High on agenda for the leaders of the US and China will be rare earths and tariffs, with a chance of a relationship reset
Ahead of Thursday’s long-awaited first meeting between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping since the US president’s return to office, officials from both sides have been hammering out the contours of what a trade deal between Washington and Beijing might look like, an agreement that could bring an end to months of global economic chaos caused by the US-China trade war.
The two leaders have not met in person since 2019. Since then, the war in Ukraine and increasing concern in Washington about China’s technological advances, as well as longstanding issues about the imbalanced US-China trade relationship, have strained the bonds between the two superpowers.
Thursday’s meeting, on the sidelines of the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Seoul, is a chance to reset the relationship.
On Wednesday, Trump struck an upbeat tone when speaking to reporters on Air Force One, saying: “I think we’re going to have a great meeting with President Xi of China, and a lot of problems are going to be solved.”













