China has denied a report claiming Beijing leader Xi Jinping told US President Donald Trump that Russian leader Vladimir Putin could ultimately regret launching the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Responding to a question from Bloomberg during a briefing on Tuesday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun dismissed the claim by calling it “completely false.”JOIN US ON TELEGRAMFollow our coverage of the war on the @Kyivpost_official. “We have released information on the China-US summit,” Guo said. “What you just cited is completely false.” The remarks followed a report citing sources familiar with discussions held during Trump’s visit to Beijing last week. According to the report, Xi told Trump during wide-ranging talks on Ukraine and global security that Putin might eventually “regret” invading Ukraine. The report also said discussions allegedly included a proposal by Trump to have China, Russia, and the US cooperate against the International Criminal Court (ICC). Neither the White House nor Beijing officially confirmed those details. The denial came as Putin arrived in Beijing on Tuesday for a two-day visit expected to focus on energy, trade and geopolitical cooperation. The Kremlin said Putin’s delegation will include senior ministers, officials and major business leaders.
Beijing Denies Xi Told Trump That Putin Would ‘Regret’ Attacking Ukraine
China dismissed a report claiming Xi Jinping told Donald Trump that Vladimir Putin could regret invading Ukraine, calling the report “completely false.”










