Trump Heads to Beijing for High-Stakes Trade Talks with Xi Jinping

US President Donald Trump will travel to Beijing for talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping, focusing on trade, investment, Iran, Taiwan, artificial intelligence, and security. The visit includes a bilateral meeting, a tour of the Temple of Heaven, and a state banquet. The agenda aims to rebalance trade and establish a US-China Board of Trade and Investment. US officials confirmed no change in Taiwan policy but expressed disappointment over defense funding, while also planning to press China on Iran and AI concerns.

Key Points: Trump in Beijing for Trade Talks with Xi Jinping

  • Trump to meet Xi in Beijing for trade, AI, Iran, and Taiwan talks
  • Agenda includes rebalancing trade and establishing new US-China boards
  • Discussions on aerospace, agriculture, and energy agreements
  • US official rejects reports of a major Chinese investment plan
3 min read

Trump to visit China amid trade push

US President Donald Trump visits China for talks with President Xi Jinping on trade, AI, Iran, and Taiwan. Key agenda includes rebalancing trade and new boards.

"This will be a visit of tremendous symbolic significance. But of course, President Trump never travels for symbolism alone. - Anna Kelly"

Washington, May 11

US President Donald Trump will travel to Beijing this week for talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping focused on trade, investment, Iran, Taiwan, artificial intelligence and security concerns, the White House said.

Principal Deputy Press Secretary Anna Kelly told reporters that Trump will arrive in Beijing on Wednesday evening. He will attend a welcome ceremony and hold a bilateral meeting with Xi on Thursday morning.

That afternoon, the two leaders will tour the Temple of Heaven. Trump will attend a state banquet that evening. On Friday, he will join Xi for a bilateral tea and working lunch before leaving China.

"This will be a visit of tremendous symbolic significance," Kelly said. "But of course, President Trump never travels for symbolism alone."

She said the talks would seek to "further rebalance trade with China" and put "American workers, farmers and families first."

Kelly said the agenda includes work on a US-China Board of Trade and a US-China Board of Investment. The Board of Trade would cover government-to-government management of trade in non-sensitive goods. The investment board would be a forum to discuss investment-related issues.

The two sides are also expected to discuss possible agreements in aerospace, agriculture and energy.

A senior US official said the potential Board of Trade could cover "double digit billions" in trade. The official said Washington and Beijing have discussed possible purchase commitments, including agricultural goods and aircraft.

"There's not a proposal out there for some massive investment," the official said, rejecting reports of a major Chinese investment plan.

On Iran, a senior US official said Trump has spoken with Xi several times about China's role, including "the revenue that China provides" to Iran and Russia and concerns over dual-use goods, components and parts.

The official said Trump was expected to press Xi again on Iran.

"I would expect the President to apply pressure," the official said.

Officials also said the two leaders may discuss artificial intelligence. One senior official said AI is "a rapidly evolving sector" and that the United States has security concerns.

Another official said Washington wants to explore whether a communication channel on AI matters should be established.

On Taiwan, a senior US official said there has been "no change of US policy" and no change is expected. The official later said the administration has approved "significantly more" arms sales to Taiwan in its first year than the previous administration did in four years.

The official also said Washington was disappointed that parts of Taiwan's defence funding package were left out and wanted the rest funded.

The visit comes as Washington and Beijing continue to manage a tense relationship shaped by trade, technology controls, Taiwan, cyber activity and China's ties with Russia and Iran.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Temple of Heaven tour while discussing trade wars? Quite a cultural contrast! 🏛️ But honestly, if Trump thinks he can strong-arm China on Iran and Taiwan while they hold the purse strings, good luck with that. India should watch closely—this affects our energy security too.
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Vikram M
Another US-China summit, another round of symbolism. The real action is in the fine print—Board of Trade and Investment boards sound promising, but how transparent will they be? India should use this as a wake-up call to strengthen our own manufacturing so we're not dependent on either superpower. 🇮🇳
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James A
As an American, I'd rather see Trump focus on domestic issues instead of these photo-op trips. But the AI and Taiwan discussions are genuine security concerns—China's ambitions in the South China Sea affect everyone, including Indian traders.
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Sneha F
I wonder if India will get any mention in these talks? 🤔 With China's Belt and Road and our border tensions, every US-China meeting impacts us. The fact they're discussing AI without India's input is concerning—we're a major tech hub.
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Rajesh Q
India should take notes: this is how big powers do diplomacy. While we squabble over domestic politics, the US and China are shaping global trade rules. Our leaders need to focus less on elections and more on economic partnerships—start by getting that free trade agreement with the US sorted!

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