China, Trump and Beijing
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China and the United States, Fall 2025: A timeline of remarks, threats, critiques — and dialogue
Tensions between the U.S. and China escalated in the weeks leading up to a possible meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping. In response to recent U.S. restrictions,
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China Is Building the Future
A fter a months-long trade war between China and the United States, Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping are scheduled to meet Thursday in Korea. Both countries seem to be angling for a truce; over the weekend, they announced a “framework” for a possible agreement.
US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping are expected to discuss a wide range of issues — from fentanyl tariffs to rare-earths to soybean trade to TikTok deal. Will they discuss Taiwan and Ukraine war?
Economic relations between the two countries are more fraught than ever: in early October, for the second time in just six months, the United States and China launched a trade war, imposing prohibitive export restrictions and threatening to raise tariffs to previously unthinkable levels.
GYEONGJU, South Korea: Chinese President Xi Jinping will meet South Korean counterpart Lee Jae Myung on Saturday (Nov 1), capping an Asian summit at which Beijing and Washington agreed to a truce in their trade war.
It needs the United States for defense and has spent billions building factories in America. But a Trump trade deal this week with China could erase a Korean edge in the U.S. market.
President Trump’s post raises technical questions about how and if the United States could “immediately” return to nuclear testing, and political considerations about the signaling behind nuclear testing and who would benefit most from a return to testing.
BEIJING (Reuters) -Chinese President Xi Jinping took centrestage at a meeting of APEC leaders on Saturday to push a proposal for a global body to govern artificial intelligence and position China as
China pledged to expand farm trade with the United States and President Donald Trump said Beijing would buy "tremendous" volumes of soybeans, but neither gave specifics, disappointing investors hoping for a return of its once-robust purchases.