Trump Plans April Beijing Visit to Meet Xi Amid Trade Talks

US President Donald Trump is reportedly planning a visit to Beijing in April to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping, which would be his first trip to China during his second term. The visit follows a recent 90-minute phone call between the two leaders, which Trump described as focusing almost entirely on trade. During the call, Xi Jinping extended an invitation for Trump and the First Lady to visit China, which Trump reciprocated. The planned summit occurs amid ongoing trade tensions, including Chinese export restrictions on rare earth minerals and recent US measures targeting Chinese technology.

Key Points: Trump to Visit China in April, Meet Xi Jinping

  • Trump's first China visit of his second term
  • Follow-up to February 4 phone call
  • Focus on trade, not Iran or Ukraine
  • Tensions over export restrictions and tariffs
3 min read

US President Trump plans to visit Beijing in April: Report

US President Donald Trump plans an April visit to Beijing to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping, focusing on trade and bilateral relations.

"We have to have a good -- these are the two most powerful countries in the world and we have a very good relationship. - Donald Trump"

Washington DC /Beijing, February 10

US President Donald Trump will reportedly visit Beijing in April and meet with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping, Politico has reported.

The news outlet cited three people familiar with Trump's plan, to report that the proposed visit will be US president's first visit to China during his second term

The Politico report did not give the finalized dates of Trump's Beijing visit.

In a recent interview with NBC News' Tom Llamas , Trump said that he will visit China in April.

"I'm gonna be going there in April then he's coming here toward the end of the year," Trump said.

When asked further on his China visit, the US President in the NBC News interview taped on February 4 said, "He's coming to the White House, toward the end of the year. We have a very good relationship. And, you know, it's important that I have a good relationship and for him, that he has a good relationship with me. We have to have a good -- these are the two most powerful countries in the world and we have a very good relationship."

Incidentally, Trump and Xi had a 90-minute telephonic conversation on February 4.

Trump said the call focused almost entirely on trade, without touching on other geopolitical issues like Iran and Ukraine. The call "resulted in a very positive conclusion for both Countries," Trump wrote on Truth Social.

Further, Trump wrote, "During the conversation, President Xi graciously invited the First Lady and me to visit China, and I reciprocated. As Presidents of two Great Nations, this is something that we both look forward to doing."

China's state media Xinhua reported that in the call Xi noted that he attaches great importance to China-U.S. relations, saying that over the past year, he and Trump have enjoyed sound communication, and had a successful meeting in Busan, charting the direction and course for China-US relations.

During the call, Xi called for the United States and China to "seek win-win results in the spirit of equality and respect each other's concerns," while urging Washington to "remove the negative measures taken against China," according to a readout from China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

"Recalibrating the direction of the giant ship of China-US relations requires us to take the helm and set the right course," Xi told his US counterpart.

CNN had previously reported that after the talks in Geneva the US had expected China to to ease export restrictions on rare earth minerals, which had been imposed in April in retaliation against Trump's "reciprocal" tariffs on Chinese goods.

But the restrictions haven't been lifted, causing intense displeasure inside the Trump administration and prompting a recent series of measures imposed on China, three administration officials told CNN last week.

Beijing, meanwhile, has bristled as Washington warned companies against using AI chips made by China's national tech champion Huawei, moved to limit critical technology sales to China and announced that the US would "aggressively revoke visas" for Chinese students in the US with connections to the Chinese Communist Party or studying in critical fields, the US broadcasting network said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
The focus seems to be purely on trade. It's a bit concerning that complex geopolitical issues like technology competition and regional stability are being set aside for a "very good relationship" narrative. Hope it's more substantive than it sounds.
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Priya S
High-level diplomacy is always good, but actions speak louder than words. China hasn't lifted the rare earth restrictions despite talks. India must continue to strengthen its own economic and tech partnerships independently. Atmanirbhar Bharat is the way! 🇮🇳
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Rohit P
"Recalibrating the direction of the giant ship..." – interesting phrase from President Xi. This summit will have ripple effects across Asia. As an Indian, I feel our foreign policy has been nimble, but we need to be prepared for any outcome from this meeting.
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Karthik V
The visa restrictions on Chinese students and the Huawei issue show the real tensions beneath the surface. This visit seems more about managing a difficult relationship than a true reset. Hope our policymakers in Delhi are taking notes.
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Meera T
Good that they are talking. Global stability needs cooperation between major powers. But as an Indian citizen, my primary concern remains China's actions in our region and along the LAC. Any US-China deal should not come at the cost of Indian security.

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