the purchase of 200 Boeing aircraft by China. Qui emphasized cooperation as the mainstay of the relationship while acknowledging competition in economic areas. Xi Jinping accepted an invitation to visit the US this autumn, signaling continued high-level engagement despite ongoing tensions.

China says Trump-Xi summit opened new phase in ties

Washington, May 28

China has said President Donald Trump's visit to Beijing early this month had produced progress on tariffs, trade mechanisms and educational exchanges, even as tensions persist over Taiwan and technology restrictions.

China's Deputy Ambassador to the United States, Qui Wenxing, on Wednesday (local time) described the recent summit between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping as "historic and successful".

Qui said Beijing believed the summit marked "a significant step towards the establishment of the right path of getting along between China and the US in the new era".

He framed the summit around three themes -- "mutual respect", "strategic stability" and "win-win results".

"China and the US are two great nations," Qui told a group of reporters. "President Xi and President Trump actually, they respect each other and have maintained close communications."

He added that Beijing believed "achieving the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation and making America greater again can go hand in hand".

According to Qui, the two leaders agreed to pursue "a constructive China-US relationship of strategic stability", which he said would guide bilateral ties "over the next three years and beyond".

"We believe that cooperation is the mainstay," he said. "Of course, there is competition in the field of economic and trade areas, but we cannot define this relationship with competition."

Qui said China opposed viewing bilateral ties through a "zero-sum game" approach and called for differences to be managed "in a constructive manner".

"We do want to do everything we can to avoid any conflict and confrontation between us, because conflict and confrontation will produce consequences no one can bear," he said.

The deputy ambassador rejected criticism that the summit had failed to deliver concrete outcomes.

"Actually, this summit has produced many tangible and concrete results," Qui said.

He listed several economic understandings reached during the talks, including discussions on reciprocal tariff reductions involving products valued at "30 billion US dollars or even more on each side".

Qui said the two governments had also agreed to establish intergovernmental trade and investment councils, work on resolving non-tariff barriers and market access issues, and study ways to address supply chain concerns involving rare earth minerals and critical materials.

He added that China had agreed to purchase 200 Boeing aircraft and said there remained "potential for Chinese companies to buy more if conditions are right".

On educational exchanges, Qui highlighted President Xi's initiative to invite 50,000 American students to study or travel in China over five years.

The Chinese diplomat also said Beijing and Washington had agreed to support each other in hosting upcoming international summits, including APEC and the G20.

Qui confirmed that Xi had accepted Trump's invitation to visit the United States this autumn, although dates had not yet been finalised.

The latest Trump-Xi summit came amid continuing friction between Washington and Beijing over tariffs, technology restrictions, Taiwan and strategic competition in the Indo-Pacific region. Despite those disputes, both governments have recently signalled interest in maintaining high-level engagement and preventing further deterioration in ties.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

As an Indian, I find this very telling. China is trying to project an image of cooperation, but the US must be careful. Remember how they treated India during the Galwan clashes? They talk about "strategic stability" but their actions on our borders tell a different story. The 50,000 students exchange sounds nice, but I hope the US isn't being naive about Chinese intentions.

James A

From an American perspective, this seems like typical Chinese diplomatic spin. They always claim summit success but rarely deliver on promises. The tariff talk is vague - $30 billion in reciprocal reductions? That's peanuts compared to what they owe us. And buying Boeing planes is just PR. We need concrete action on intellectual property and market access, not more photo ops.

Vikram M

Classic Chinese diplomacy - talk about "mutual respect" while building artificial islands in the South China Sea. India should strengthen its Quad partnership and look at this with open eyes. The 200 Boeing deal is just a tactical move to divide the US business community from its strategic interests. We've seen this playbook before in how they courted Pakistan while talking peace with India. 😏

Sarah B

As an American, I'm cautiously optimistic. The student exchange program is a smart move - building relationships early. But the US needs to hold China accountable on trade practices and human rights. We can't just accept "mutual respect" as a buzzword while Chinese companies steal our technology. Let's see what actually comes from these agreements.

Rohit P

Pakistan is probably feeling nervous reading this. China-US rapprochement could affect the regional

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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