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  • Live updates: Trump concludes warm China trip with few clear wins – NBC News

    Live updates: Trump concludes warm China trip with few clear wins – NBC News

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    How Trump’s China trip compares to visits by other presidents

    U.S. presidential visits to China are often remembered not just for the meetings, but for their locations.

    Trump is the third U.S. president to make more than one visit to China while in office, after George W. Bush and Obama. In 2017, Xi hosted Trump at the Forbidden City, but this time, his itinerary included the Temple of Heaven, bringing a U.S. president back to the imperial site for the first time in more than 50 years.

    Richard Nixon became the first sitting U.S. president to visit China in 1972, traveling to Beijing, Hangzhou and Shanghai on a trip he later called “the week that changed the world.” At the Great Wall, he said the landmark “had to have been built by a great people.”

    = 1000px) and (resolution < 2dppx)">Nixon in China

    President Nixon and Secretary of State William Rogers with Chinese Deputy Premier Li Xiannian during a visit to the Great Wall of China in 1972.  Corbis via Getty Images

    Gerald Ford followed in 1975, four years before Washington and Beijing established formal diplomatic ties. His itinerary also included the Temple of Heaven, the Great Wall and the Summer Palace. After diplomatic ties were established, Ronald Reagan made a trip in 1984 that included stops in Beijing, Xi’an and Shanghai, where he saw the famous terracotta warriors.

    George H.W. Bush arrived in Beijing in February 1989, barely a month after taking office. The city was already familiar to him: He served as the top U.S. envoy to China in the 1970s and was known for cycling around Beijing with his wife, Barbara Bush.

    = 1000px) and (resolution < 2dppx)">George Herbert Walker Bush poses with his wife Bar

    George and Barbara Bush in China in 1974. The White House / AFP- Getty Images file

    The Bush family’s bike connection continued years later under George W. Bush, who visited China four times while in office, more than any other U.S. president. His trips included the 2001 APEC summit in Shanghai, the 2008 Beijing Olympics and a 2005 ride with China’s national mountain biking team in Beijing.

    Bill Clinton’s 1998 trip was the longest and most wide-ranging China visit by a sitting U.S. president, taking him to five cities over nine days: Xi’an, Beijing, Shanghai, Guilin and Hong Kong.

    Barack Obama visited China three times as president: for a 2009 state visit, the 2014 APEC summit in Beijing and the 2016 G20 summit in Hangzhou.

    37m ago / 10:33 AM EDT

    Trump says he didn’t discuss tariffs or computer chips with Xi

    Trump told reporters that he didn’t discuss tariffs or computer chips with Xi during his meetings with his counterpart in China.

    “We didn’t discuss tariffs. They’re paying tariffs, they’re paying substantial tariffs, but we didn’t discuss,” Trump said on Air Force One when asked if he agreed with Xi to extend the yearlong truce on tariffs. “You know, before I came along, it was the opposite. We didn’t discuss that.”

    Asked about computer chips, Trump said, “It didn’t come up.”

    Trump also added during his gaggle with the media that China is going to buy “billions of dollars of soybeans” from the U.S.

    52m ago / 10:18 AM EDT

    Trump criticizes Iran’s latest proposal for peace

    Trump criticized Iran’s latest proposal for peace while speaking to the media on Air Force One.

    “I looked at it, and if I don’t like the first sentence, I just throw it away,” he said, adding that the nuclear guarantees were “not enough” in his estimation. 

    When asked about the possibility of restarting bombing in Iran, Trump told reporters: “I’d like to say on a certain hour, a certain day, the bombing is going to start. I don’t want to say that. I can only say that Iran, I could say this with very, very strong conviction, Iran will never have a nuclear weapon.”

    2h ago / 9:34 AM EDT

    Beijing gave Trump the bare minimum on Iran, analyst says

    When it came to Iran, the U.S. may have touted agreement, but Beijing appeared to give Trump the bare minimum, according to one analyst.

    Beijing’s agreement to keep the Strait of Hormuz open and its statement that Iran should not obtain nuclear weapons cost China “very little,” said Craig Singleton, a senior fellow and China expert at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.

    “Those rhetorical commitments cost China very little,” Singleton said in emailed comments. “The harder test is whether Beijing pressures Tehran, curbs Chinese purchases of Iranian oil, or helps Washington turn general language into observable outcomes.”

    “So far, China appears willing to support de-escalation in principle, not carry Trump’s Iran policy in practice,” he added.

    3h ago / 8:55 AM EDT

    Trump addresses potential denuclearization with China and Russia

    Trump was asked on Air Force One if he succeeded in securing any form of arms control during talks with China.

    “We brought it up — denuclearization. I talk about it all the time with Russia and with China, and it did come up. We did discuss that,” Trump told reporters.

    “I got a very positive response at the beginning,” he added, but did not provide details on what was discussed.

    = 1000px) and (resolution < 2dppx)">People gather to watch Air Force One, carrying US President Donald Trump, take off from Beijing Capital Airport in Beijing on May 15, 2026.

    People gather to watch Air Force One take off in Beijing today. Wang Zhao / AFP via Getty Images

    3h ago / 8:38 AM EDT

    Trump says he would consider lifting sanctions on Chinese oil companies that buy Iranian oil

    Trump said on Air Force One that he would make a decision soon about whether to lift sanctions on Chinese oil companies that purchase Iranian oil.

    “Well, we talked about that, and I’m going to make a decision over the next few days,” he told reporters when asked if he would consider removing the sanctions.

    = 1000px) and (resolution < 2dppx)">President Donald Trump boards Air Force One as he departs Beijing on May 15, 2026.

    President Donald Trump boards Air Force One as he departs Beijing today. Brendan Smialowski / AFP via Getty Images

    3h ago / 8:22 AM EDT

    Trump says Xi called Jimmy Lai’s case ‘a tough one’

    Trump said on the flight back from China that he brought up the cases of several political prisoners in China during his conversations with Xi, including Jimmy Lai.

    “He said Jimmy Lai’s a tough one, went through a lot,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One. “He told me that would be a tough one.”

    Lai, a pro-democracy activist, was sentenced in February to 20 years in prison in Hong Kong after his conviction in a landmark national security trial.

    4h ago / 7:47 AM EDT

    Trump says he has not yet decided on $14 billion Taiwan arms package

    Trump said he has not yet made a “determination” on whether a proposed $14 billion arms package to Taiwan will move forward.

    “I’ll make a determination over the next fairly short period,” Trump told reporters on Air Force One while en route to Alaska, adding that he would need to speak with Taiwan’s president, Lai Ching-te, before making a final decision.

    5h ago / 7:08 AM EDT

    Trump says he and Xi spoke ‘a lot’ about Taiwan, downplays conflict risk

    Trump has said that he spoke “a lot” about Taiwan with Xi during their summit and that he does not believe there is a risk of conflict with China over the Beijing-claimed island. 

    Asked whether there is a risk of conflict with China over Taiwan, Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One that “we’ll be fine.”

    “President Xi and I talked about Taiwan,” Trump said during a gaggle with reporters en route to Alaska. “On Taiwan, he does not want to see a fight for independence because that would be a very strong confrontation.”

    Xi warned Trump that mishandling the issue of Taiwan, a self-ruling democracy, could create conflicts with the U.S. and jeopardize ties, according to a Chinese readout of the meeting. A U.S. readout had made no mention of Taiwan.

    = 1000px) and (resolution < 2dppx)">Shopping Mall Screen Broadcasts Xi Jinping And Donald Trump Tour In Zhongnanhai In Xuchang

    A large screen at a shopping mall in Xuchan, China, broadcasts coverage of Trump’s visit. Cheng Xin / Getty Images

    5h ago / 6:46 AM EDT

    Trump calls Japanese leader Takaichi on plane back from Xi summit

    Trump has begun talks on the phone with Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, the Japanese government said on X.

    Japan is a close U.S. ally and the call, while still on the way home from his summit with Xi, highlights the importance of that relationship and how any shifts in ties with China may affect it.

    5h ago / 6:36 AM EDT

    Trump praises Xi, says ‘China has a Ballroom, and so should the U.S.A.’

    “China has a Ballroom, and so should the U.S.A.!” Trump wrote on Truth Social after departing Beijing today. He said the White House ballroom will be open around September 2028 and will be the “finest facility of its kind anywhere in the U.S.A.”

    Trump also posted a picture showing him walking alongside Xi and called him “one of the World’s Great Leaders.”

    5h ago / 6:12 AM EDT

    Putin’s upcoming China trip a ‘good chance’ to discuss Trump’s visit, Kremlin says

    The Kremlin said today that Vladimir Putin’s upcoming trip to China will provide a “a good chance to exchange views” on Trump’s visit to Beijing.

    The timing of the trip has yet to be announced, but is widely expected to be soon. “This will be an important visit. Our especially close trade ties will be on agenda as well as a whole range of other elements of our ties with China,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters today.

    “Obviously, when top two economies are in dialogue — this is a matter of deep analysis for all countries in the world, including us,” Peskov said. “We are assessing media reports and hope to get first hand accounts once we are in China.”

    6h ago / 5:42 AM EDT

    Taiwan thanks U.S. after Rubio says policy remains unchanged

    Taiwan thanked the U.S. today after Secretary of State Marco Rubio told NBC News that Washington’s policy toward the island had not changed following Trump’s meeting with Xi in Beijing.

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    NBC News’ Tom Llamas and Secretary of State Marco Rubio in Beijing yesterday.  Ignacio Torres / NBC News

    Taiwan’s Foreign Ministry said Foreign Minister Lin Chia-lung thanked the U.S. for repeatedly expressing support for peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait, according to Taiwan’s government-funded Central News Agency.

    Rubio said in an interview from Beijing that Taiwan came up during the Trump-Xi meeting, but that U.S. policy toward Taiwan remained unchanged.

    6h ago / 5:11 AM EDT

    Trump announces plan to build National Garden of American Heroes in West Potomac Park

    Trump, still on his way back from China, has posted an official announcement on Truth Social of his plans to build the National Garden of American Heroes in West Potomac Park in Washington, complete with a rendering. 

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    @realDonaldTrump / Truth Social

    “Right now, it is a totally BARREN field of Prime Waterfront Real Estate along our Mighty Potomac River,” he wrote. “When finished, West Potomac Park will be a World Class Masterpiece with elegant Landscaping, and adorned with Beautiful Statues, and be yet another one of my great projects to make Washington, D.C., the Safest and Most Beautiful Capital in the World.”

    The idea for the garden of statues of famous Americans dates back to his first term. Funding for the garden was included in the “one big beautiful bill.” 

    7h ago / 5:04 AM EDT

    Pandas set for 8,000-mile blind date in Atlanta

    They’ve never met, but Ping Ping and Fu Shuang are getting ready for the blind date of a lifetime. The two pandas are preparing to leave China on a nearly 8,000-mile trip to their new home in Atlanta.

    Ping Ping and Fu Shuang will make the lengthy journey from their current home in Chengdu, a city of over 20 million people in southwestern China.

    While Ping Ping is an avid bamboo eater, Fu Shuang — whose name means “double happiness” — is playful but a bit timid. She also enjoys snacking on apples and resting her chin on her paw.

    The pair will eventually be moved to another panda base farther south before they begin their journey to America.

    Read the full story here.

    = 1000px) and (resolution < 2dppx)">Exclusive look at Chinese pandas preparing for trip to America

    7h ago / 4:48 AM EDT

    China doesn’t say if it’s buying Boeing aircraft

    When asked about Trump saying that China had agreed to buy 200 Boeing aircraft, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun didn’t confirm the claim.

    Instead, he told reporters today at a regular briefing, “China and the United States can promote their respective development and revitalization by strengthening cooperation.” Trump had earlier told Fox News that China had agreed to buy 200 Boeing planes.

    When asked if both countries had reached any agreement in agriculture, Guo said that the U.S. and China had reached “important consensus on maintaining the stability of economic and trade relations, expanding practical cooperation in various fields, and properly managing their differences.”

    China was willing to work with the U.S. to achieve win-win outcomes, he added.

    7h ago / 4:13 AM EDT

    Why China emphasized a new relationship status with the U.S.

    Beijing seems to be seeking to ensure stability in U.S.-China relations for the rest of Trump’s term in office — as long as the U.S. doesn’t make any perceived false moves on Beijing-claimed Taiwan, one of the most sensitive issues in the relationship.

    = 1000px) and (resolution < 2dppx)">U.S. President Trump Meets With China's President Xi At Zhongnanhai

    Trump and Xi tour Zhongnanhai Garden in Beijing today. Evan Vucci / Getty Images

    According to a Chinese readout of the Trump-Xi talks yesterday, the two leaders agreed to work toward a relationship of “constructive strategic stability,” a phrase that Xi said would guide ties for the next three years and beyond.

    There was no mention of the concept in the U.S. readout of the talks, although Secretary of State Marco Rubio appeared to allude to it in an interview with NBC News.

    “One of the things the Chinese emphasize, which we agree, is strategic stability in our relationship, a constructive relationship, but also one that establishes strategic stability so that we don’t have misunderstandings that could lead to broader conflict,” he told “NBC Nightly News” anchor Tom Llamas in Beijing.

    The new framing accepts that the U.S.-China relationship is a competitive one, while potentially allowing China to define what kind of competition crosses the line, Chinese affairs commentator Bill Bishop said in his Sinocism newsletter.

    “The Chinese government wants a period of strategic détente and this concept could realize that on terms favorable to them for the rest of Trump’s second term,” he said.

    Any future U.S. action that China doesn’t like, such as combating Chinese industrial overcapacity or tightening export controls, “could then be cast by Beijing as violations of the new ‘constructive China-U.S. relationship of strategic stability’ to which the two leaders personally agreed,” Bishop said.

    Stability could also be threatened by disputes over Taiwan, a self-ruling democracy that relies on the U.S. to resist China’s designs on it. During their talks yesterday, Xi warned Trump that the Taiwan issue could lead to “clashes and even conflicts” between their countries if not handled carefully.

    “The concept of ‘constructive strategic stability’ appears to be the new moniker for the relationship that China intends to use, at least over the next three years — we’ll see if the U.S. side uses it as well,” said Ambassador Daniel Kritenbrink, a partner at the Asia Group who served as assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs during the Biden administration.

    “But of course in classic Chinese fashion, President Xi makes clear this stability could be threatened if Taiwan is not managed well,” he said.  

    8h ago / 3:19 AM EDT

    Xi gave Trump a rare tour of China’s secret garden at heart of Chinese government

    Ahead of their closed-door lunch, Xi gave Trump a tour of Zhongnanhai, the former imperial gardens that now serve as the leadership compound of the Chinese Communist Party.

    During the tour, a hot mic captured the leaders talking.

    Xi pointed out several historic trees on the grounds, saying some were hundreds of years old and others more than 1,000 years old.

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    “One of them is 490 years old. In other places within this compound, there are trees that have lived to be over 1,000 years old,” Xi told Trump. 

    Trump replied, “They live that long?”

    Pointing to two trees growing side by side, Xi said they were “connected as one.”

    Xi also noted that the site is rarely used for foreign affairs events. Trump responded that it was a “nice place.”

    = 1000px) and (resolution < 2dppx)">CHINA-US-DIPLOMACY

    Evan Vucci / POOL/AFP via Getty Images

    = 1000px) and (resolution < 2dppx)">U.S. President Trump Meets With China's President Xi At Zhongnanhai

    Evan Vucci / POOL/AFP via Getty Images

    9h ago / 2:42 AM EDT

    Air Force One departs Beijing

    The president has now finished his whirlwind visit to China and is heading home to the U.S.

    His plane took off from Beijing Capital International Airport at around 2:41 p.m. local time (2:41 a.m. ET).

    9h ago / 2:26 AM EDT

    Trump boards Air Force One

    The president’s motorcade has arrived at the airport in Beijing. Trump was greeted with a red carpet and an honor guard, with dignitaries there to see him off.

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    A group of children dressed in blue and white held flags and chanted “farewell, farewell, a warm farewell” as Trump climbed the steps of Air Force One.

    He waved before boarding and will now fly home to Washington.

    9h ago / 2:16 AM EDT

    Locals flock to airport to watch Trump depart after visit that fascinated Chinese capital

    While the Chinese capital regularly hosts world leaders, few command the sort of attention that comes with a visiting U.S. president. And in Trump’s case, his plane.

    The landing of Air Force One this week for the pivotal summit was a source of fascination in China. For Trump’s departure today, hundreds of amateur photographers, live streamers, and enthusiasts flocked to the airport to watch the famous presidential plane take off.

    “It’s obvious we can just watch Air Force One on CCTV,” said a 19-year-old Beijinger named Yang, “but to take a look at Air Force One in real life, that’s breathtaking.”

    With the summit between Trump and Xi winding down, security around the city is easing.

    Every time the presidential motorcade made a move, traffic on Beijing’s congested freeways and streets was brought to a complete halt. There have been layers of added fences and barriers, as well as other restrictions (like banning people from using a balcony overlooking motorcade routes) to ensure the two-day visit went off without a hitch.

    Crowds of curious onlookers also regularly gathered near the Four Seasons hotel where Trump stayed.

    At the airport, Zhan Rui Liu made his enthusiasm easy to spot. The 22-year-old milled around wearing a bright red ‘Make America Great Again’ baseball hat.

    ‘As a Trump supporter, I’m excited,’ Zhan said of trying to catch a glimpse of the U.S. president, ‘For myself, I want to welcome him.’

    10h ago / 1:59 AM EDT

    Trump heads to the airport after lunch with Xi

    Trump is now heading to Beijing Capital International Airport after a closed-door lunch with Xi, concluding his state visit.

    10h ago / 1:58 AM EDT

    Trump says ‘fantastic’ trade deals made during talks with Xi

    NBC News looks at Trump’s comments on trade agreements that may have been reached during the U.S.-China summit as well as how the United States’ stance on Taiwan could impact further trade relations between the two countries.

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    10h ago / 1:39 AM EDT

    What did Trump and Xi have for lunch?

    Trump and Xi were served an expansive menu during their closed-door lunch, with dishes ranging from seafood to traditional Chinese specialties.

    The offerings included minced codfish in seafood soup, crispy and stir-fried lobster balls, pan-seared beef fillet stuffed with mushrooms, kung pao chicken, braised seasonal greens, stewed beef in a bun, and steamed pork and shrimp dumplings.

    Chocolate brownies, fruit and ice cream were served for dessert.

    10h ago / 1:22 AM EDT

    Families of Americans imprisoned in China appeal to Trump for help

    After living without their loved ones for more than a decade, two families of Americans detained in China are appealing to Trump to bring them home as he meets with Xi in Beijing.

    U.S. citizens Dawn Michelle Hunt, a 54-year-old from Illinois, and Nelson Wells Jr., a 52-year-old from Louisiana, are both in Chinese prisons on separate allegations of drug trafficking after their families say they were caught up in smuggling scams at the airport.

    The Hunt and Wells families see the state visit this week as a rare opportunity for Trump to speak directly to Xi about releasing the two Americans, whose families say are both in declining health.

    Read the full story here.

    10h ago / 1:13 AM EDT

    AI battle between U.S. and China could be part of talks

    The Trump administration had telegraphed that AI would be a core part of the meeting between the U.S. and China, but it remains unclear exactly what sort of agreement could be reached over the quick-moving technology. 

    Both sides have acknowledged AI as a critical issue for global power and technological leadership, with Trump arguing the U.S. “is in a race to achieve global dominance in artificial intelligence.”

    China is seen as America’s chief competitor, with its leading systems months behind America’s top companies. The U.S. exerts control over several key bottlenecks in the AI pipeline, especially the manufacturing equipment and chips necessary to power AI hardware.

    Some of the administration’s leading AI policy architects are part of the delegation to China, including Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and the director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, Michael Kratsios. 

    Just three weeks ago, Kratsios penned a memo to the heads of federal agencies targeting Chinese AI companies over their alleged attempts to distill, or reverse engineer, complex AI systems from American companies. 

    China has taken a strict approach to governing AI, compared to the light-touch designs from the Trump administration. All new powerful generative AI models must be registered with the Beijing central government before they are made public, while similar testing is voluntary in the U.S. 

    As part of the summit, officials may seek to create some sort of emergency communication system or collaboration to prevent non-state actors from using powerful AI systems for dangerous purposes, Bessent said today.

    11h ago / 1:04 AM EDT

    How the Iran war looms over the Beijing summit

    Xi gave Trump a lavish welcome in Tiananmen Square as the superpower summit began. Secretary of State Marco Rubio told “NBC Nightly News” anchor Tom Llamas that key topics included Iran, Taiwan and trade deals.

    = 1000px) and (resolution < 2dppx)">Trump’s high-stakes summit in China

    11h ago / 12:48 AM EDT

    Trump and Xi begin working lunch

    Trump and Xi are now at a working lunch at Zhongnanhai, the last event on the schedule before Trump returns to Washington.

    11h ago / 12:14 AM EDT

    Trump says he and Xi both want Iran war to end

    Trump said he and Xi settled “a lot of different problems” that others would have struggled to resolve, and he lavished praise on the U.S.-China relationship.

    = 1000px) and (resolution < 2dppx)">Trump praises Xi, says ‘wonderful things’ done during China summit

    “We did discuss Iran,” Trump said, saying he and Xi share similar feelings about how they wish for the conflict to end.

    “We don’t want them to have a nuclear weapon; we want the straits open,” he added in a reference to the Strait of Hormuz, a crucial shipping route whose effective shutdown by Iran has disrupted global energy supplies.

    12h ago / 12:06 AM EDT

    Trump and Xi deliver closing remarks

    Trump and Xi are seated in an ornate room, joined by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, as well as the U.S. ambassador to China, David Perdue, and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer.

    = 1000px) and (resolution < 2dppx)">Xi welcomes Trump to Zhongnanhai for summit closing remarks

    The two sides made “fantastic trade deals,” Trump said.

    Xi is joined by a cadre of top officials including Cai Qi, his chief of staff, Foreign Minister Wang Yi, Vice Premier He Lifeng and Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs Ma Zhaoxu.

    12h ago / 11:59 PM EDT

    Roses and archways as Trump and Xi talk

    Trump and Xi’s talk lasted about 10 minutes out of sight of reporters. As they continued with their walk, Trump remarked, “These are the most beautiful roses anyone has ever seen.”

    Asked whether he was enjoying his visit, Trump offered a thumbs-up.

    “No questions,” a Chinese official said.

    The two leaders continued their walk through a covered passageway with painted archways that showed birds and traditional Chinese mountain scenes.

    = 1000px) and (resolution < 2dppx)">U.S. President Trump Meets With China's President Xi At Zhongnanhai

    Trump and Xi touring the Zhongnanhai leadership compound in Beijing today. Mark Schiefelbein / Getty Images

    Xi spoke about the history of the compound through a translator and said he was sending rose seeds to Trump.

    12h ago / 11:50 PM EDT

    What is Zhongnanhai, where Trump and Xi are meeting?

    Zhongnanhai is a lakeside, walled leadership compound next to the Forbidden City where China’s top leaders have worked and lived since 1949. It was once part of Beijing’s imperial garden system, and its name, which comes from two connected lakes, Zhonghai and Nanhai, is often used as shorthand for China’s top leadership.

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    Xi and Trump at Zhongnanhai Garden in Beijing on Friday. Evan Vucci / Pool / AFP via Getty Images

    The compound has been the setting for some of the most symbolic moments in U.S.-China diplomacy. Nixon met Mao Zedong there in 1972, hours after he arrived in Beijing for a visit that opened the way for the normalization of U.S.-China relations.

    The most recent major U.S. presidential event was Barack Obama’s 2014 meeting with Xi at Yingtai, an imperial-era site inside Zhongnanhai. Chinese state media later framed the meeting as an unusually intimate leader-to-leader exchange, saying their one-on-one talks lasted almost five hours, far longer than scheduled.

    12h ago / 11:47 PM EDT

    Once again, a conspicuous lack of women as Trump and Xi meet

    Like the last time Trump and Xi met, women are conspicuously absent from talks between the leaders of the world’s two biggest economies.

    Almost all of the business executives and officials who traveled to China with Trump are men, except for Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser, Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg and Meta President Dina Powell McCormick.

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    Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and Meta President Dina Powell McCormick in Beijing on Thursday. Brendan Smialowski / AFP via Getty Images

    There are also few women on the Chinese side. Though Xi has called for more women in governance, since 2022 there have been no women in his 24-member Politburo, China’s top policymaking body, the first time they have been shut out in 20 years.

    First lady Melania Trump, who accompanied Trump on his last state visit to China in 2017, is not on the trip this time. But the president is traveling with Brett Ratner, director of the “Melania” documentary released this year. The film represented a comeback for Ratner after multiple women accused him of sexual misconduct in 2017, allegations he has denied and was never charged over.

    12h ago / 11:29 PM EDT

    Trump and Xi get another chance to talk

    Trump and Xi are set to begin the second and final day of their summit in Beijing with a tea ceremony at Zhongnanhai Garden, a sweeping government compound dating to the imperial age, followed by a working lunch.

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    Xi and Trump at the Zhongnanhai leadership compound in Beijing on Thursday. Mark Schiefelbein / Pool / AFP via Getty Images

    Whether the two sides strike any formal agreements before the trip wraps up remains to be seen, though a Chinese official this morning told the pool traveling with Trump that Trump and Xi wanted to have a private discussion as the second day got underway. Trump had said last night during the state banquet that he hoped to continue the day’s conversation into the evening.

    The walled gardens Trump and Xi are walking through have ornamented Chinese roofs and winding paths trimmed by pink, yellow and red roses, along with manicured lawns and carefully tended trees. A clock chimed 11 as Trump arrived, and there is so little outside noise that you can hear birdsong, in contrast to much of the rest of the city of 22 million people.

    13h ago / 11:06 PM EDT

    Trump set to meet Xi for second time

    Trump is making his way to Zhongnanhai, a formal imperial retreat that now serves as the leadership compound of the Chinese Communist Party in Beijing.

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    Trump’s motorcade heads to Zhongnanhai Garden. Pedro Pardo / AFP via Getty Images

    Trump and Xi are expected to pose for photos commemorating Trump’s visit before heading into a working tea.

    The two leaders are also scheduled to hold a closed-door lunch before Trump departs for Washington later this afternoon.

    13h ago / 10:51 PM EDT

    U.S. trip planned for Xi is a good sign, expert says

    The “best single measure” of the success of this week’s U.S.-China summit is how concrete the plans seem to be for a reciprocal U.S. visit by Xi, said Kurt Tong, a managing partner at the Asia Group, with Trump saying the date has been set for Sept. 24.

    = 1000px) and (resolution < 2dppx)">China's President Xi Jinping (R) receives US President Donald Trump

    Trump and Xi on Thursday. Kenny Holston / Pool/AFP via Getty Images

    “Such a visit would be a big deal — bigger than President Trump going to Beijing,” said Tong, a former diplomat who was the U.S. consul general in the Chinese territory of Hong Kong.

    “If that seems solid, it means a deep commitment by both sides to pursuing strategic stability,” he added.

    13h ago / 10:34 PM EDT

    Posting from China, Trump says Iran war ‘to be continued’

    Trump said the “military decimation of Iran” is “to be continued” on Truth Social on Friday morning, Beijing time.

    Trump said earlier this week that the weekslong ceasefire with Iran is on “life support” amid stalling negotiations to end the war.

    The war in Iran, and the subsequent blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, has featured in bilateral talks in Beijing. Trump told Fox News host Sean Hannity on Thursday morning that Xi said his country would not provide military equipment to Iran.

    14h ago / 10:07 PM EDT

    Trump says summit will be remembered as an ‘important moment in history’

    Trump finished his interview with Sean Hannity tonight by predicting the U.S.-China summit “will go down as a very important moment in history.”

    “Well, I think it’s a very historic summit. It’s the two great countries,” Trump said on Fox News. “I think it will go down as a very important moment in history, and maybe more than anything else, a great moment of respect.”

    14h ago / 9:44 PM EDT

    Trump says Xi is considering buying oil from the U.S.

    Trump said tonight that during their meeting, Xi agreed to consider buying oil from the U.S.

    “They get a lot of their oil, 40% of their oil, from that location,” Trump said in an interview with Sean Hannity, referring to oil from Iran. “One thing I think that we were going to make a deal on is they’ve agreed, they want to buy oil from the United States, they’re going to go to Texas.”

    “We’re going to start sending Chinese ships to Texas and to Louisiana and to Alaska, and I think that was another thing that was agreed to, that’s a big thing,” he continued.

    Asked whether a deal could include liquefied natural gas, Trump said, “Yeah, everything.”

    Trump said Xi told him “he likes the idea” of buying oil from the U.S.

    “I think it’ll happen,” Trump said. “Look, they’re doing it right now. They’re sending Chinese ships up to buy it.”

    14h ago / 9:24 PM EDT

    Trump says Xi is ‘a warm person,’ but he’s ‘all business’

    Trump said that he thinks Xi is a “warm person, actually, but he’s all business.”

    “There’s no games, there’s no talking about how nice the weather is. Let’s look at the stars, let’s look at the sun. No, he’s all, he’s all business,” Trump said in an interview with Sean Hannity on Fox News.

    “I like that. That’s a good thing. No games, I said about him,” Trump continued.

    Trump has repeatedly complimented Xi’s leadership during his visit to Beijing, calling him “a tremendous leader.”

    14h ago / 9:18 PM EDT

    U.S. trade representative expects China to buy billions of dollars of U.S. agricultural products

    U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said that he expects to “see an agreement for double-digit billion purchases” of U.S. agricultural products after Trump’s visit to China concludes.

    Speaking on Bloomberg TV, Greer was asked if China is complying with prior trade agreements on farm products and he said they have.

    Greer also spoke about rare earth elements, critical to the manufacturing of everything from smartphones to electric vehicles to medical diagnostic equipment. He said that “sometimes” China drags its feet on allowing those to be exported, but he would still give the country “a passing grade.”

    Asked if the ongoing trade truce that the U.S. and China are currently in will be extended after the visit, Greer said, “We’ll see about that.”

    14h ago / 9:15 PM EDT

    Xi warns Trump of possible conflict over Taiwan at grand Beijing summit

    On the first day of U.S.-China talks, Xi warned of “clashes and even conflicts” over Taiwan, cautioning Trump that tensions over the Beijing-claimed island could jeopardize ties between the world’s two biggest economies.

    Xi delivered the stark warning as the two leaders met for high-stakes talks in Beijing at the start of their two-day summit. It contrasted with the public praise both men offered as they arrived for a grand welcome ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in the Chinese capital.

    The rival superpowers entered the summit divided over thorny issues, including Taiwan, trade disputes and the Iran war, though both Washington and Beijing have sought to prioritize stability in bilateral relations after a turbulent start to Trump’s second term.

    Differences in the two countries’ tone at the summit — as well as differing versions of what Trump and Xi discussed — reflected the probable difficulties in bridging those gaps.

    Read the full story here.

    14h ago / 9:14 PM EDT

    U.S. trade representative says chip export controls didn’t come up in China meetings

    U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer was asked in an interview on Bloomberg TV about Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s joining the trip at the last minute.

    Greer chuckled discussing Huang’s meeting Air Force One in Alaska and said that in meetings with Chinese officials, “we did not talk about chip export controls.”

    = 1000px) and (resolution < 2dppx)">CHINA-US-DIPLOMACY

    CEO of Nvidia Jensen Huang (L) and Egyptian-US financial executive and President at Meta Dina Powell McCormick leave after a banquet at the Great Hall of the People, on Thursday. Brendan Smialowski / AFP via Getty Images

    The U.S. allows some Nvidia chips to be sold into China; however, they are now multiple generations old, so none have been sold to Chinese customers yet.

    Huang’s joining the trip had caused Nvidia shares and those of other major tech companies to rally in recent days, as investors thought it was a possible sign of the Chinese market’s thawing to U.S. chip suppliers.

    14h ago / 9:13 PM EDT

    Trump said he brought business leaders into meeting with Xi

    Trump said tonight that he brought top business leaders who traveled with him to China into his meeting with Xi and discussed how to increase trade between the U.S. and China.

    “I suggested that before we start the meeting, I’d like to introduce them to you, and they were surprised, because it wasn’t, you know, it wasn’t scheduled,” Trump said in an interview with Sean Hannity, referring to bringing Elon Musk, Tim Cook, Jensen Huang and other CEOs into the meeting with Chinese officials.

    “It’s interesting, because they do business in general, most of them do business here, but probably like to do more, and I’d like to see them do more. That would be good for trade and trade balance, and they were fantastic,” Trump said.

    15h ago / 8:51 PM EDT

    China and U.S. agree Hormuz shouldn’t be ‘militarized,’ Rubio says

    Trump discussed the Iran war and the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz during a summit with Xi, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said in an interview today, adding that the U.S. was not asking for Beijing’s help with Iran.

    “The Chinese side said they are not in favor of militarizing the Straits of Hormuz, and they’re not in favor of a tolling system, and that’s our position,” Rubio said in Beijing after Trump, Xi and their delegations held more than two hours of talks.

    = 1000px) and (resolution < 2dppx)">Marco Rubio says 'we're not asking for China's help' with Iran

    During the wide-ranging interview, Rubio — who traveled to Beijing while he is under Chinese sanctions in what appears to be a first for a U.S. secretary of state — said Trump and Xi also discussed the Beijing-claimed island of Taiwan and the case of Jimmy Lai, a pro-democracy publisher in the Chinese territory of Hong Kong who was sentenced to 20 years in prison this year after he was convicted in a landmark national security trial.

    Read the full story here.

    15h ago / 8:51 PM EDT

    Trump and Xi to meet for second day of talks

    Trump and Xi are set to meet today for a second round of talks in Beijing, with events that include a photo, tea and a working lunch before Trump heads back to the U.S.

    Talks yesterday included a warning from Xi over U.S. policy toward Taiwan, with Xi saying mishandling Beijing’s claim over the self-ruling island could cause “clashes and even conflicts,” China’s foreign ministry said.

    Yesterday’s bilateral meeting also touched on the Iran war and the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.

  • Trump and Xi conclude ‘very successful’ talks but no deals confirmed – BBC

    Trump and Xi conclude ‘very successful’ talks but no deals confirmed – BBC

    Suranjana TewariAsia business correspondent

    Watch: What did we learn from Trump’s visit to China?

    US President Donald Trump left Beijing after a two-day summit saying he had struck “fantastic trade deals, great for both countries”, but few details have emerged on what the two superpowers agreed.

    Trump arrived for a high-stakes summit with Chinese leader Xi Jinping on Wednesday, accompanied by several CEOs: a high-profile business delegation spanning agriculture, aviation, electric vehicles and artificial intelligence (AI) chips.

    Trade was near the top of the agenda despite recent tensions over the Iran war, and businesses hoped for key deals as well as an extension of the tariff truce that is due to expire in November.

    The visit was defined by warm rhetoric and symbolism. Trump was wooed with a packed itinerary that included an honour guard, a state banquet, and an invitation to the exclusive compound where China’s Communist Party leaders live and work.

    The US president seemed impressed and invited Xi to the White House in September. He said talks had been “very successful”, while Xi called it a “historic and landmark” visit.

    China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi confirmed on Friday that Xi would visit the White House in the autumn.

    But neither side has announced trade breakthroughs or significant business deals.

    President Trump, however, spoke to reporters aboard Air Force One and said China has agreed to buy 200 Boeing jets, with a potential commitment to buy an additional 750 planes. The BBC has contacted Boeing for comment.

    Trump also said American farmers will be happy with his trade deals because China would be buying “billions of dollars” of soybeans.

    There has been no confirmation of any deals or purchases from the Chinese.

    If the Boeing orders are finalised, this would be the plane-maker’s first major Chinese deal in nearly a decade. It was largely shut out of the world’s second-largest aviation market because of trade tensions between Beijing and Washington.

    Trump touts potential Boeing deal with China

    Asked about Trump’s earlier comments to Fox News in which he said deals had been made, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun only said that the “essence of China-US economic and trade relations is mutual benefit and win-win co-operation”.

    He added that both sides should work to implement the “important consensus” reached by the two leaders and bring greater stability to bilateral trade ties and the global economy.

    There are still questions over the trade truce agreed in October, when Washington suspended steep tariff increases on Chinese goods while Beijing eased back from restricting rare earth exports critical for manufacturing.

    Suprisingly Trump told reporters on Air Force One that he and Xi did not discuss tariffs at all.

    The White House however said both leaders agreed to establish a “Board of Trade” to manage the relationship without having to reopen tariff negotiations.

    US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who had been leading trade talks for Washington, said in a pre-recorded interview with CNBC that he expected progress on a mechanism to support future investment.

    US officials have cautioned, however, that there is a lot of work to be done before these announcements can go into effect.

    Tech and trade

    Getty Images US President Donald Trump (R) speaks with China's President Xi Jinping as he leaves after a visit to Zhongnanhai Garden in Beijing on May 15, 2026. Getty Images

    The visit was defined more by warm rhetoric and symbolism than concrete announcements

    One of the most closely watched moments came as Air Force One touched down in Beijing on Wednesday night.

    Tesla CEO Elon Musk stepped off the plane ahead of senior officials including Pete Hegseth, Marco Rubio and Greer – a sign of the crucial economic agenda that lay ahead.

    And Musk and US chipmaker Nvidia’s boss Jensen Huang stayed close to Trump during the welcome ceremony, and were prominent during the banquet.

    Huang’s appearance was notable because he was not meant to be part of the delegation originally – but when he joined the trip, it fuelled speculation that AI and access to chips was a bigger part of the talks than previously thought.

    With electric vehicles, AI and semiconductors becoming key battlegrounds in the US-China rivalry, both Tesla and Nvidia are very exposed to China.

    Tesla relies heavily on its Shanghai gigafactory and Chinese consumers, while Nvidia wants to be able to start selling advanced chips to China again, which is currently prohibited by US export controls.

    US export controls are aimed at limiting China’s access to frontier AI capabilities, but Greer said they were not a major talking point at the summit.

    Beijing, however, continues to push for greater access to advanced tech, while criticising what it sees as efforts to constrain its industrial development.

    AI was expected to be a big part of conversations. “We talked about possibly working together for guardrails”, Trump told reporters. When asked about what kind of guardrails, he added: “Standard guardrails that we talk about all the time.”

    Selling to China

    Getty Images Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang waves after a welcome ceremony for US President Donald Trump at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on May 14, 2026.Getty Images

    Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang at the Great Hall of the People

    Last year’s tit-for-tat tariff war also hit American farmers, who want to export more soybeans, beef and poultry to China.

    According to US trade representative Jamieson Greer, deals on Chinese purchases of US agricultural products have been firmed up. But China’s foreign ministry did not confirm any such new deals, saying only that both sides had agreed to maintain stable trade ties and expand co-operation based on “equality, mutual respect and mutual benefit”.

    The White House said the talks also touched on expanding Chinese market access for US companies and increasing Chinese investment in US industries.

    While China is a major market for US companies, it is also a difficult operating environment because of regulation, red tape and geopolitical uncertainty.

    But Beijing seemed to strike a positive note on this issue. Xi told US business leaders that China’s “doors will open wider” and that American firms would have “broader prospects” in the Chinese market, according to news site Xinhua.

    He also called for expanded co-operation in trade, agriculture, healthcare, tourism and law enforcement, describing bilateral ties as “mutually beneficial” and delivering “win-win results”.

    The red line: Taiwan

    Taiwan, the US ally and self-governed island that Beijing claims, has largely been treated as one of several friction points between the US and China during trade talks over the past year.

    But this time Beijing linked Taiwan to the broader economic relationship with the United States.

    According to Beijing’s readout, Xi said the two sides had agreed to a “new positioning” for relations based on “constructive strategic stability”, but issued the now-familiar warning that Taiwan remained the most sensitive issue.

    “The Taiwan question is the most important issue in China-US relations,” Xi warned during the talks, according to Chinese state media.

    “If mishandled, the two nations could collide or even come into conflict,” he said.

    Taipei would be watching closely but it’s hard to say yet if and how this will affect US collaboration with semiconductor companies in Taiwan, or its long-standing close relationship with the island.

    Unresolved fault lines

    The war against Iran and the resulting blockade of the Hormuz Strait was a key part of the agenda, and Trump entered the talks hoping for Chinese co-operation on the Iran conflict and the oil market.

    Trump has said that China could use its influence to encourage Iran to stabilise flows through the Strait of Hormuz, a key global energy artery.

    “[Xi would] like to see the Hormuz Strait open, and said ‘if I can be of any help whatsoever, I would like to help,’” Trump told Fox News.

    The Chinese foreign ministry was more vague, and released a statement on Friday calling for “a comprehensive and lasting ceasefire”.

    “Shipping lanes should be reopened as soon as possible in response to the calls of the international community,” it added.

    Chinese readouts indicated that while the Middle East was discussed, details were limited.

    Getty Images Members of the U.S. delegation and CEOs from various industries stand prior to a welcome ceremony for U.S. President Donald Trump outside the Great Hall of the People on May 14, 2026 in Beijing, China.Getty Images

    Some 30 CEOs were part of the US delegation that visited Beijing

    The conflict is a challenge for the Chinese economy too. Oil price volatility and repeated disruptions to supply routes have increased China’s import costs and pushed up prices across the world.

    Trump has already invited Xi to ​the White House ​in September for a second summit.

    Discussions between the two sides are expected to continue ahead of that summit, with the hope that the world’s two biggest economies can deliver a major breakthrough on trade that proved elusive this time around.

  • ‘It Will Become a Landmark’: Trump Defends Giant Golden Statue of Himself Amid Much Debate – Time Magazine

    ‘It Will Become a Landmark’: Trump Defends Giant Golden Statue of Himself Amid Much Debate – Time Magazine

    President Donald Trump has defended a 22-foot golden statue of himself that has spurned mixed reactions since its formal unveiling last week. 

    “This is a statue, now standing at Doral, that was commissioned by a large group of political supporters who just wanted a statue of yours truly,” Trump said Friday as he shared a picture of the installation that stands at Trump National Doral Miami golf course.

    Dubbed Don Colossus and covered in gold leaf, the statue was commissioned by the $PATRIOT cryptocurrency group and unveiled during a dedication ceremony led by Pastor Mark Burns, a longtime spiritual adviser to Trump who was involved in the project.

    “I very much appreciate their support, and all that they went through to get it done! They are very good people,” Trump added. “Those playing the Blue Monster, at Doral, are absolutely in love with it. Congratulations to all involved. With time, it will become a landmark.”

    Trump has repeatedly championed the statue erected in his honor. 

    The President phoned into the unveiling ceremony to thank Pastor Burns for being with him “from the beginning.” He later referred to the artwork as “the real deal” and said those responsible for making it happen were “great American patriots.” But others have been less enthusiastic about the golden design.

    Pastor Burns defended the installation via a lengthy public statement after critics compared it to the biblical golden calf, a symbol associated with idolatry.

    “What amazes me is how quickly some people have compared this beautiful statue, created, and made possible by more than 6,000 patriots, to a golden calf or idol worship,” he said. “Let me be very clear. We worship the Lord Jesus Christ and him alone.”

    “You may dislike President Trump. That is your choice. But you are in gross error if you think for one second that I worship this magnificent statue or anything made by human hands,” he added. “This was not idol worship… This was patriotism.”

    The installation has continued to draw strong responses from late-night hosts. Stephen Colbert—who has repeatedly clashed with Trump—described it this week as “some recreational idolatry.” Jon Stewart also mocked the golden display.

    The discourse over the statue comes just weeks after Trump received stern criticism from Christians and conservatives after posting—and deleting—an AI-generated Jesus-like image of himself as a robed figure with light emanating from his hands.

    Trump had explained the image by saying it wasn’t intended to be a Jesus-like depiction and that he instead thought it was presenting him as a doctor.

    Meanwhile the golden statue—which is drawing mixed reactions at the golf course— was commissioned in August 2024 from sculptor Alan Cottrill following the assassination attempt against Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania. 

    The design appears to reference the instance Trump faced the crowd and raised his fist in the air after the shooting. The captured moment became the defining photo of the rally.

    The original plan had been to unveil the statue during Trump’s inauguration, though reported disputes between the design and commissioning teams behind the scenes delayed its release.

    A statue of President Donald Trump is seen at the Trump National Doral site in Miami, Florida, on April 30, 2026.

    This is far from the first golden statue associated with Trump.

    At the Conservative Political Action Conference in 2021, a smaller gold statue of the President was displayed for attendees to pose alongside.

    When Trump teased the interior of the planned Donald J. Trump Presidential Library and Museum via an AI-generated video in March, it notably included mock-ups for two golden statues of Trump, drawing ire from the President’s long-time sparring partner California Gov. Gavin Newsom.

    Since returning to the White House, the President’s personal brand and likeness has made appearances across multiple platforms.

    A statue depicting President Donald Trump and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein in a ‘Titanic’-themed pose is displayed on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., on March 10, 2026. Bill Clark—Getty Images

    There have also been statues of Trump installed by protesters and critics.

    In late 2025, a bronze statue depicting Trump holding hands with the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein appeared near the U.S. Capitol on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. The artwork came during a renewed call for the full release of the Epstein files and amid reignited questions over Trump’s former relationship with the disgraced financier.

    Another gold-painted replica appeared in March this year, showing Trump standing behind Epstein, arms outstretched, embracing the offender in a Titanic-style pose on the National Mall.

  • Live updates: Trump-Xi summit ends on cordial note but no breakthroughs announced yet – CNN

    Live updates: Trump-Xi summit ends on cordial note but no breakthroughs announced yet – CNN

    Live Updates

    US-China summit: Trump says he discussed arms sales to Taiwan with Xi

    • Source: CNN ” data-fave-thumbnails=”{“big”: { “uri”: “https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/videothumbnails/56161695-70314099-generated-thumbnail.jpg?c=16×9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill” }, “small”: { “uri”: “https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/videothumbnails/56161695-70314099-generated-thumbnail.jpg?c=16×9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill” } }” data-vr-video=”false” data-show-html=”” data-byline-html=”

    ” data-timestamp-html=”

    Updated 10:57 AM EDT, Fri May 15, 2026

    ” data-check-event-based-preview data-is-vertical-video-embed=”false” data-network-id data-publish-date=”2026-05-15T14:15:09.000Z” data-video-section=”world” data-canonical-url data-branding-key data-video-slug=”sciutto-analysis-taiwan-intldsk-dle” data-first-publish-slug=”sciutto-analysis-taiwan-intldsk-dle” data-video-tags data-breakpoints=”{“video-resource–media-extra-large”: 660}” data-display-video-cover=”true” data-details data-track-zone=”live-story-lede” data-sticky-anchor-pos=”bottom”>

    CNN

    

<p>Presdent Trump failed to make any explicit commitment to greenlighting arms sales to Taiwan in what CNN chief national security analyst Jim Sciutto called a “win” for Beijing. Analysing remarks given by the president to reporters as he returned from his state visit to China, Scuitto said China will undoubtedly relieved that President Trump said he had made “no commitment either way” when it comes to Taiwan.</p>
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<p>CNN chief national security analyst calls Trump’s failure to commit to Taiwan arm sales a “win for China”</p>
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    • Trump leaves Beijing: After wrapping up a summit with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, President Donald Trump said he is considering lifting sanctions on Chinese companies that buy Iranian oil as the war drags on. The two days of meetings ended Friday without any substantive agreements on key issues announced, although Trump said “a lot of different problems” were settled.

    • Iran war looms: The Iran war loomed large over the summit, with Trump saying he and Xi agreed Tehran should not have a nuclear weapon. Following the summit, Iran’s foreign minister said the country welcomes any diplomatic efforts from China.

    • Taiwan spotlighted: Trump said he and Xi discussed Taiwan and US arms sales to the island “in great detail” during their meetings. Earlier in the summit, Xi said Taiwan was “the most important issue in China-US relations”

    Stocks fell, oil prices climbed and bond yields surged Friday as a cautious tone spread on Wall Street and investors reckoned with concerns about resurgent inflation.

    The Dow fell 425 points, or 0.85%, retreating below the 50,000-point threshold. The S&P 500 sank 1%, and the Nasdaq fell 1.35%, each pulling back from record highs set Thursday.

    Brent crude oil rose 3% and surpassed $109 per barrel. US crude oil gained 3.3% and hit $104.50 per barrel.

    Bonds fell, pushing yields higher, as investors wrestled with inflation nerves and uncertainty about whether the Federal Reserve might eventually have to raise interest rates to combat inflation.

    The benchmark 10-year US Treasury yield, which influences mortgage rates, jumped nearly a tenth of a point to 4.57%, its highest level in a year. The two-year US Treasury yield rose to 4.07%, its highest level in over a year. The 30-year yield jumped to 5.11%.

    Stocks have surged in recent weeks on enthusiasm about AI. But the bond market is showing signs of strain. Higher bond yields can pull investors away from stocks, posing a headwind for the rally.

    Bond yields have climbed across the globe over nerves about higher oil prices, government spending and a shift in outlooks for central banks. The 30-year gilt yield in the United Kingdom hit its highest level since 1998.

    “Rates have been on an upward trajectory overnight on inflation and deficit concerns,” Mohit Kumar, chief economist for Europe at Jefferies, said in a note.

    • Source: CNN ” data-fave-thumbnails=”{“big”: { “uri”: “https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/videothumbnails/56161695-70314099-generated-thumbnail.jpg?c=16×9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill” }, “small”: { “uri”: “https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/videothumbnails/56161695-70314099-generated-thumbnail.jpg?c=16×9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill” } }” data-vr-video=”false” data-show-html=”” data-byline-html=”

    ” data-timestamp-html=”

    Updated 10:57 AM EDT, Fri May 15, 2026

    ” data-check-event-based-preview data-is-vertical-video-embed=”false” data-network-id data-publish-date=”2026-05-15T14:15:09.000Z” data-video-section=”world” data-canonical-url data-branding-key data-video-slug=”sciutto-analysis-taiwan-intldsk-dle” data-first-publish-slug=”sciutto-analysis-taiwan-intldsk-dle” data-video-tags data-breakpoints=”{“video-resource–media-extra-large”: 660}” data-display-video-cover=”true” data-details>

    CNN

    

<p>Presdent Trump failed to make any explicit commitment to greenlighting arms sales to Taiwan in what CNN chief national security analyst Jim Sciutto called a “win” for Beijing. Analysing remarks given by the president to reporters as he returned from his state visit to China, Scuitto said China will undoubtedly relieved that President Trump said he had made “no commitment either way” when it comes to Taiwan.</p>
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<p>CNN chief national security analyst calls Trump’s failure to commit to Taiwan arm sales a “win for China”</p>
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<p data-uri= After two days of talks with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, President Donald Trump refused to commit to an arms sale with Taiwan in a move that marks a win for China.

    Aboard Air Force One, Trump told reporters that he and Xi discussed Taiwan “in great detail” during their meetings but declined to answer directly about whether the US would defend Taiwan in the event of a conflict with China. Trump added that on the arms sale to Taiwan, “I’ll make a determination over the next early short period of time.”

    But a pause, if we could read it that way, would be a win for China. While Trump could still change, of course, and commit to an arms deal, his comments that he’ll think about it leave an opening for the Chinese leader.

    The president also echoed Xi’s lines on the issue, telling reporters that Xi argued during their talks that China had Taiwan for thousands of years and he “doesn’t want to see a movement for independence.”

    Under the longstanding “One China” policy, the US acknowledges China’s position that Taiwan is part of China but has never officially recognized the Communist Party’s claim to the self-governing island.

    Washington maintains robust unofficial relations with Taiwan and has sold billions of dollars in advanced weapons to the island, with bipartisan approval, but has remained intentionally ambiguous on whether it would intervene militarily in the event of a Chinese attack.

    Under the decades-old Taiwan Relations Act, Washington is also bound by law to provide Taiwan with the means to defend itself. But some US and Taiwanese officials have long feared that Trump may be inclined to use Taiwan as a bargaining chip with China.

    CNN’s Kaanita Iyer, Jennifer Hansler, Zachary Cohen and Isabelle Khurshudyan contributed reporting.

    Lin Chia-lung, Taiwan's foreign minister, during a Bloomberg Television interview in Taipei, Taiwan, on December 2, 2025.

    Taiwan’s foreign minister has said the island closely followed the meetings between US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping, emphasizing that Taipei is “maintaining good communication” with the American side and will deepen its ties with the US.

    “Just as US Secretary of State Marco Rubio explained, the long-standing US policy toward Taiwan, spanning multiple presidents and administrations, has not changed,” Taiwanese Foreign Minister Lin Chia-lung said in a statement on Friday. “The US government has also reiterated its opposition to any actions that coerce or force a change to the status quo, emphasizing that disrupting regional stability is highly detrimental to the US, China and the entire world.”

    The foreign minister also reiterated the self-governing island’s position that China is “the primary source of threat causing widespread concern in the international community.”

    “We will continue to deepen cooperation with the United States and like-minded nations in the Indo-Pacific, strengthen our self-defense capabilities, and jointly safeguard the peace, stability and prosperity of the Taiwan Strait and the Indo-Pacific region,” Lin added.

    Latest US comments: President Donald Trump said Friday that he made “no commitment either way” on Taiwan during his meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping, after Beijing warned the issue could spark conflict between the two countries.

    That stands in contrast to Rubio’s comments earlier this week, when he emphasized that the US policy towards Taiwan is “unchanged.” In an interview with NBC News posted Thursday morning, Rubio said: “From our perspective, any forced change in the status quo in the situation would be bad for both countries.”

    In this file image from June 12, 2018, North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un shakes hands with President Donald Trump at the start of their historic US-North Korea summit, at the Capella Hotel on Sentosa island in Singapore.

    President Donald Trump said Friday he has had communications with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and described the pair’s relationship as “very good.”

    “You know, I have a very good relationship with Kim Jong Un, pretty quiet.” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One on his return flight from China.

    Asked if he has had any communications with him, Trump answered: “Yes.”

    “Doesn’t matter, I don’t tell you about that,” Trump said when pressed how many times the two have held talks.

    “He’s been respectful of our country. I want him to be respectful. He’s been respectful of our country,” Trump added.

    Trump told reporters he had discussed North Korea with Chinese President Xi Jinping during his trip to Beijing.

    The president’s comments come months after the North Korean leader previously said the US war with Iran proves his country made the right decision to keep its nuclear weapons, accusing Washington of “acts of state sponsored terrorism and aggression” in a speech during which he did not mention Iran by name.

    President Donald Trump boards Air Force One on Friday at Beijing Capital International Airport in Beijing.

    US President Donald Trump said on Friday that the first sentence of Iran’s latest proposal was “unacceptable,” claiming that Iran has backtracked on its stance regarding its nuclear program.

    The first sentence was an “unacceptable sentence, because they have fully agreed no nuclear, and if they have any nuclear of any form, I don’t read the rest,” he said, adding that he is unsatisfied with the “level of guarantee from them.”

    He said that Iran had agreed to give up its “nuclear dust” – referring to Tehran’s enriched uranium – but “then they took it back,” adding that they would agree to it eventually in his view.

    Meanwhile, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said on Friday that the topic of uranium enrichment “is currently not on the agenda of discussions or negotiations,” but will be addressed in later stages, according to the semi-official news agency Tasnim.

    Iran denies it intends to build a nuclear weapon but has so far refused to relinquish its stockpile of enriched uranium.

    Asked if Chinese President Xi Jinping made any commitments to put pressure on the Iranians to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, Trump said “we don’t need favors” but that “we may have to do a little cleanup work.”

    “We had a little month-long ceasefire, I guess you’d call it, but we have a blockade that’s so effective, that’s why we did the ceasefire.”

    It comes after Trump wrote yesterday (Friday morning Beijing time) that his military campaign against Iran is “to be continued!” — suggesting he is still strongly considering resuming attacks amid a fragile ceasefire.

    President Donald Trump poses with Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Temple of Heaven on Thursday in Beijing.

    Nebulous agreements on agricultural purchases. Tepid commitments on oil purchases. Some talk about opening up microchip sales to China. No firm deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Trump said tariffs didn’t even come up.

    Investors are decrying the lack of specifics from President Donald Trump’s meeting with Chinese leader Xi Jinping.

    Trading on their disappointment, stock investors are ready to sell Friday morning. Dow futures were down more than 300 points, or 0.6%. The broader S&P 500 futures fell 1%, and Nasdaq futures were 1.4% lower.

    With no firm resolution to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, Brent oil futures rose 3%, above $108 a barrel.

    Soybean futures sold off sharply after the United States spoke of a vague commitment from China to buy from US farmers — a promise it has made in the past without following through.

    And bond yields rose as traders grew cautious about rising inflation.

    President Donald Trump walks to board Air Force One on Friday, at Beijing Capital International Airport in Beijing.

    US President Donald Trump said he brought up the issue of political prisoners held in China, including imprisoned Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai, during his meetings with Chinese President Xi Jingping.

    “I think he’s giving very serious consideration to the pastor, the pastors,” Trump said, referring to leaders of underground Christian churches that China has detained amid a mass crackdown on Christian congregations.

    This photo taken on February 14, 2026 shows the Chinese version of Jimmy Lai's biography 'The Troublemaker' (C), authored by Mark L. Clifford, displayed at an independent bookstore in Hong Kong.

    For context: Lai was convicted in December 2025 on national security and sedition charges and sentenced to 20 years in prison. The 78-year-old self-made billionaire was among the highest-profile government critics charged since Beijing imposed a sweeping national security law on the semi-autonomous city of Hong Kong in 2020.

    Both Beijing and Hong Kong’s government have repeatedly rejected international criticism of Lai’s prosecution and dismissed accusations that his jailing was politically motivated or an assault on press freedom.

    President Donald Trump speaks with Chinese President Xi Jinping while leaving after a visit to the Zhongnanhai Garden in Beijing on Friday.

    President Donald Trump said Friday that he and Chinese President Xi Jinping discussed Taiwan and US arms sales to the island “in great detail” during their meetings.

    “We discussed the Taiwan, the whole thing with the arm sales, in great detail, actually, and I’ll be making decisions, but you know, I think the last thing we need right now is a war that’s 9,500 miles away,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One as he left China.

    The president reiterated, saying “the last thing we need right now is a war,” an answer that comes as the ongoing war between the United States and Iran continues.

    Asked whether the United States would defend Taiwan in the event of a conflict with China, Trump declined to answer directly, saying Xi had posed the same question to him earlier in the day.

    “There’s only one person that knows that, you know who it is? Me, I’m the only person,” Trump said.

    “That question was asked to me today by President Xi,” Trump added, explaining that Xi asked whether the United States would defend Taiwan. “I said I don’t talk about that.”

    Car owners are queuing up to refuel at a gas station in Beijing, China, on March 23.

    US President Donald Trump said he is weighing lifting sanctions on Chinese companies that have been buying Iranian oil, as the war and disruptions to oil markets drag on.

    “I’m going to make a decision over the next few days. We did talk about that,” Trump told reporters on Friday as he flew back from his state visit with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

    Trump added that he thinks Xi would like to see the strait opened up, noting that China gets a significant portion of its oil from the Gulf while claiming that the US “gets none. We don’t need it.”

    For context: Iran is one of the world’s top oil producers, exporting an average of 1.69 million barrels per day in 2025, according to analytics company Kpler. Roughly 90% of its oil goes to China, according to the US government. China has not sanctioned Iranian crude and says it opposes sanctions on Iran’s oil, CNN previously reported.

    Because of the widespread sanctions, Iran relies on an opaque fleet of aging tankers to move its crude around the world. China does not officially declare Iranian crude imports and often obscures the origin of the oil as Malaysian, according to Ying Cong Loh, a crude-oil market analyst at Kpler.

    CNN’s Lex Harvey and Isaac Yee contributed to this report.

    • Source: CNN ” data-fave-thumbnails=”{“big”: { “uri”: “https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/videothumbnails/45667801-96961643-generated-thumbnail.jpg?c=16×9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill” }, “small”: { “uri”: “https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/videothumbnails/45667801-96961643-generated-thumbnail.jpg?c=16×9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill” } }” data-vr-video=”false” data-show-html=”” data-byline-html=”

    ” data-timestamp-html=”

    Updated 10:57 AM EDT, Fri May 15, 2026

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    Trump says he “didn’t dicuss” tariffs with Xi

    0:22 • Source: CNN

    clipped thumbnail - tariffs-china-us-intldesk-dle - CNN ID 22628547 - 00:00:00;00

    Trump says he “didn’t dicuss” tariffs with Xi

    0:22

    President Donald Trump told reporters on Air Force One that he and Chinese leader Xi Jinping did not discuss tariffs during two days of talks.

    “We didn’t discuss tariffs,” Trump said. “I mean they’re paying tariffs. They’re paying substantial tariffs but we didn’t discuss.”

    “It wasn’t brought up,” he added.

    US and Chinese trade envoys met in South Korea on Wednesday and held positive talks hours before Trump landed in Beijing, Xi said yesterday according to Chinese state media Xinhua.

    After a previous meeting between the two leaders in October in South Korea, Trump cut the overall tariff rate on Chinese goods to 47%.

    Earlier this year, the US Supreme Court nullified some of the tariffs Trump imposed last year.

    • Source: CNN ” data-fave-thumbnails=”{“big”: { “uri”: “https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/videothumbnails/44999917-44434440-generated-thumbnail.jpg?c=16×9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill” }, “small”: { “uri”: “https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/videothumbnails/44999917-44434440-generated-thumbnail.jpg?c=16×9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill” } }” data-vr-video=”false” data-show-html=”” data-byline-html=”

    ” data-timestamp-html=”

    Updated 10:57 AM EDT, Fri May 15, 2026

    ” data-check-event-based-preview data-is-vertical-video-embed=”false” data-network-id data-publish-date=”2026-05-15T11:33:01.934Z” data-video-section=”world” data-canonical-url data-branding-key data-video-slug=”presidenttrump-china-taiwan-intldesk-dle” data-first-publish-slug=”presidenttrump-china-taiwan-intldesk-dle” data-video-tags data-breakpoints=”{“video-resource–media-extra-large”: 660}” data-display-video-cover=”true” data-details>

    CNN

    

<p>President Trump told reporters onboard Air Force 1 that he had made “no commitment” to China regarding any possible conflict with Taiwan. Trump said his Chinese counterpart “feels very strongly” about the contested territory of Taiwan and doesn’t “want to see a movement for independence” emerge.  </p>
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<p>President Trump says he made “no commitment” to President Xi on Taiwan</p>
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<p data-uri= President Donald Trump said Friday that he made “no commitment either way” on Taiwan during his meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping, after Beijing warned the issue could spark conflict between the two countries.

    “On Taiwan, he feels very strongly. I made no commitment either way,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One returning back from China.

    Asked whether Xi had suggested there was a risk of conflict with the United States over Taiwan, Trump downplayed the prospect.

    “I don’t think there’s a conflict, other than we don’t need their srait,” Trump said.

    Trump also signaled that a decision on future US arms sales to Taiwan had not yet been finalized. “I’ll make a determination,” Trump said when asked.

    Trump’s comments came after China said in its official readout of the meeting that Xi warned the US president that mishandling the Taiwan issue could lead to confrontation between Washington and Beijing.

    President Donald Trump smiles for a portrait next to ballroom construction that he posted on Truth Social on April 2, 2026.

    President Donald Trump used his trip to China to spotlight his long-discussed White House ballroom project, posting on social media Friday that the United States should have a grand venue comparable to the one he visited in Beijing following his summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

    “Scheduled opening will be around September of 2028,” Trump wrote.

    The president’s post included a photo of himself walking alongside Xi outside the Great Hall of the People in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square, the sprawling government building used for major state ceremonies and high-level political meetings in China.

    “The man I am walking with is President Xi, of China, one of the World’s Great Leaders!” Trump added in the post.

    The president has repeatedly seized on high-profile moments, most recently the shooting at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, to promote his plans for a large-scale White House ballroom, despite legal battles over its authorization.

    Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said Iran would welcome any diplomatic push by China to de-escalate the conflict with the United States.

    “Any effort made by the Chinese to support diplomacy will be welcomed by the Islamic Republic of Iran,” he said at a press conference in New Delhi, during a visit to attend the BRICS foreign ministers’ meeting there.

    There have been questions of what, if any, behind-the-scenes support Beijing might be willing to extend to help bring an end to the months-long US-Israeli conflict with Iran, which has thrown the global economy into turmoil without a clear endgame.

    China is a close diplomatic partner of Iran and the top purchaser of its oil – and has framed itself as proponent of peace throughout the war – which was a key topic of discussion between Chinese leader Xi Jinping and US President Donald Trump during the American leader’s visit to Beijing.

    Araghchi said Pakistan’s mediation efforts had not failed but were “facing a very difficult path largely because of American behavior.”

    US President Donald Trump walks with China's President Xi Jinping at the Zhongnanhai leadership compound in Beijing on Friday.

    President Donald Trump left Beijing without any immediate sign that the US and China have resolved thorny challenges dogging their fractious relationship, but with a freshly stabilized relationship with Chinese leader Xi Jinping – for now.

    The leaders covered a range of issues from Iran and Taiwan to trade in two days of talks.

    Here’s the bigger picture:

    On Iran: Comments from both sides suggest the summit hasn’t moved the needle. A US-China energy deal may be in the works, one that sees Beijing – which imports large quantities of Iranian oil – purchase more US supplies. But whether the summit will have any bearing on the conflict remains unclear, as Beijing appeared to largely have reiterated its existing position.

    On Taiwan: Xi delivered an explicit warning on Taiwan – an issue Xi called the “most important” in US-China relations. Despite concern Xi would try to maneuver Trump to shift US positioning on Taiwan – or Trump would use the island as a bargaining chip – Rubio said America’s position on the issue is “unchanged.”

    On trade: Trump is returning to the White House with some economic wins that have, so far, proven short on substance in the absence of any formal announcements or confirmation from China.

    Read more about the key takeaways of the summit.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during a press conference in Moscow, Russia, on May 9.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin is hoping to discuss US President Donald Trump’s visit to China directly with the Chinese leader Xi Jinping during his next visit to Beijing, the Kremlin said on Friday.

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters that Putin’s upcoming visit to China – the timing of which has not yet been announced – will be “a good opportunity to exchange opinions on the contacts that have taken place between the Chinese and the Americans.”

    Delivering a slight dig at the US, when referring to the US and China as the world’s two biggest economies, Peskov said: “You know that in terms of purchasing power parity, China is the first economy, the United States is the second economy in absolute terms.”

    Some context: China is by far Russia’s most important ally. Chinese-made electronic components are vital for the Russian defense industry. And as the biggest buyer of its oil, China provides a key source of revenue for the Kremlin at a time when the Russian economy is under strain because of the country’s war on Ukraine.

    Global crude benchmarks jumped after President Donald Trump said China agreed to purchase US oil amid disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz. China has yet to confirm the deal, as tanker traffic and maritime risks continue to weigh on supply. CNN’s Kristie Lu Stout reports.

    • Source: CNN ” data-fave-thumbnails=”{“big”: { “uri”: “https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/16×9-loop-00-02-01-29-still003.jpg?c=16×9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill” }, “small”: { “uri”: “https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/16×9-loop-00-02-01-29-still003.jpg?c=16×9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill” } }” data-vr-video=”false” data-show-html=”” data-byline-html=”

    ” data-timestamp-html=”

    Updated 10:57 AM EDT, Fri May 15, 2026

    ” data-check-event-based-preview data-is-vertical-video-embed=”false” data-network-id data-publish-date=”2026-05-15T06:55:16.330Z” data-video-section=”world” data-canonical-url=”https://www.cnn.com/2026/05/15/world/video/oil-prices-surged-as-trump-says-china-will-buy-u-s-crude-after-xi-talks-lu-stout-hnk-digvid” data-branding-key data-video-slug=”oil-prices-surged-as-trump-says-china-will-buy-u-s-crude-after-xi-talks-lu-stout-hnk-digvid” data-first-publish-slug=”oil-prices-surged-as-trump-says-china-will-buy-u-s-crude-after-xi-talks-lu-stout-hnk-digvid” data-video-tags data-breakpoints=”{“video-resource–media-extra-large”: 660}” data-display-video-cover=”true” data-details>

    Oil prices surged as Trump says China will buy US crude after Xi talks

    3:37 • Source: CNN

    16x9_loop.00_02_01_29.Still003.jpg

    Oil prices surged as Trump says China will buy US crude after Xi talks

    3:37

    U.S. President Donald Trump gestures as he speaks next to Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Zhongnanhai Garden on Friday.

    The Trump-Xi meeting resulted in minor trade deals and discussions, allowing both sides to claim some progress in the contentious economic rivalry. But several sensitive topics were largely absent, including international sanctions, tech export controls and Chinese electric vehicles.

    Major breakthroughs on these sticking points were always unlikely. But the lack of public dialogue indicates that some of the most controversial trade frictions between and Washington and Beijing still remain.

    So far, neither the US nor China has shown a willingness to roll back punitive measures targeting businesses in the other country.

    Of course, the US-Israeli war with Iran loomed large. Less than a week before Trump arrived in Beijing, the US imposed sanctions on three Chinese satellite firms that it said were helping Iran’s military. And earlier this month, China ordered several firms not to comply with US sanctions on oil refineries accused of enabling the trade of Iranian oil.

    There also seemed to be little change on policies meant to restrict access to critical minerals and electronic components, which have threatened to slow tech development in both the US and China.

    So too on the question of Chinese EVs accessing the US market. At the beginning of the year, Trump said he was open to allowing Chinese cars into the country, and Chinese EV makers have been eager to expand overseas with cheap and cutting-edge new models. However, US lawmakers have been vehemently against the idea, saying it could decimate the domestic auto industry and undermine national security.

    Donald Trump’s trip to Beijing — the first by a US leader since 2017 — ended on a high note, with the president praising China and its leader Xi Jinping in his last public remarks before heading home.

    No new deals have been announced yet from the summit, though Trump said the two countries “settled a lot of different problems that other people wouldn’t have been able to settle.”

    Here’s an overview of Trump’s time in Beijing:

    • Trump touched down late evening local time in Beijing, where he was greeted by hundreds of enthusiastic flag-waving children and welcomed by Chinese Vice President Han Zheng, widely seen as Xi’s envoy for diplomatic events.

    U.S. President Donald Trump participates in an expanded bilateral meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing on Thursday.

    President Donald Trump brought 17 American corporate leaders with him to Beijing this week, and said he had made many business deals, including commitments from China to purchase 200 Boeing aircrafts and more US oil.

    But the last time Trump visited in 2017, he brought nearly 30 executives, and the US had announced deals totaling more than $250 billion by the time he left. China agreed to buy 300 Boeing airplanes that time.

    The distinct outcomes signify the deterioration in the economic relationship between the US and China over the past decade. After two trade wars launched by Trump, China’s economy has become less reliant on the US, giving it an upper hand in this week’s negotiations.

    Operating a foreign business in China has also become significantly more difficult. China has developed domestic competitors that can match or even outperform foreign brands, including some of the companies whose leaders attended the meeting this year, like Apple or Tesla.

    Meanwhile, geopolitical frictions have weighed on bilateral investment and trade deals, particularly in sensitive sectors like technology.

    During Trump’s trip in November 2017, the Commerce Department announced 37 deals between US and Chinese companies, though not all of them materialized. Leaders from Boeing, GE, Goldman Sachs and Qualcomm were also in attendance then, along with executives from Dow Chemical, Honeywell and Caterpillar among others.

    Kent Kedl, founder of risk and strategy advisory firm Blue Ocean Advisors in Shanghai, said the 2017 cohort was more focused on securing specific export agreements, whereas this year the group seemed to prioritize access to the China market and Trump himself.

    Following a busy day as part of US President Donald Trump’s accompanying delegation to Beijing, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang spent some time exploring one of the city’s famous tourist hutongs — narrow alleyways lined by traditional courtyard houses.

    On Friday morning, people posted videos on social media of him slurping fried sauce noodles, a signature dish of Beijing, and snacking on ice cream and grilled squid along Beijing’s bustling South Luogu Lane.

    People approached the leather jacket-clad billionaire for selfies. He also chatted with a few people as he snacked on the tasty street food.

    Huang was among more than a dozen business leaders on the trip as part of Trump’s entourage.

  • Trump’s approval rating hits second-term low among his Latino voters, though many still approve – Pew Research Center

    Trump’s approval rating hits second-term low among his Latino voters, though many still approve – Pew Research Center

    A campaign sign in Houston on Election Day 2024. (Yi-Chin Lee/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)
    A campaign sign in Houston on Election Day 2024. (Yi-Chin Lee/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)

    A clear majority of President Donald Trump’s 2024 voters continue to approve of the job he is doing in office, but his rating has declined among this group and the public as a whole – and his standing has dropped more sharply among his Hispanic voters than among his non-Hispanic backers.

    A Pew Research Center survey conducted in April finds that 66% of Latino Trump voters approve of his job performance. That’s down 27 percentage points since the start of his second term.

    About this research

    This Pew Research Center analysis explores approval ratings for President Donald Trump among those who voted for him in 2024 – and in particular, among his Latino voters.

    Why did we do this?

    Pew Research Center does research to help the public, media and decision-makers understand important topics. We have studied Latinos’ views of politics, including views of the president, for decades.

    Learn more about Pew Research Center.

    How did we do this?

    We surveyed 5,103 U.S. adults from April 20 to 26, 2026, including 778 Hispanic adults. Everyone who took part in this survey is a member of the Center’s American Trends Panel. The survey represents the views of the full U.S. adult population.

    In this analysis, we specifically looked at validated voters – adult citizens who had a record of voting, based on official state election results. We asked them who they voted for in a survey conducted after the 2024 election.

    Here are our survey questions, the detailed responses and the survey methodology.

    Meanwhile, the share of non-Hispanic Trump voters who approve of his performance has fallen by 16 points, to 79%. As a result, the gap in Trump voters’ evaluations of the president has widened since February 2025.

    approve of the way Donald Trump is handling his job as president”,”note”:”* The February 2025 survey included 148 Hispanic Trump voters, for an effective sample size of 95 and a margin of error of plus or minus 10.1 percentage points at the 95% confidence level.
    Note: Hispanics are of any race. Trump voters are adult citizens who had a record of voting, based on official state election results. We asked them who they voted for in a survey conducted in the month after the 2024 election.”,”source”:”Source: Survey of U.S. adults conducted April 20-26, 2026.”,”tag”:”PEW RESEARCH CENTER”,”tableData”:{“header”:[“”,”Hispanic adults”,”Non-Hispanic adults”,”Hispanic Trump 2024 voters”,”Non-Hispanic Trump 2024 voters”],”rows”:[[“4/26/2026″,”22%”,”37%”,”66%”,”79%”],[“1/26/2026″,”26%”,”39%”,”75%”,”84%”],[“9/28/2025″,”27%”,”42%”,”81%”,”88%”],[“6/8/2025″,”30%”,”44%”,”83%”,”89%”],[“2/2/2025″,”36%”,”49%”,”93%”,”95%”]],”footer”:[]}}” data-wp-init–detect-web-share-support=”callbacks.detectWebShareSupport” data-wp-init–sync-table-height=”callbacks.syncTableHeight” data-png-url=”https://www.pewresearch.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/20/2026/05/trumps_approval_rating_falls_sharply_among_his_2024_hispanic_supporters-304228-1778856761.png” data-has-csv=”true” data-post-url=”https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2026/05/15/trumps-approval-rating-hits-second-term-low-among-his-latino-voters-though-many-still-approve/” data-chart-url=”https://www.pewresearch.org/chart/st_26-05-14_hispanicviews_lines/” data-chart-title=”Trump’s approval rating falls sharply among his 2024 Hispanic supporters”>


    Trump’s approval rating falls sharply among his 2024 Hispanic supporters

    % who approve of the way Donald Trump is handling his job as president

    Chart

    Chart

    * The February 2025 survey included 148 Hispanic Trump voters, for an effective sample size of 95 and a margin of error of plus or minus 10.1 percentage points at the 95% confidence level.
    Note: Hispanics are of any race. Trump voters are adult citizens who had a record of voting, based on official state election results. We asked them who they voted for in a survey conducted in the month after the 2024 election.

    Source: Survey of U.S. adults conducted April 20-26, 2026.

    PEW RESEARCH CENTER



    Trump’s approval rating falls sharply among his 2024 Hispanic supporters

    % who approve of the way Donald Trump is handling his job as president

    Hispanic adults Non-Hispanic adults Hispanic Trump 2024 voters Non-Hispanic Trump 2024 voters
    4/26/2026 22% 37% 66% 79%
    1/26/2026 26% 39% 75% 84%
    9/28/2025 27% 42% 81% 88%
    6/8/2025 30% 44% 83% 89%
    2/2/2025 36% 49% 93% 95%

    * The February 2025 survey included 148 Hispanic Trump voters, for an effective sample size of 95 and a margin of error of plus or minus 10.1 percentage points at the 95% confidence level.
    Note: Hispanics are of any race. Trump voters are adult citizens who had a record of voting, based on official state election results. We asked them who they voted for in a survey conducted in the month after the 2024 election.

    Source: Survey of U.S. adults conducted April 20-26, 2026.

    PEW RESEARCH CENTER


    The steeper drop in approval among Latino Trump voters highlights shifts within an important segment of Trump’s electoral coalition.

    With fast population growth over the past few decades, Latinos made up the second-largest racial and ethnic group of eligible voters by 2024. About 36 million Latino adults were U.S. citizens and therefore eligible to vote.

    Latinos were also more likely to vote for Trump in 2024 than in prior elections. In 2024, 48% of Latino voters backed him, according to the Center’s 2025 study on validated voters, up from 36% in 2020 and 28% in 2016.

    Note: Here are our survey questions, the detailed responses and the survey methodology.

    Download Joseph Copeland's photo

    Joseph Copeland is a research analyst at Pew Research Center.

  • Key takeaways: Trump leaves China short on deliverables but with signs of a stabilized relationship – CNN

    Key takeaways: Trump leaves China short on deliverables but with signs of a stabilized relationship – CNN

    Beijing — 

    President Donald Trump departed Beijing Friday afternoon local time without any immediate sign that the US and China have resolved thorny challenges dogging their fractious relationship, but with a freshly stabilized relationship with Chinese leader Xi Jinping – for now.

    The leaders covered a range of issues from Iran and Taiwan to trade, during two days that included intensive bilateral meetings. But there were also grand displays of soft diplomacy, marking the first Beijing meeting for the longtime rivals in nearly a decade.

    Since Trump’s last visit in 2017, he has reimagined Washington’s role in the world, while Xi has tightened his grip on authority domestically and spurred China’s high-tech transformation.

    “We’ve settled a lot of different problems that other people wouldn’t have been able to settle, and the relationship is a very strong one,” Trump said at the start of bilateral discussions Friday, offering no concrete details on the problems in question.

    • Source: CNN ” data-fave-thumbnails=”{“big”: { “uri”: “https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/gettyimages-2275534366.jpg?c=16×9” }, “small”: { “uri”: “https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/gettyimages-2275534366.jpg?c=16×9″ } }” data-vr-video=”false” data-show-html=”” data-byline-html=”

    ” data-timestamp-html=”

    Updated
    PUBLISHED

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    BEIJING, CHINA - MAY 14: U.S. President Donald Trump (R) is greeted by Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of the People on May 14, 2026 in Beijing, China. The trip by Trump is focused on trade, regional security, and strengthening bilateral ties between the world's two largest economies. (Photo by Kenny Holston-Pool/Getty Images)

    President Trump arrives in Beijing for summit with Chinese President Xi

    2:42 • Source: CNN

    BEIJING, CHINA - MAY 14: U.S. President Donald Trump (R) is greeted by Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of the People on May 14, 2026 in Beijing, China. The trip by Trump is focused on trade, regional security, and strengthening bilateral ties between the world's two largest economies. (Photo by Kenny Holston-Pool/Getty Images)

    President Trump arrives in Beijing for summit with Chinese President Xi

    2:42

    Speaking aboard Air Force One as he left China, Trump did reveal that he had discussed with Xi Taiwan and US arms sales to the island “in great detail.”

    “We discussed the Taiwan, the whole thing with the arm sales, in great detail, actually, and I’ll be making decisions, but you know, I think the last thing we need right now is a war that’s 9,500 miles away,” he said.

    Asked by reporters whether the United States would defend Taiwan in the event of a conflict with China, Trump declined to answer directly, saying Xi had posed the same question to him earlier in the day.

    Given how bad relations have been in recent years, the fact both leaders came away speaking of each other in warm terms and agreeing on the importance of their ties is evidence of a shift to stabilization at a time when a jittery world is desperately seeking geopolitical calm.

    The US-Israeli war with Iran loomed over the whirlwind summit. There were questions of what, if any, behind-the-scenes support Xi might be willing to extend to help bring an end to the months-long conflict, which has thrown the global economy into turmoil without a clear endgame.

    Details of the sweeping trade deals Trump promised ahead of the trip remain unclear, with big pronouncements from the president and some top officials, but any substantive announcements still absent and unconfirmed by China.

    And amid concerns from experts and analysts that Xi was walking into the meeting with the upper hand, the Chinese leader offered his own flex on the issue of Taiwan.

    But the visit also provided an opportunity to reset the tone of the fractious US-China relationship, Xi rolling out a literal and figurative red carpet that charmed and delighted his guest, a warm connection on display.

    “I think it will go down as a very important moment in history. And maybe more than anything else, a great moment of respect,” Trump reflected during an interview with Fox News.

    Ahead of talks, expectations were high that the American president could push his Chinese counterpart to help resolve the Iran conflict.

    China is a close diplomatic partner of Iran and the top purchaser of its oil – and has framed itself as proponent of peace throughout the war. The topic was part of the more than two hours of discussions between the two leaders Thursday, but Trump departed without a clear sign from Beijing that it’s willing to press Tehran to work with US demands.

    Instead, comments from both sides so far suggest the summit hasn’t moved the needle.

    Trump told Fox News that Xi offered to help resolve the conflict and pledged not to provide Iran with military equipment. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, in a separate interview with NBC News Thursday, said the US did not ask for China’s help resolving the conflict.

    A readout released by the White House also said the two countries agreed that the Strait of Hormuz must remain open and that Iran can never have a nuclear weapon.

    It also said Xi “made clear China’s opposition to the militarization of the Strait and any effort to charge a toll for its use,” and suggested China would buy more oil from the US.

    A US-China energy deal may be in the works, one that sees Beijing – which imports large quantities of Iranian oil – purchase more US supplies. But whether the Trump-Xi talks will have any bearing on the conflict remains unclear, as Beijing appeared to largely have reiterated its existing position.

    China has already repeatedly pledged to do what it can to facilitate peace negotiations. Xi last month called for the Strait of Hormuz to “maintain normal passage.” As a policy, China says it does not supply weapons to countries in conflict.

    Beijing supports Iran’s stated commitment not to develop nuclear weapons, though it backs the country’s right to a peaceful nuclear program.

    China also leaned into its own framing of the war in a statement released by its Foreign Ministry Friday morning, saying that it “should have never happened.” It also implied consistency in its message, adding China’s position was “very clear.”

    Trump, meanwhile, seemed to accept limits to the pressure Beijing is likely to put on Iran.

    “Look, he’s not coming in with guns … not coming in shooting,” he told Fox News when asked if Xi would influence the Iranians. “He’s been very good.”

    Taiwan friction, and a warning

    For his part, Xi used the opportunity of having Trump in his home court to give an explicit warning on Taiwan – an issue Xi called the “most important” in US-China relations.

    “If it is handled properly, the bilateral relationship will enjoy overall stability,” Xi said during his Thursday-morning meeting with Trump, according to a Chinese readout. “Otherwise, the two countries will have clashes and even conflicts, putting the entire relationship in great jeopardy.”

    The language – which appears as unusually direct, though in step with Beijing’s expected rhetoric – stands out in tone from China’s otherwise upbeat assessment of the new era of “strategic stability” between the two countries touted by Xi.

    That’s sure to be a deliberate choice to make one thing clear: Beijing wants to have a positive relationship, but only if the US can respect what China sees as its “red line” on Taiwan.

    US President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping attend a bilateral meeting at the Great Hall of the People on Thursday.

    China’s ruling Communist Party claims the self-ruling democracy as its own territory and has vowed to “reunify” with the island, by force if necessary. It has long decried the US’ robust unofficial relationship with Taipei and its arms sales to the island.

    Despite concern from some observers that Xi would try to maneuver Trump to shift US positioning on Taiwan – or Trump would use the island as a bargaining chip – Rubio said America’s position on the issue is “unchanged.”

    Speaking to NBC, the diplomat said the issue was raised and the two sides stated their positions, and then “moved on to the other topics.”

    “We always respond by saying anything that would compel or force a change in what we have now would be problematic” he said. He added that the topic of arms sales “did not feature prominently” in discussions.

    Trade and economic deals give Trump a win at home

    Trump is returning to the White House with some economic wins that have, so far, proven short on substance in the absence of any formal announcements or confirmation from China.

    US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer announced the administration expects China to agree to buy “double-digit billion” worth of agricultural products from the US every year over the next three years, as a result of Trump’s trip.

    However, on individual agricultural goods, Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent indicated there would be no more purchases of soybeans during an interview with CNBC, stressing they were taken care of under October’s sales agreement with China.

    Greer told Bloomberg News that China had also “reupped” the license for American beef exports. Over the past year, export permission for more than 400 US beef plants expired. Greer did not specify the number of licenses renewed.

    President Trump also announced that his Chinese counterpart agreed to purchase 200 Boeing jets. Boeing’s CEO was part of the US delegation to China.

    China has yet to confirm specific deals mentioned by the Trump team. In a readout, Beijing called for the countries to “expand exchanges and cooperation” in areas including the economy and trade, health, agriculture and tourism.

    Pomp, circumstance, and a diplomatic odd couple

    Trump, a former reality TV star, is keenly aware of optics and appreciates stagecraft as both a host in Washington and a guest abroad.

    Xi understood his assignment.

    He dispatched his vice president, Han Zheng, to meet Trump as he arrived in Beijing Wednesday evening local time. Han is widely seen as Xi’s envoy for diplomatic events and attended Trump’s 2025 inauguration, his presence this week signaling the importance with which China viewed Trump’s visit.

    Asked if that moment was meaningful to him, Trump told Fox News he viewed it as a sign of respect.

    “If I got out of a plane and nobody was there to greet me, I would say that wouldn’t be so cool because it’s really respect for our country. Our country is respected,” he said.

    On Thursday, Trump was treated to a more elaborate welcome ceremony outside China’s Great Hall of the People, including military bands, a troop inspection, and a throng of schoolchildren waving flags and flowers. The US president appeared visibly delighted.

    US President Donald Trump and China's leader Xi Jinping inspect a guard of honor during a welcome ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Thursday.

    “We were treated very well,” Trump reflected later that day.

    The president also offered rare deference to his counterpart, exerting uncharacteristic restraint, for example, during a walk with Xi around the Temple of Heaven as reporters from the US press pool tried to pepper him with questions. Trump, who is often keen to engage, offered a brief pleasantry, ignoring shouted questions on Taiwan.

    He also sipped from a champagne flute during a toast at a state banquet, the teetotaler extending a meaningful gesture to his host.

    Ahead of a bilateral meeting at the Zhongnanhai complex on Friday, Xi guided his guest on a tour of his gardens and offered sweeping historical references conveying subtle meaning.

    Few world leaders get to see the inside of the Chinese Communist Party’s secretive leadership compound, which used to be the imperial gardens. Xi made sure to note that he had invited Trump there as a way to reciprocate his own visit to Mar-a-Lago.

    Taken together, China’s meticulous stagecraft had its intended effect of projecting stability onto the US-China relationship.

    Throughout the visit, Trump expressed admiration for Xi and the way he conducts himself.

    “He’s not going to respond too much – he’s a pretty cool guy. He’s not going to say, ‘That’s a good point,’” Trump said of Xi.

    He added: “There’s no games, there’s no talking about how nice the weather is, let’s look at the stars, let’s look at the sun. No, he’s all – he’s all business, and I like that. That’s a good thing. No games.”

    CNN’s John Liu in Hong Kong contributed to this report.

  • Live Updates: Iran says it “cannot trust the Americans at all” as Trump says “we control” the Strait of Hormuz – CBS News

    Live Updates: Iran says it “cannot trust the Americans at all” as Trump says “we control” the Strait of Hormuz – CBS News

     

    India’s prime minister flies into UAE, calls for “open and safe” Strait of Hormuz

    Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi called for an “open and safe” Strait of Hormuz during a brief visit to the United Arab Emirates on Friday.

    President of the United Arab Emirates Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi inspect the UAE Armed Forces honor guard in Abu Dhabi, May 15, 2026.
    President of the United Arab Emirates Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi inspect the UAE Armed Forces honor guard in Abu Dhabi, May 15, 2026. Ryan Carter/UAE Presidential Court/Handout via Reuters

    Modi, whose plane was guided in and out of UAE airspace by military jets, received an honor guard and met President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan before leaving for the Netherlands.

    Disruptions to Gulf shipping routes through the Strait of Hormuz have put oil and gas markets in a spin, raising pressure on energy importers such as India, which was forced to hike gas and diesel prices on Friday.

    “Keeping Hormuz free, open and safe is our highest priority, and in this matter adherence to international laws is essential,” Modi said, in footage released by the Indian Foreign Ministry.

    The two sides agreed to explore increasing UAE giant ADNOC’s oil storage in India to up to 30 million barrels, and storing crude at the UAE’s Fujairah port as part of India’s strategic reserve, an ADNOC statement said.

     

    Iran “must not be allowed to have nuclear weapons,” says German chancellor

    Iran “must not be allowed to have nuclear weapons” and must “come to the negotiating table now,” German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said Friday after a call with President Trump.

    In a post on X, Merz said he had “a good phone call” with Mr. Trump on his return trip from China. 

    “We agree: Iran must come to the negotiating table now. It must open the Strait of Hormuz,” he said.

    “Tehran must not be allowed to have nuclear weapons,” Merz added.

     

    Foreign minister says Iran welcomes China’s help in resolving conflict

    Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said on Friday he was open to any support, including from China, to help resolve conflict in the Middle East.

    “We appreciate any country who has the ability to help, particularly China,” he told reporters in the Indian capital, where he attended a meeting of the BRICS bloc of nations.

    “We have very good relations with China, we are strategic partners to each other, and we know that (the) Chinese have a good intention, so anything that can be done by them to help diplomacy would be welcomed by the Islamic Republic,” he said.

     

    Israel’s army urges residents of 5 south Lebanon villages to evacuate

    Israel’s military called on residents of five villages in southern Lebanon to immediately evacuate on Friday ahead of expected attacks against Hezbollah, despite a truce with Lebanon intended to halt fighting.

    “In light of the terrorist Hezbollah’s violation of the ceasefire agreement, the Defence Army is compelled to act against it forcefully,” the military’s Arabic-language spokesman Avichay Adraee posted on X, listing five villages near the city of Tyre, on the south Lebanon coast.

    “For your safety, you must evacuate your homes immediately and stay away from the villages and towns by a distance of no less than 1,000 metres,” he added.

     

    “We control” the Strait of Hormuz, says Trump

    The U.S. is in control of the Strait of Hormuz, President Trump said Friday, adding “We wiped out their armed forces, essentially.”

    Speaking to reporters on Air Force One after his summit with China’s President Xi, Mr Trump said “We control the Strait [of Hormuz], and they’ve done no business… so we have ben doing very well on all fronts.

    “We don’t need favors,” he added. “We wiped out their armed forces, essentially.” 

    “We may have to do a little cleanup work,” he added. “Because we had a little month-long ceasefire, I guess you’d call it, but we have a blockade that’s so effective, that’s why we did the ceasefire.”

    Mr Trump added that his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping “feels strongly” that Iran should not have a nuclear weapon, “and he wants them to open up the strait.”

    The President also said ‌he felt OK about a suspension of Iran’s nuclear program for 20 years, but only if there is a “real” commitment ⁠from Tehran.

     

    “We cannot trust the Americans at all,” says Iran’s foreign minister

    Iran’s foreign minister Abbas Araghchi said Friday that his country “cannot trust the Americans at all” and that they are “trying to maintain” the “shaky” ceasefire “to give diplomacy a chance.”

    Speaking at a press conference in New Delhi during the ongoing BRICS summit, Araghchi added that the Strait of Hormuz “is open, and all vessels can pass,” except those that belong to “countries that are at war with us.”

    “We are now in a ceasefire, although it is very shaky,” he said. “But we are trying to maintain it in order to give diplomacy a chance so that a negotiated, diplomatic solution can be found.”

    He described the lack of trust in the U.S. as “the main obstacle to any diplomatic effort.” 

    “We cannot trust the Americans at all,” he said. “Everything must be precise and clearly defined before any agreement can be concluded.”

    “Every day brings a different message, sometimes even two different messages in a single day, which deepens mistrust.”

     

    Iranian army chief says they will defend the country “until the last drop of blood”

    Iranian troops will defend the country “until the last drop of blood,” the head of its army has said.

    In remarks carried by almost all state media, the Iranian army’s commander-in-chief Major General Amir Hatami said, “With all our being, until the last drop of blood and God willing until the realization of complete victory,” his troops would “continue our sacred mission of defending the territorial integrity” and “independence of the country.”

    Iran's Revolutionary Guard holds military drills in Tehran province
    Members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) participate in a military exercise aimed at ‘increasing combat capabilities’ in Tehran province, Iran, on May 12, 2026. Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps/Anadolu via Getty Images

    “The issue of death has been resolved for our fighters,” he added. “We fight for victory, but we also consider martyrdom a great blessing.”

     

    Iran “was the victor in this war,” says foreign minister Abbas Araghchi

    Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi claims “Iran was the victor in this war” and says  the country must now be seen as capable of “confronting the world’s greatest powers.”

    In a video posted to his Telegram channel Friday, Araghchi told state TV that “all countries now acknowledge that the Islamic Republic of Iran was the victor in this war.”

    “Iran was able to prevent its enemies from achieving their objectives and succeeded in imposing its will,” he added.

    “From now on, Iran must be viewed differently,” he said, “as a power capable of confronting the world’s greatest powers.”

    He also doubled down on his condemnation of the UAE for, he claimed, standing “alongside the United States and Israel during this war” … by providing “airspace, territory, facilities and services to U.S. forces.”

    Araghchi added that Tehran and Abu Dhabi should “see security in regional cooperation, not in dependence on forces from outside the region.”

     

    Trump says he and China’s Xi “feel very similar on Iran”

    As his summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping was wrapping up Friday, President Trump told reporters the two leaders “feel very similar on Iran” and share a desire to bring the Iran war to an end.

    Mr. Trump noted that both countries want the Strait of Hormuz — a key chokepoint that 20% of the world’s oil usually travels through — to be reopened — and both want to keep Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon.

    Mr. Trump told Fox News after he and Xi met Thursday that Xi said he’s not going to give any military equipment to Iran, which the U.S. president called a “big statement.” It remains to be seen if Xi follows through. Mr. Trump also told Fox News that Xi wants to help reopen the Strait of Hormuz, which has been effectively closed since the U.S.’s war with Iran began in late February. China is Iran’s biggest oil customer.  

     

    Trump says Xi told him China would not give Iran military equipment: “That’s a big statement”

    In an interview with Fox News’ Sean Hannity Thursday from Beijing, President Trump said that during their summit, Chinese President Xi Jinping assured him that China would not provide military equipment to Iran for its war in the Middle East.

    Asked by Hannity how big of a discussion the two leaders had regarding China’s support for Iran, Mr. Trump responded, “We discussed it. When you say support, they’re [China] not fighting a war with us or anything.”

    According to Mr. Trump, Xi told him that he’s “not going to give [Iran] military equipment. That’s a big statement. He said that today. That’s a big statement. He said that strongly.”

    Last month, CBS News reported that U.S. intelligence agencies had detected signs that China was weighing whether to provide the Iranian regime with advanced radar systems.

    Mr. Trump disclosed that Xi also noted to him how much China depends on the oil and gas it imports from Iran.

    “But at the same time, he said, you know, they buy a lot of their oil there, they would like to keep doing that,” Mr. Trump said. “He’d like to see the Hormuz strait opened,” adding that Xi “didn’t like the fact that they’re [Iran] charging tolls. I don’t know if they are or not.”

    According to analysts at maritime intelligence company Lloyd’s List, early in the war, Iran had been using Larak Island, which is located a few miles off Iran’s coast, as a tolling stop for tankers.

    Per the congressional U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission, China purchases about 90% of the oil that Iran exports.

    And according to analysis from Det Norske Veritas, an independent global assurance and risk management provider, prior to the Iran war, China imported 70% of its oil and gas, the majority of which came through the Persian Gulf.

     

    Trump says he’s “not going to be much more patient” on an Iran deal

    President Trump said in an interview with Fox News that he’s “not going to be much more patient” on a possible peace deal with Iran. 

    “I’m not going to be much more patient,” Mr. Trump told Fox News’ Sean Hannity Thursday. “They should make a deal.” 

    After wrapping up their summit in Beijing, Mr. Trump said Chinese President Xi Jinping “would like to see a deal made.”

    “He said, ‘If I can be of any help at all, I would like to be of help.’ Anybody that buys that much oil has obviously got some kind of relationship, but he’d like to see the Hormuz Strait open,” Mr. Trump told Hannity. 

     

    CENTCOM chief says Iran’s hold on strait has weakened, but threats remain

    The head of U.S. forces in the Middle East told senators that the bombing campaign against Iran, named Operation Epic Fury, achieved all of its objectives to “significantly degrade” the country’s military capabilities, even as Tehran continues to claim control of the Strait of Hormuz.

    Admiral Brad Cooper of U.S. Central Command told the Senate Armed Services Committee that U.S. forces have destroyed more than 90% of Iran’s inventory of 8,000 naval mines to prevent their deployment in the strait. But he acknowledged Iran still maintains some capabilities to threaten ships.

    “The Iranian ability to stop commerce has been dramatically degraded through the straits, but their voice is very loud, and those threats are clearly heard by the merchant industry and the insurance industry,” Cooper said Thursday.

    Read more here.

     

    Trump says Xi wants to see Iran deal made, offered to help

    President Trump said Thursday that Chinese President Xi Jinping would like to see a deal with Iran made, and a reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, and has offered to help.

    “President Xi would like to see a deal made,” Mr. Trump told Fox News host Sean Hannity. “He would like to see a deal made. And he did offer, he said, ‘If I can be of any help at all, I would like to be of help.’”

    “Look, anybody that buys that much oil has obviously got some kind of relationship with them, but he said, ‘I would love to be of help, if I can be of any help whatsoever.’ He’d like to see the Hormuz Strait open,” Mr. Trump said. “He said, ‘If I can be of any help whatsoever, I would like to help.’” 

  • Trump weighs Taiwan arms package after summit aimed at steadying US-China ties – WABI

    Trump weighs Taiwan arms package after summit aimed at steadying US-China ties – WABI

    BEIJING (AP) — U.S. President Donald Trump said Friday that he has not made a decision on whether to move forward with a major arms package for Taiwan after hearing concerns about it from Chinese President Xi Jinping.

    Trump’s comments on Taiwan — a self-ruled island that China claims as its own territory — came as he flew back to Washington after wrapping up critical talks in which both leaders said important progress was made in stabilizing U.S.-China relations even as deep differences persist between the world’s two biggest powers on Iran and Taiwan.

    “I will make a determination,” Trump said. He added: “I’ll be making decisions. But, you know, I think the last thing we need right now is a war that’s 9,500 miles away.”

    Trump’s Republican administration in December authorized a record-setting $11 billion weapons package for Taipei, but it has yet to move forward. Lawmakers also approved a $14 billion arms sale to Taiwan in January, but the sale cannot advance until Trump formally sends it to Congress. China opposes such sales and has suggested that Washington’s relationship with the self-governing island is the key factor in U.S.-China relations.

    Trump said Xi also reiterated China’s strong opposition to Taiwan’s independence. “I heard him out,” Trump said. “I didn’t make a comment.”

    Trump’s consultation with Xi about arms sales to Taiwan may violate the so-called Six Assurances, a set of nonbinding U.S. policy principles formulated in 1982 under President Ronald Reagan that have helped guide the U.S. relationship with Taipei, according to analysts.

    The second of the Six Assurances states that the U.S. “did not agree to consult with the People’s Republic of China on arms sales to Taiwan.”

    Trump said the issue of the 1982 assurances came up in the talks with Xi.

    Trump says Xi is ‘very positive’ about a potential nuclear deal

    Trump also said he raised a potential three-way nuclear deal that would involve the U.S., Russia and China. He wants each of the three countries to sign a pact that would cap the number of nuclear warheads in their arsenals. China has previously been cool to entering such a pact.

    Beijing’s arsenal, according to Pentagon estimates, exceeds 600 warheads and is far from parity with the U.S. and Russia, which are each estimated to have more than 5,000 warheads. But Trump suggested Xi was receptive to the idea.

    “I got a very a positive response,” Trump said. “This is the beginning.”

    The last nuclear arms pact, known as the New START treaty, between Russia and the United States expired in February, removing any caps on the two largest atomic arsenals for the first time in more than a half-century. As the treaty was set to expire, Trump rejected a call by Russia to extend the two-country deal for another year and called for “a new, improved and modernized” deal that includes China.

    The Pentagon estimates China will have more than 1,000 nuclear warheads by 2030.

    Trump was impressed by Chinese presidential residence

    Xi welcomed Trump at his official residence, Zhongnanhai, on Friday for their final engagement of the summit before the U.S. leader’s return to Washington. The leaders took a short walk through the grounds that feature ancient trees and Chinese roses, and they strolled through a covered passageway with green columns and archways painted with birds and traditional Chinese mountain scenes.

    Over tea and lunch, Trump and Xi — with top aides and translators in tow — huddled for nearly three hours of talks before the U.S. leader completed his three-day visit to China.

    Trump appeared impressed by the bucolic grounds, remarking that the roses were the most beautiful he had ever seen. Xi promised to send him some rose seeds.

    The compound is wrapped around two artificial lakes built for the pleasure of emperors. Zhongnanhai is often compared to the White House, the Kremlin or South Korea’s Blue House. But unlike the other presidential residences, Zhongnanhai does not serve as the main venue for diplomatic visits. The invitation appeared to be an attempt by Xi to extend a personal touch to a U.S. leader who appreciates big gestures.

    “It’s been really a great couple of days,” Trump told reporters.

    Xi, for his part, called it a “milestone” visit. “We have established a new bilateral relationship, or rather a constructive, strategic, stable relationship,” he said.

    But the optimistic outlook collides with some difficult truths about the thorniest issues between the two superpowers.

    Beijing has shown little public interest in U.S. entreaties to get more involved in solving the conflict in Iran, even though Trump said in an interview with Fox News’ Sean Hannity that Xi had in their conversations offered to help.

    In recent weeks, the U.S. State Department has accused Chinese firms of providing satellite imagery to the Iranian government, and the Treasury Department has moved to target Chinese oil refineries accused of buying oil from Tehran, as well as shippers of the oil.

    Xi on Thursday warned Trump during private talks that their differences on Taiwan, if handled poorly, could hurtle the world’s dominant powers toward “clashes and even conflicts,” according to Chinese government officials.

    But Trump, as he made his way home, said he was not concerned that the U.S.-China relationship was in danger. “I think we will be fine,” he said.

    Taiwan remains the most important issue for China

    Xi’s sharp language on Taiwan loomed large over the visit, with Chinese government officials amplifying his view that differences on the island pose the biggest risk to U.S.-Chinese relations.

    But Secretary of State Marco Rubio told NBC News that U.S. policy toward Taiwan was “unchanged” and cautioned that it would be “a terrible mistake” for China to try to take Taiwan by force. He also framed Xi’s comments as standard practice.

    “They always raise it on their side. We always make clear our position, and we move on to the other topics,” said Rubio, who was among senior aides to join Trump for the talks.

    China in recent weeks has sought to put more focus on its view that Taiwan sits at the “core” of its interests and is key to ensuring a stable relationship with the U.S. Trump at moments has shown ambivalence toward Taiwan, raising speculation that he could be open to loosening ties with Taipei.

    China wants the Strait of Hormuz opened

    Trump said he and Xi also spoke at length about Iran.

    The leaders agreed that the critical Strait of Hormuz — effectively closed since the start of the Iran conflict — needs to be reopened to support global energy demands About 20% of the world’s oil flowed through the strait before the war started on Feb. 28.

    “We feel very similar about (how) we want it to end,” the president said with Xi at this side. “We don’t want them to have a nuclear weapon.”

    White House officials said Xi was also opposed to any implementation of tolls on vessels crossing the strait and expressed interest in China potentially purchasing U.S. oil to reduce Chinese dependence on Gulf oil in the future.

    Trump earlier this week downplayed the importance of talks with Xi on the 11-week-old Iran war that has led to surging energy prices and threatens to plunge the global economy into recession if the conflict does not conclude soon.

    ___

    Mistreanu reported from Bangkok. Associated Press writers Huizhong Wu in Bangkok and Darlene Superville and Josh Boak in Washington contributed to this report.

    Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.