Donald Trump-Xi Jinping meeting – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Thu, 14 May 2026 09:57:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png Donald Trump-Xi Jinping meeting – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Trump-Xi talks: U.S. to persuade China to play ‘more active role’ in resolving Iran war crisis, says Marco Rubio https://artifex.news/article70976894-ece/ Thu, 14 May 2026 09:57:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70976894-ece/ Read More “Trump-Xi talks: U.S. to persuade China to play ‘more active role’ in resolving Iran war crisis, says Marco Rubio” »

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U.S. President Donald Trump, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and others during a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of the People, in Beijing on May 14, 2026.
| Photo Credit: AP

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio has said Washington hopes to convince Beijing during the talks between President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart to play a “more active role” in resolving the Iran war crisis.

Mr. Trump arrived in Beijing last night for a three-day visit during which he is scheduled to have several rounds of talks with Mr. Xi. Mr. Trump was welcomed by Chinese Vice President Han Zheng at the airport, a rare honour that broke with usual diplomatic protocol.

Speaking to Fox News aboard Air Force One on the way to Beijing, Mr. Rubio said the Iran war was a “huge source of instability” and “threatens to destabilise Asia more than any other part of the world because it’s heavily reliant on the straits for energy”.

“It’s in (China’s) interest to resolve this. We hope to convince them to play a more active role in getting Iran to walk away from what they’re doing now and trying to do now in the Persian Gulf,” he said, the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post reported on Thursday (May 14, 2026).

When departing for Beijing on Tuesday (May 12, 2026), Mr. Trump told reporters that he planned to have a “long talk” with the Chinese leader about Iran.

But Mr. Trump also said he did not think he needed Mr. Xi’s help with Iran and that the U.S. would “win it one way or the other, peacefully or otherwise.”

In the Fox News interview, Mr. Rubio described Beijing as Washington’s “top political challenge” but added that “it’s also the most important relationship for us to manage”.

“(China is) a big, powerful country… We’re going to have interests of ours that are going to conflict with interests of theirs, and to avoid wars and maintain peace and stability in the world, we’re going to have to manage those,” he said.

“There are clearly areas where they’re so important for the United States that we’re going to have to raise those issues. And we’ll continue to do so…There might be some areas of cooperation, too, and we want to make sure we don’t walk away from those,” he said.

Mr. Rubio also said the U.S. was “not trying to constrain China, but their rise cannot come at our expense”.

“Their rise cannot come at our fall,” he said.

“When (China’s) plan conflicts with the national interest of the United States, we need to do what’s right for the United States. And that’ll come up on this trip, but more importantly, that’ll be a feature of this relationship for a long time,” he said.



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Trump embarks on visit to China, focus on trade https://artifex.news/article70971552-ece/ Tue, 12 May 2026 20:35:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70971552-ece/ Read More “Trump embarks on visit to China, focus on trade” »

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President Donald Trump waves from the stairs of Air Force One as he boards upon his arrival at Joint Base Andrews, Md. on May 12, 2026, for a trip to China to meet President Xi Jinping.
| Photo Credit: AP

U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday (May 12, 2026) embarked on a visit to China for a meeting with President Xi Jinping to discuss smoothing trade relations rocked by tit-for-tat tariffs.

“We’re going to be talking with President Xi about a lot of different things. I would say more than anything else, it’ll be trade,” Mr. Trump told reporters at the White House as he headed to China.

“He’s been a friend of mine. He’s been somebody that we get along with… this is going to be a very exciting trip. A lot of good things are going to happen,” Mr. Trump said about his meeting with the Chinese President.

Mr. Trump sought to downplay differences with Mr. Xi over Iran and the shadow the conflict is casting on global oil markets.

“We’re going to have a long talk about it. I think he’s been relatively good, to be honest with you,” Mr. Trump said of his plans to discuss the conflict with Mr. Xi.

“We have a lot of things to discuss. I wouldn’t say Iran is one of them, to be honest with you, because we have Iran very much under control,” he added.

“I don’t think we need any help with Iran, and we’ll win it one way or the other. We’ll win it. We’ll win it peacefully or not. The Navy’s gone. Their air force is gone. Every single element of their war machine is gone,” he added.

“We have Iran very much under control. We’re either going to make a deal or they’re going to be decimated — so one way or the other, we win,” he said.

Accompanying Mr. Trump on Air Force One are Secretary of State and National Security Adviser Marco Rubio; Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth; U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer; Eric Trump; and Laura Trump, among others.

A large delegation of CEOs of top US companies will also be in Beijing during Mr. Trump’s visit.

The White House has invited top CEOs, including Elon Musk (Tesla), Tim Cook (Apple), Larry Fink (BlackRock), and Kelly Ortberg (Boeing), to join Mr. Trump on his trip to China this week.

Also expected to join Mr. Trump’s delegation for meetings with Chinese President Xi Jinping are Blackstone’s Stephen Schwarzman, Cargill’s Brian Sikes, Citigroup’s Jane Fraser, Cisco’s Chuck Robbins, Coherent’s Jim Anderson, GE Aerospace’s H. Lawrence Culp Jr, Goldman Sachs’s David Solomon, Illumina’s Jacob Thaysen, Mastercard’s Michael Miebach, Meta Platforms executive Dina Powell McCormick, Micron Technology’s Sanjay Mehrotra, Qualcomm’s Cristiano Amon and Visa’s Ryan McInerney.



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Donald Trump aims to clinch deal with China’s Xi during Asia trip https://artifex.news/article70200547-ece/ Sat, 25 Oct 2025 00:25:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70200547-ece/ Read More “Donald Trump aims to clinch deal with China’s Xi during Asia trip” »

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U.S. President Donald Trump will test his deal-making capabilities on a trip next week to Asia, a region battered by his hardball trade policies, while doubts hang over his highly anticipated meeting with China’s Xi Jinping.

Mr. Trump, who leaves Washington on Friday (October 24, 2025) night, is set for a five-day trip spanning Malaysia, Japan and South Korea, his first to the region and his longest journey abroad since taking office in January.

The Republican leader hopes to pile up trade, critical mineral and ceasefire deals before turning to the toughest challenge, a face-to-face with Mr. Xi in South Korea.

Mr. Trump is also working to maintain the signature foreign policy achievement of his second term, a fragile ceasefire he helped to strike in the Israel-Gaza conflict, while the Russian war in Ukraine rages and a trade war with China shows little sign of ending.

U.S. and China trade threats on key minerals, technology

Washington and Beijing have hiked tariffs on each other’s exports and threatened to cut off trade in critical minerals and technologies altogether.

The trip was formally announced by the White House on Thursday (October 23, 2025). Details remain in flux, including the meeting between leaders of the world’s two largest economies.

Neither side expects a breakthrough that would restore terms of trade that existed before Mr. Trump’s second-term inauguration in January, according to a person familiar with the conversations. Instead, talks between the two sides to prepare for the meeting focused on managing disagreements and modest improvements.

An interim agreement could include limited relief on tariffs, an extension of current rates, or China committing to buy U.S.-made soybeans and Boeing airplanes. Beijing reneged on similar promises in a 2020 deal with Trump.

Washington could let more high-end computer chips flow to Beijing, which in turn could loosen controls on rare earth magnets that have angered Mr. Trump.

Or, nothing could come of the talks at all.

On Wednesday (October 22, 2025), U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the Mr. Trump-Mr. Xi talk would be a “pull-aside,” suggesting nothing formal. Mr. Trump later told reporters the two would have “a pretty long meeting,” allowing them to “work out a lot of our questions and our doubts and our tremendous assets together.”

China has not confirmed a meeting is planned.

Trump set to visit three countries, meet world leaders

Mira Rapp-Hooper, a visiting fellow at the Brookings Institution and former Biden administration official, said Mr. Trump’s Asia policy has been defined by intense pressure on countries’ trade policies and defense spending.

“The high-level question on this trip is really, who does the United States stand with, and what does it stand for,” she said.

Mr. Trump is expected at the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) summit, which starts on Sunday (October 26, 2025) in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

There, he could oversee the signing of a ceasefire deal between Thailand and Cambodia. The deal would formalize an agreement that ended the worst fighting in years between the two countries in July, though it falls short of a comprehensive peace deal. During his second term in office, Mr. Trump has branded himself as a global peacemaker.

After that stop, Mr. Trump will head to Japan to meet Sanae Takaichi, the newly elected Prime Minister. Ms. Takaichi is expected to affirm plans by her predecessor to hike military spending and to make $550 billion in Trump-directed investments in the U.S.

Then, in Busan, South Korea, Mr. Trump plans to meet Mr. Xi ahead of an international trade summit. Mr. Trump is set to return to Washington before the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) leaders’ forum gets under way, according to the schedule announced by the White House on Thursday.

Mr. Trump has threatened to raise tariffs on Chinese imports to a total of some 155% from November 1 if they cannot strike a deal. That would almost certainly provoke a reaction from Beijing and end a truce that paused tit-for-tat hikes.

Beyond trade, the two leaders are expected to discuss Taiwan, a long-running U.S.-China irritant, and Russia, a Chinese ally now subject to expanded U.S. sanctions over the war in Ukraine.

“There’s no intent from the U.S. side to discuss other issues,” aside from China’s trade, export controls and its purchases of Russian oil, according to a U.S. official, who said Mr. Trump would be prepared to reiterate previous responses if Mr. Xi raised other topics.

Deal or no deal

It was not clear if Mr. Trump would try to resume trade negotiations with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, who is also traveling in Asia, after abruptly cutting off talks. The two “will likely see each other” on Wednesday at a dinner with other leaders, another official said.

Mr. Trump is also trying to close trade deals with Malaysia and India, while shoring up a deal that has already been struck with South Korea.

U.S. and South Korean relations have been strained by Seoul’s concerns over the $350 billion investment in U.S. companies sought by Trump and deportations of the country’s foreign workers.

South Korean President Lee Jae Myung wants Trump to pursue peace with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un. U.S. officials considered, but never confirmed, a trip to the demilitarized zone (DMZ) separating the two Koreas, according to another person familiar with the discussions. Another U.S. official said on Friday that no Kim-Trump meeting was on the schedule for the trip.

Published – October 25, 2025 05:55 am IST



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