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    Home » Trump and Xi end Beijing summit with cautious progress
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    Trump and Xi end Beijing summit with cautious progress

    May 15, 2026
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    BEIJING / MENA Newswire / — President Donald Trump concluded talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing after the White House said the leaders had a “good meeting” that covered economic cooperation, the Strait of Hormuz and Iran’s nuclear issue. The White House said the two sides discussed wider market access for American businesses in China and increased Chinese investment in U.S. industries, while agreeing that the waterway must remain open and that Iran can never have a nuclear weapon. The public U.S. account cast the session as a practical exchange focused on trade and regional stability.

    Trump and Xi end Beijing summit with cautious progress
    Trump and Xi conclude Beijing summit amid trade, Taiwan and Iran tensions. (Credit – WAM)

    The final session took place Friday at Zhongnanhai, where Trump and Xi held nearly three hours of talks over tea and lunch before the U.S. president departed for Washington. Chinese official accounts said Xi presented a new vision for a constructive relationship of strategic stability, while Trump said the visit had produced a lot of good. Both sides portrayed the closing encounter as orderly and substantive.

    The Beijing meetings capped two days of talks during Trump’s three-day visit, with trade, investment and wider regional issues running through the agenda. China’s Foreign Ministry said the two countries’ economic and trade teams had produced generally balanced and positive outcomes, and the White House said the leaders discussed expanding commercial ties and investment flows, while Trump said trade deals had been struck during the visit though detailed terms were not released publicly. That left the summit with a more positive tone than a detailed public package of agreements.

    Taiwan remains the sharpest divide

    Taiwan remained the clearest point of friction in the official accounts of the summit. China’s Foreign Ministry said Xi told Trump the Taiwan question is the most important issue in bilateral relations and warned that mishandling it could lead to clashes and conflict. Wider reporting on the meeting said Xi also warned privately that mismanaging differences over Taiwan could push ties to a dangerous place, while the U.S. public summary of the talks did not mention the issue. The contrast showed how sharply the two sides continue to differ on one of their most sensitive disputes.

    The summit also gave unusual prominence to the Iran conflict and the security of global energy routes. The White House said Trump and Xi agreed that the Strait of Hormuz must remain open, and U.S. officials later said Xi opposed tolls on ships using the passage and expressed interest in buying more U.S. oil. On Friday, China’s Foreign Ministry separately said it was important to reopen shipping lanes as soon as possible and keep global supply chains stable. Those statements placed energy security alongside trade near the top of the visit’s agenda.

    Trade and investment stay central

    Economic issues remained central even as the public focus widened to regional security and supply chains. The White House said the talks included increased Chinese purchases of U.S. agricultural products, broader access for American companies and more Chinese investment in the United States, while public reporting on the trip also pointed to discussions involving companies such as Boeing, Mastercard and Visa. Senior officials and business executives formed part of the wider effort to show that commercial ties remained a core feature of the Beijing meetings.

    By the time Trump left Beijing, both governments were presenting the summit as a step toward steadier ties between the world’s two largest economies. The White House maintained that the meeting with Xi was productive, while China’s Foreign Ministry said the visit opened a new chapter and provided strategic guidance for relations beyond the immediate talks. At the same time, the public record from both sides showed that Taiwan, trade and wider regional security remained central to the relationship even as the leaders highlighted areas of cooperation. The result was a summit that closed with warm language but with the main points of tension still clearly in view.

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