| An AI-generated fake, nonetheless, not entirely false |
On the surface, the recent summit
between Xi Jinping and Donald Trump in Beijing did not appear to have produced
much.
There was no public communique or any joint statement after all the closed-door meetings.
Nonetheless, Xi and Trump’s opening addresses and their speeches at the state banquet were widely reported.
For the opening addresses, Xi cautioned the danger of the Thucydides trap and need for world powers to work together for the better good of humanity. He also warned that the Taiwan issue was “the most important issue” in China-US relations. And if Taiwan were mishandled, the two countries could face “clashes and even conflicts.” Xi also stressed that China’s development was “compatible with making America great again,” an apparent attempt to frame Chinese growth as complementary rather than threatening to US interests.
Trump, in the public portions of the meeting and afterwards, emphasized expanding US access to Chinese markets and coordination regarding Iran and keeping the Strait of Hormuz open.
At the state banquet, Xi described US-China relations as the most important bilateral relationship in the world and toasted the bright future of China-US relations. Trump, in return, called the relationship one of the most consequential relationships in world history. He also invited Xi and Peng Liyuan to visit the White House in September. Interestingly, he also mentioned the statue of Kung-tze in US’s Supreme Court building and the role the US helped to establish Tsinghua University.
Any tangible outcome?
Trump desperately needs China to do a couple of things to avert his declining popularity which appears to foretell heavy losses for the Republican in the coming mid-term elections, amongst them – the war in Iran, the availability of rare earth elements, the Treasury bonds, and anger of the US farmers and the Chinese “boycott” of its semiconductor chips.
(And ironically even though the US are on the begging end, its Treasury and Commerce Secretaries were still busy introducing all sorts of sanctions days before the summit.)
On the surface, not really. Trump was quite tongue-tight when asked about the Taiwan demand from China. But judging from what the US side has scored, Trump must have given Xi some degree of assurances.
Both sides publicly agreed to continue a more “constructive” and “strategically stable” relationship, after a very turbulent 2025 marked by tariff escalation and tensions over Taiwan. China especially emphasised this language.
On trade and investment mechanisms, both governments appear to have agreed in principle to establish some form of councils for trade and investment discussions – essentially institutional channels to manage disputes and coordinate commerce.
Third is on agricultural trade
reopening. This is probably the most substantive practical outcome so far for
Trump. China signaled tariff reductions on some US agricultural products. China
resumed or expanded purchases of US soybeans, wheat and sorghum. Registrations
for hundreds of US beef plants were also renewed or approved. Reuters reported
that both sides reached preliminary understandings on tariff reductions and
non-tariff barriers affecting agriculture.
The Trump side claimed China would make major purchases of Boeing aircraft, US agricultural goods and energy products.
The two countries will also hold continued dialogue on Iran and the Strait of Hormuz. Trump claimed Xi agreed Iran should reopen or keep open the Strait of Hormuz. China’s public statements were much more cautious and avoided endorsing the US position directly. Still, both sides evidently coordinated diplomatically on the issue.
Much of this is about announced intentions, rather than binding agreements.
Throughout the visit, Xi hosted Trump and his team with great dignity and confidence. The talk about Trump being snubbed deliberately because Xi was not at the airport to receive him was all nonsense. For the entire post-1949 history of the People’s Republic, I believe no top Chinese leader has personally gone to the airport to receive a visiting foreign head of state or government. Trump was received by Vice President Han Zheng, which was the appropriate protocol.
This time around, Xi played tourist guide to Trump at the Temple of Heaven and walked Trump around Zhongnanhai, which is the enclave for top Chinese leaders.
Two things may be worth mentioning – One, Marco Rubio’s appearance despite sanction by China, and two, Pete Hegseth’s taut face when being introduced to Xi during the welcoming ceremony. The former simply reflected China’s pragmatic way of handling foreign affairs, and the latter, a typical western kurang ajar’s attitude. As for many in Trump’s delegation, it was a case of Liu Lao-lao seeing the China for the first time.
As for Trump, he did behave well. But his anxiousness is subtly written all over his face.
Behind all the smiles, America’s paranoia about China remains difficult to overcome. The picture above may be fake, but it is true that members of the US delegation accompanying Trump were instructed to discard all China-issued items — badges, lapel pins, credentials, commemorative items, gifts and souvenirs — before boarding Air Force One. The mistrust is evident. To an East Asian like me, it comes across simply as an act of insensitivity.
Xi obviously knows this: No sooner had Air Force One become airborne, there is a danger that Trump would do a U-turn on everything that he had undertaken to Xi. But I suspect Xi is nonchalant about it. China does not need the US that much; it is the US that needs China to halt its decline.
During the state banquet given by Xi to Trump, the former mentioned a statue on the eastern pediment of the building of the US Court. At the very center of the sculptural group are three great historical “lawgivers” carved side by side: from left to right, Confucius, Moses, and the ancient Greek lawgiver Solon. The significance of the statue of Confucius can mainly be understood from the following perspectives.
The designer of the pediment
sculptures, sculptor Hermon Atkins MacNeil, clearly explained the concept
behind his work. He believed that “law is an element of civilisation, and
American law naturally inherits or derives from earlier civilisations.” Thus,
the sculptural group was intended to show that American law and civilisation
did not emerge out of nowhere, but drew inspiration from much older
civilisations.
The choice of Confucius, Moses, and
Solon was meant to represent the three great sources of civilisation: Eastern
civilisation, Hebrew civilisation, and ancient Greek civilisation. By placing
these three figures at the centre, the designer sought to convey that the
American legal tradition is rooted in the oldest foundations of human
civilisation.
Trump mentioned this during a state
banquet speech in order to highlight the long-standing cultural ties between
China and the US. At the time, he also cited historical details — for example,
that the American founding father Benjamin Franklin had once published excerpts
of the “Sayings of Confucius” in a newspaper — as evidence of the influence of
Chinese culture on early American political thought.
It is worth noting that, in the
official context of the US Supreme Court, Confucius is identified as a
“lawgiver.” This differs from the more familiar Chinese understanding of him as
the “Great Sage and Teacher.” Sinologists have suggested that this reflects how
American designers of the time viewed Confucius: as a symbolic representative
of Chinese civilisation and a model of morality and social order.
Trump also touched on the US help in the establishment of the university. President Trump's recent remarks reference a specific and historically significant chapter in US-China relations: the use of returned Boxer Indemnity funds to establish what is now Tsinghua University.
The original source of funding is directly tied to a complex and painful period in Chinese history, i.e., the Boxer Rebellion and the Boxer Indemnity. In 1900, known as the 庚子年 (Gengzi year), this anti-foreign movement occurred in China but was soon suppressed by an eight-nation alliance, including the US. The conflict ended with the Qing Dynasty being forced to sign the 1901 Boxer Protocol (part of the 辛丑条约) and a crippling reparation of 450 million taels of silver (over 980 million taels with interest) was imposed on China over 39 years as punishment.
The US share amounted to over $24
million (7.4% of the total)
US officials came to
believe that the amount demanded from China was "excessive". American
missionary and educator Arthur Henderson Smith suggested to President
Theodore Roosevelt that the surplus funds be used to educate Chinese students
in the US. This idea was supported by others who urged that educating China's
future leaders would yield significant "spiritual and commercial"
influence for the US.
The Qing ambassador to the US actively
lobbied the US government for the remission, stressing the powerful positive
impact such an act of goodwill would have.
The culmination of these efforts was
President Theodore Roosevelt signing a congressional resolution
in 1908 to return the surplus of approximately $11.6
million to China, to be used specifically for educating Chinese students
in America.
With this dedicated fund, the Qing
government established a plan to select and prepare students for study in the US.
A school named
Tsinghua College was built near the former royal garden in 1911. It was meant
to serve as a preparatory school to send students to the US. It continued to
evolve. After the Xinhai Revolution of 1912, it was renamed Tsinghua
School. It later added a university section in 1925 and a research institute
for Chinese studies. Finally, in 1928, it was officially
renamed National Tsinghua University.
The founding of
Tsinghua is not a simple story of charity. The "indemnity" itself
originated from a war and an unequal treaty, making Tsinghua what many of its
early scholars called a "monument to national humiliation".
Nonetheless, the return of the funds did help to see a generation of China's
top intellectual talent, producing leaders who would drive the country's
modernization. None of the other members of the Alliance showed any sympathy.
The funding of
Tsinghua is an undeniable fact of history, and as Trump noted, it establishes a
tangible, century-old link between the U.S. and a top Chinese institution, a
connection other presidents like George W. Bush have also referenced.
End