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by Kanwal Sibal
May 17, 2026
from
RT Website
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Kanwal Sibal,
retired Indian
foreign secretary and former Ambassador to Russia
between 2004 and 2007.
He also held
ambassadorial positions in Turkey, Egypt, France and was
Deputy Chief of Mission in Washington DC. |

US President Donald
Trump speaks
with Chinese
President Xi Jinping
on May 15, 2026 in
Beijing, China.
© Evan Vucci -
Pool/Getty Images
The
US president arrived
with
flattery, CEOs and a need
for
pre-midterm trade wins,
Beijing
stayed formal
and
refused to budge
on core
issues...
China maintained the upper hand during US President
Donald Trump's visit to Beijing
this week. He visibly tried to ingratiate himself with Chinese
President
Xi Jinping, but his counterpart
made no attempt to reciprocate.
Trump has been heaping praise on Xi personally as a great leader and
has vaunted his personal ties with him. He laid it thick at the
start of formal delegation-level talks in Beijing, eliciting a smile
from the normally impassive Xi who, in turn, did not feel the need
to play to audience.
Trump is not particularly popular in China and Xi would have not
have wanted, in any case, to unnecessarily rehabilitate him in the
public eye in China.
Earlier, during the welcome ceremony at the Great Hall of the
People, Trump made several overtly warm physical gestures toward Xi,
but the Chinese leader remained formal and impassive.
By acting as a suitor, Trump effectively handed
Xi the political and psychological upper hand.
Trump effectively cast himself as,
someone who had come to seek favors from
China.
His boast that only the number ones, not
number twos of top American corporations were accompanying him
hardly projected strength, coming after years of Washington's
(and Trump's own) tirades against China's business practices,
alleged "rip‑offs" of US consumers, and technology theft.
This, despite the fact that Trump had
imposed sweeping tariffs on Chinese goods and moved to
restrict the flow of advanced technology, especially chips, to
China.
The message, on the contrary,
was one of willingness to explore renewed
economic interdependence, with the biggest names in US business
looking for openings in the Chinese market - and this after all
the talk of decoupling, de-risking supply chains, onshoring,
pushing US firms to invest at home and create American jobs, and
so on...
From the media coverage of the visit, it does not
seem that the Chinese side felt overwhelmed by the composition of
Trump's delegation.
The emphasis in the reporting was on Trump's
praise for Xi, China's rising stature, the US engaging China as an
equal global power, setting a new framework of cooperation, and
Trump visiting China when he was relatively weak domestically and
needing trade deals before the
mid-term elections...
Normally, before a visit of this importance, which has been under
preparation for many months,
the two sides begin working on a joint
statement that would list the agreed-upon outcomes.
In this case, no joint statement
has been issued, which means that on many contentious points,
the differences between the two sides could not be bridged.
The Taiwan issue is especially divisive:
an agreed formulation on Iran, with the US
being the initiator of the war and also militarily blockading
the Strait of Hormuz, would have been difficult (China has been
vetoing one-sided resolutions in the UN Security Council,
prompted by the US).
The same goes for the South China Sea and
many other issues, including sanctions, tariffs and trade
disbalance.
All this signifies that the visit did not produce
definable concrete results.
The two sides gave their own readouts of the visit, which makes it
difficult to assess the real outcome.
The US readout is unusually subdued, given
the exuberance and exaggerations that characterize Trump's
pronouncements and presentations.
The readout merely says that Trump "had a
good meeting" with Xi.
No superlatives...
Ways to enhance bilateral economic cooperation
were discussed, including by expanding American businesses' access
to Chinese markets and increasing Chinese investment in US
industries.
Higher Chinese purchases of American agricultural
products was discussed, but no figures for corn, soya beans,
sorghum, beef etc. are mentioned, though in his public remarks Trump
said China had agreed to buy 200 Boeing jets and US oil as
well...
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has told the American
media that,
the US and China have also discussed forming
a "Board of Trade" and "Board of Investment" to oversee commerce
between the two countries.
Some understandings seem to have been reached but
not anything major, as Xi speaks of the economic and trade teams
having reached a generally balanced and positive outcome, which is a
low-key formulation, contrary to,
Trump's claim to have "achieved
a fantastic trade agreement"...
Xi has said that China will only continue
to open up.
Both sides agreed that the Strait of Hormuz must remain open to
support the free flow of energy, which is fine in principle as far
as China's access to energy from the Gulf is affected, and the US
too does not want oil prices to shoot up beyond a point.
Xi also made it clear that China was opposed to
the militarization of the Strait, using double edged language, as
this position applies also to the US positioning its warships in the
region and blockading the Strait.
As for charging a toll, not only is China against
it, but so is India, because this can have wider repercussions.
That China expressed interest in purchasing more American oil to
reduce China's dependence on the Strait in the future is not only
not a commitment it is ironical too, as the US has sanctioned
China's "tinpot refineries" buying Iranian oil and has ended the
flourishing oil ties between Venezuela and China.
It is hard to believe that both countries genuinely agreed Iran can
"never" have a nuclear weapon, given that this is the central
justification for
the US‑Israeli war on Iran.
China, as a former
JCPOA party, would in any case be
reluctant to see Iran go nuclear because of the regional
fallout.
Trump's claim that Xi said during their summit
that Beijing would not provide military equipment to Iran sounds
rather more like what Washington would like to hear - as also is the
case with China's purported military-tech support for Russia.
In response to Trump's claim that Xi Jinping had offered China's
help in reaching a settlement with Iran, the Chinese Foreign
Ministry set out Beijing's position at some length.
It said that China recognizes that the
conflict has put a heavy strain on global economic growth,
supply chains, international trade order and the stability of
the global energy supply.
It added that there is no point in continuing
this conflict, which should not have happened in the first
place, and that dialogue and negotiation are the right way
forward while the use force is a dead end.
It called for a settlement of the Iranian
nuclear issue and other issues that accommodate the concerns of
all parties, a comprehensive and lasting ceasefire as soon as
possible, and laying the foundation for building a sustainable
security architecture for the region.
The US didn't mention Taiwan in its
readout of the meeting.
According to American media reports,
China seems to have brought up Taiwan in
talks.
Washington appears to have acknowledged
Beijing's position, restated its own view, and then moved on.
The US didn't mention Taiwan in its readout of the meeting.
Trump acknowledged to the US media that Xi
had raised the issue forcefully, including that of US arms
supplies to Taiwan, but he listened and did not respond.
Trump has since also equivocated on defending
Taiwan and executive approval of $14 billion of arms aid to
Taiwan cleared by the US Congress.
He has also called on Taiwan and China to
"cool it", meaning avoiding provocations.
The Chinese readout of the Xi-Trump
summit has a hard, realistic and demanding edge to it.
The emphasis is on a relationship based on
equality.
Centrality is given to US handling of the
Taiwan issue, with Xi warning that it must be treated with
utmost caution.
If handled well, bilateral relations can
maintain overall stability, but if handled poorly it can lead to
confrontation and even conflict, pushing the entire relationship
into a very dangerous situation.
This has implications for Trump's decision on
the $14 billion arms package for Taiwan approved by the US
Congress.
When Xi speaks about an agreement to
establish a,
"constructive and stable relationship
between China and the US",
...it implies that the provocations have come
from the US and that China is a victim.
This is the usual Chinese tactic of placing
the responsibility for handling ties on the shoulders of others
and not accepting its own responsibility in creating tensions.
Xi says that faced with differences and
frictions, equal consultation is the only correct choice, which is
another formula that places the onus of making the "correct choice"
on the other party and not China.
For Xi, stabilizing bilateral relations and strengthening
communication were important.
In his view,
"we have established a new status called the
'China-US Constructive Strategic Stable Relationship'" with the
US.
He added that the two sides had,
"achieved important agreements on stabilizing
economic and trade relations, expanding practical cooperation in
various fields, and properly handling mutual concerns."
The reference is to properly handling
figures in statements that China makes on border issues with India.
The sub-text is that, it is not China but the
other side that fails to properly address differences.
Xi also resorted to standard clichés
about,
"enhancing mutual understanding, deepening
mutual trust... and peaceful coexistence and win-win cooperation
based on mutual respect."
In his opening remarks to Trump at the formal
talks, Xi called on the US to be "partners, not rivals," and made a
reference to overcoming
the Thucydides Trap.
He has done so in the past, but that he chose to
do so when the debate over this concept is no longer current
internationally, suggests that Xi wanted to revive the debate and
convey that China was now the risen power that was in a position to
potentially clash with the US as the established power.
Trump seems to have understood the message belatedly and later in
his Truth Social post called this an elegant way by Xi to
refer to the US as a declining power...
The subtle message here by Xi is also that China
and the US are the principal powers today and bear the shared
responsibility for global peace and prosperity - a possible hint of
a G2...!
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