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Weekly Column

G2 Summit in Beijing: Trump Returns Empty-Handed From The Meeting With Xi

Donald Trump’s state visit to Beijing from 13 to 15 May 2026, the first by a sitting US president in nearly a decade, was conceived both as a commercial endeavour and a diplomatic exercise. The US President arrived flanked by seventeen corporate leaders, among them Elon Musk (Tesla and SpaceX), Tim Cook (Apple), Jensen Huang (Nvidia), Kelly Ortberg (Boeing), Larry Fink (BlackRock), Stephen Schwarzman (Blackstone), David Solomon (Goldman Sachs), Jane Fraser (Citigroup), Brian Sikes (Cargill), and Jim Anderson (Coherent), alongside senior representatives from Mastercard, Micron, Qualcomm, Meta, Visa, and GE Aerospace. The optics were unmistakable: a transactional presidency seeking deliverables — aircraft, agricultural offtake, semiconductor licences — while Xi Jinping, receiving the delegation at the Great Hall of the People and later at Zhongnanhai, played the role of gracious host, promising that China’s door would only open wider to American capital.

Beneath the choreography, the substantive agenda turned on four irreducible problems. Regarding the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which started soon after the American-Israeli attacks on 28 February, all issues remain unresolved. Reportedly, the two leaders agreed that the Strait of Hormuz must remain open to restore energy flows; Xi opposed any “militarisation” of the corridor and, crucially, any Iranian attempt to impose transit tolls, while signalling Chinese willingness to purchase more US oil to wean itself off its reliance on Middle Eastern crude. Subsequent reports from China specified that this was the US Administration’s account of the events. China will continue siding with Iran.

On the war itself, the convergence was rhetorical rather than operational; both sides reiterated that Tehran can never have a nuclear weapon, and Xi reportedly offered to broker an end to hostilities, having already given prior assurances — confirmed by Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth in April — that Beijing would not transfer surface-to-air missiles or other military equipment to Iran. Yet Trump’s own remarks en route home, promising further “military decimation” of the Islamic Republic, betrayed how thin the ceasefire’s foundations remain.

Taiwan, predictably, produced the sharpest friction. Xi called it the most important issue in US-China relations and warned that mishandling the question risked clashes or conflict, with specific reference to the $11 billion arms package Washington approved in December but has yet to deliver. Trump’s response — “I heard him out, I didn’t make a comment” — postponed rather than resolved the dilemma; the arms sale now functions as a suspended bargaining chip.

Regarding Ukraine, the readouts are studiously vague. The Chinese foreign ministry merely confirmed an exchange of views on the Ukraine crisis, alongside the Middle East and Korean peninsula. No joint position emerged, and Beijing’s continuing role as the principal external prop of Russia’s war economy, through dual-use components, machine tools, and energy purchases, was left undisturbed.

In sum, the summit delivered atmospheric stabilisation, a “constructive relationship of strategic stability” in Xi’s formula, and a state visit to Washington pencilled for 24 September. But it postponed every structural decision. Markets read this as détente; strategists should read it as deferred reckoning. In effect, Trump returned empty handed: none of the most pressing issues was really resolved. The vast majority of media and commentators agreed that Xi emerged as the clear winner of the confrontation, especially as he met Trump at the time of his greatest weakness. Xi has time on his side and is not in a rush, whereas Trump needs to deliver some concrete results before the November mid-term elections.

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