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Politics May 13, 2026

Xi Jinping Expected to Press Trump on Taiwan, Tariffs Amid Regional Tensions

Chinese President Xi Jinping is expected to seek concessions on Taiwan and US tariffs during his su…
The Lead: A High-Stakes Diplomatic Encounter Chinese President Xi Jinping is expected to seek concessions on Taiwan and US tariffs when he meets United States President Donald Trump for a critical summit taking place in the shadow of the war on Iran. Trump's arrival in China marks the first trip by a US leader to the country since 2017, setting the stage for what could be a pivotal moment in US-China relations. The Taiwan Confrontation: Core Interest and Red Lines Unlike Trump's mercurial policymaking approach, Xi is widely seen as predictable in his goals for the summit, particularly concerning Beijing's "core interests" related to national security and territorial integrity. At the top of that list is Taiwan, which Beijing views as an inalienable part of its territory despite Taiwan's self-governing status. China has named Taiwan as the first of "four red lines" that "must not be challenged." In a call with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio last month, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi described Taiwan as "the biggest risk in the China-US relationship." While analysts say it's unlikely the US will change its position on Taiwan due to Chinese pressure, Trump has indicated the summit will include discussions about the $14bn arms package approved by Congress for Taiwan. The Trade War Dynamics: Economic Uncertainty and Strategic Maneuvering Xi is also eager to smooth over US-China relations after a tumultuous 18 months that saw Trump launch a second trade war with the world's second-largest economy. The standoff saw both countries implement escalating tariffs and punitive measures, including export controls, before hitting pause in May. During their last meeting in South Korea in October, Xi and Trump agreed to a one-year reprieve in their trade war, though some trade measures remain in place. China is likely to agree to increase purchases of US agricultural exports and Boeing planes during the summit, but is unlikely to make concessions on rare earths—a sector it dominates—without major political trade-offs from the US. The Geopolitical Chessboard: Iran Conflict and Global Implications The US-Israel war on Iran will loom large over the summit. Although not a direct participant, China has been significantly impacted by the economic fallout of the conflict and the shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz, through which one-fifth of global oil and natural gas supplies typically pass. Beijing has consistently called for negotiations and a comprehensive ceasefire since the conflict began, a message Xi is likely to reiterate. Despite Trump stating he doesn't need China's "help" resolving the war, the White House has pressured Beijing to influence Iran to reopen the strait. China has maintained a "comprehensive strategic partnership" with Iran since 2016 and purchases more than 80% of its oil, though Xi is expected to limit China's role to mediation, consistent with its non-intervention foreign policy principle. The Future of US-China Relations: Strategic Adjustments and Long-term Planning For Beijing, the stakes are particularly high as its view of Trump has shifted from a "predictable transactional counterpart" to a "more action-oriented and harder-to-restrain opponent." Rather than securing immediate concessions, China's priority is "trying to adjust the current strategic position and negotiating pace that are unfavorable to it, and bring US-China interactions back into a framework that it can better control." Xi may also support Trump's plan to create a "Board of Trade" and "Board of Investment" to oversee US-China economic ties, as Beijing seeks predictability and certainty for the remainder of Trump's term through January 2029. This stability would allow China to plan its own economic policies with greater confidence, particularly regarding tariff levels and trade relationships.
#Xi Jinping #Donald Trump #Taiwan
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Politics May 13, 2026

Jensen Huang Joins Trump’s China Delegation, Highlighting US Tech Push

Billionaire Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang was added at the last minute to Donald Trump's high‑profile Chi…
Jensen Huang Added to Trump’s High‑Profile China DelegationJensen Huang, chief executive of Nvidia, joined Donald Trump's 36‑hour China trip after a reported last‑minute invitation, sitting with CEOs such as Elon Musk and Tim Cook for a meeting with President Xi Jinping.Summit dates: May 13‑14, 2026Key participants: CEOs of Nvidia, Tesla, Apple, Goldman Sachs and othersAgenda items: conflict in Iran, tariffs, Taiwan, and US‑China tech cooperationFinancial Stakes: $50 bn Market Target and Billionaire Net WorthHuang has repeatedly cited the Chinese market as a $50 bn opportunity for Nvidia’s AI chips. His personal fortune surged to $191.5 bn, briefly placing him among the world’s top seven richest people, while his 2026 compensation fell to $36.6 m after a stock‑price correction.Net‑worth: $191.5 bn (based on 3 % Nvidia stake)Compensation 2026: $36.6 m (‑27 % YoY)China market potential cited: $50 bnImplications for US‑China Tech Relations and AI CompetitionThe inclusion of a leading AI hardware maker signals Washington’s intent to leverage private‑sector expertise in diplomatic talks, aiming to “open up” China for American tech firms. It also raises questions about the optics of blending corporate influence with foreign policy amid ongoing tensions over AI dominance.What the Summit Could Signal for Future Tech DiplomacyAnalysts expect the summit to set a precedent for more frequent “business‑state” delegations, potentially accelerating joint research agreements or, conversely, prompting stricter export controls if negotiations stall. The outcome may shape the pace at which US AI firms gain market access in China and influence broader geopolitical strategies.
#Nvidia #Jensen Huang #Donald Trump
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Lifestyle May 13, 2026

Scaling Carn Ffoi: A Bouldering Journey on Pembrokeshire’s Rugged Hilltops

Eben Muse recounts his solo bouldering adventure on the volcanic tor of Carn Ffoi in Carningli Comm…
First Ascent: The Allure of Carn Ffoi’s Jagged EdgeThe Guardian’s Country Diary captures a solitary climber’s obsession with a dark, looming rock outcrop on the brow of a Pembrokeshire hill. From a modest “home away from home,” the author watches the storm‑washed landscape settle, the wind drying the volcanic stone and setting the stage for a daring bouldering session.On‑Ground Details: Route‑Finding Without a GuidebookWithout a phone or detailed topos, the climber relies on a hand‑drawn booklet of routes that proves indecipherable. Instead, he scouts a potential line on the lee side of the boulder, warms his fingers, and visualises the climb in his mind before committing to the overhanging block.Physical Metrics: Climb Length, Elevation Gain, and Weather ConditionsClimb height: approximately 4‑5 metres of vertical gain.Elevation gain from base to summit: ~12 m above sea level.Wind: post‑storm gusts around 15‑20 km/h, drying the rock surface.Temperature: mild coastal chill, roughly 12 °C.Why This Matters: Highlighting Remote Coastal Climbing in WalesThe piece underscores a growing niche of climbers seeking untouched tors along the Welsh coast. The volcanic geology offers a texture “rough as old bark,” while the surrounding landscape—sandy Trefdraeth Bay, gorse scrub, and distant fishing boats—provides a dramatic backdrop that differentiates these sites from inland crags.Looking Ahead: Future Exploration of Pembrokeshire’s TorsAfter topping the boulder, the author spots a freshly‑moulted adder, a reminder of the area’s rich biodiversity. The encounter, combined with the panoramic sea view, suggests that Pembrokeshire’s tors will continue to attract adventurous climbers and nature enthusiasts alike, encouraging more detailed route documentation and sustainable access initiatives.
#Pembrokeshire #Carningli Common #Eben Muse
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Politics May 13, 2026

Trump‑Xi Beijing Summit: Trade, Tech, Taiwan and the Iran Conflict at the Forefront

U.S. President Donald Trump arrives in Beijing for his first visit to China in nearly a decade, mee…
Trump's Beijing Visit Marks First U.S. Leader in a DecadePresident Donald Trump departed for Beijing ahead of a two‑day summit with President Xi Jinping, the first U.S. head of state to set foot in China since 2017. The high‑stakes meeting comes after weeks of stalled U.S. attempts to enlist Beijing’s help in reviving Iran negotiations and easing tensions in the Strait of Hormuz.Trade, Technology and Taiwan: Core Bargaining ChipsThe agenda is expected to centre on four pillars: trade (especially U.S. agricultural exports and Boeing sales), advanced semiconductor and rare‑earth restrictions, the Taiwan question, and the Iran war. Washington will press China for higher purchases of U.S. goods, while Beijing will seek relief from U.S. export controls on chip‑making equipment and a loosening of rare‑earth export curbs.Economic Stakes: Tariffs, Rare Earths and Energy FlowsChina controls roughly 90 % of global rare‑earth refining, a critical input for chips, EVs and military hardware.The United States has imposed tariffs on some Chinese goods that have risen to above 100 % in the past year.China buys more than 80 % of Iran’s shipped crude, giving it leverage over Tehran’s oil revenue.U.S. officials hope to secure new Chinese purchases of American beef, soybeans and aircraft.Geopolitical Ripple Effects: Iran, the Strait of Hormuz and Global OrderAnalysts see the Iran conflict as a rare area of overlapping interest: both Washington and Beijing benefit from stable energy flows through the Gulf. However, Beijing is unlikely to fully align with U.S. pressure on Tehran, preferring to protect its own oil‑buyer relationship. The summit also tests the durability of the “strategic rivalry‑dependency paradox” that binds the two economies.What the Summit Could Signal for Future U.S.–China RelationsA “successful” outcome for Trump would be visible trade wins—new Chinese purchase commitments, limited tariff pauses, or a framework for rare‑earth cooperation—that can be sold to domestic voters ahead of the 2026 midterms. For Xi, success means preserving China’s strategic autonomy while extracting economic predictability without appearing to concede to U.S. demands. Most experts expect a limited, issue‑by‑issue agreement rather than a comprehensive deal, leaving the deeper structural rivalry largely intact but temporarily managed.
#Donald Trump #Xi Jinping #US‑China trade
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World Wide May 13, 2026

Trump‑Xi Summit Highlights Shifting US‑China Power Dynamics

Donald Trump will meet Xi Jinping in Beijing on May 14‑15, 2026, marking the first US presidential …
Executive Summary: Trump‑Xi Summit Sets the Stage for a US‑China Power Contest Donald Trump will meet Xi Jinping in Beijing on May 14‑15, 2026. The talks, delayed by the US‑Israel war on Iran, are expected to focus on trade, debt, military spending and emerging technologies, marking the first US presidential visit to China in nearly a decade. Trade Metrics Highlight China’s Export Supremacy According to the World Bank’s WITS, China exported $3.59 trillion of goods in 2024, surpassing the US’s $1.9 trillion. China now leads 145 economies in trade volume, while the US trails with a trade deficit of roughly $1.2 trillion (imports $3.12 trillion vs exports $1.9 trillion). Top Chinese exports: Machinery & electrical machines $1.68 trillion, metals $286 bn, textiles $268 bn. Top US exports: Machinery & electrical machines $447 bn, mineral products $364 bn, chemicals $245 bn. Numbers Behind the Trade Gap, Debt and Military Budgets In 2024 China posted a trade surplus of over $1 trillion, while the US ran a deficit of about $1.2 trillion. Government debt stands at 115 % of GDP for the US and 94 % of GDP for China, with the US national debt exceeding $39 trillion. Military spending in 2025 was $954 bn for the US (3.1 % of GDP) versus $336 bn for China (1.7 % of GDP). Strategic Implications for the Global Power Balance The data underscore a shift: China now leads in export volume, rare‑earth reserves (44 million tonnes vs US 1.9 million tonnes), and green‑energy investment ($290 bn vs US $97 bn). The US retains advantages in AI corporate spending ($109 bn in 2024) and semiconductor technology. Both powers dominate global military outlays, together accounting for over half of worldwide defence spending. Outlook: What the May Summit May Determine Analysts expect the summit to address tariff levels (US average tariff on Chinese imports ~31.6 %), rare‑earth supply security, and coordination on climate‑energy policy. A de‑escalation could stabilize trade flows and reduce debt‑driven fiscal pressures, while a hard‑line stance may deepen the bifurcation of technology supply chains and reinforce competing growth models.
#United States #China #Donald Trump
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Politics May 13, 2026

Trump-Xi Summit: Five Critical Issues Shaping US-China Relations

President Trump's state visit to China marks the first by a US president in nearly a decade, with f…
The Trump-Xi Summit: A Pivotal Moment in US-China Relations Donald Trump's state visit to China this week – the first by the US president in nearly a decade – comes amid a time of geopolitical upheaval, a new and intractable conflict in the Middle East, and a sometimes rocky relationship between the world's two major superpowers. There is much for Trump and Xi Jinping to discuss, but a few key issues are likely to dominate the agenda. Five Critical Issues on the Summit Agenda The high-stakes meeting between the two leaders addresses several pressing matters that could reshape the global landscape: The Iran Conflict and Hormuz Strait Crisis Trump is eager for China to lean on Tehran to advance peace talks and reopen the strait of Hormuz. To now, Beijing has sat back and watched the US struggle against Iran, at least publicly. But with about half of China's crude oil imports passing through the strait, Xi does want the waterway unblocked. China knows its exports will suffer if a global recession results from an oil supply crisis. Complicating the picture, the US this week put sanctions on several Chinese firms accused of assisting Iranian oil shipments and supplying satellite imagery allegedly used in Iranian military operations, claims that Beijing denied. Trump's arrival comes after Iran's foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, visited Beijing last week. Taiwan: The Flashpoint in US-China Relations Beijing is keen to push the US on Taiwan, with Trump saying he is prepared to raise the issue of arms sales to the island, which China claims as a breakaway territory despite never having ruled it. In December, Trump authorised an $11bn arms package for Taiwan, the largest weapons sale ever to the island, but no shipments have been made yet. Xi may seek changes in how the US refers to Taiwan. Ideally, from the perspective of Beijing, this would be a statement from Washington "opposing" Taiwan's independence rather than "not supporting" it. Taiwan will be watching closely. Just two weeks ago, China's foreign minister in a phone call with Marco Rubio urged the US to "make the right choices" on Taiwan. With Trump known to veer off script, John Kirby, a former US state department and Pentagon spokesperson cautioned: "They just have to be so extraordinarily precise when you're talking about Taiwan because, quite frankly, the stakes are enormously high." The AI Cold War: Technological Supremacy at Stake China and the US are locked into a race on artificial intelligence that is becoming something of a technological cold war. In April, the White House accused China of stealing US AI labs' intellectual property on an industrial scale, claims Beijing denied. Meanwhile, Beijing has been frustrated by Washington's reluctance to allow Nvidia to export its most powerful processing chips to China. In January, the White House said Nvidia could export its second most powerful chip, the H200, but no shipments have been sent yet. Analysts and ethics leaders hope Trump and Xi will discuss non-binding AI guidelines, including sharing information about AI misuse and safety, which are seen as critical guardrails amid the advent of AI weaponry and military adoption. Trade War: Rare Earth Minerals and Economic Leverage Trump has repeatedly threatened China over trade, imposing tariffs above 140% last year. But Xi held some cards of his own and did not fold. Instead, China blocked exports of its rare earth minerals and magnets to the US. Trump, finally, backed down. The US has depleted notable levels of its weapons arsenal in the war against Iran, with many weaponry components requiring critical minerals that are linked to supply chains dominated by China. China is expected to announce purchases related to Boeing airplanes, American agriculture and energy, US officials have said. In turn, Beijing wants the US to ease curbs on exports of advanced semiconductors. Beijing also wants to reduce barriers to investment in the US, and hopes to establish a Board of Investment to match the Trump-back Board of Trade. Fentanyl: The Drug War and Political Posturing Fentanyl is a key item on Trump's agenda this week, Politico reported, citing an administration official granted anonymity to preview the closed-door sessions. The US has long accused Chinese businesses of knowingly supplying the chemical precursors to Mexican cartels who use them to make the drug. Trump knows that being seen to press China hard over fentanyl and precursors plays well with his Maga base. But Trump lost important leverage on the fentanyl front when China defied his tariffs threats. In March, the US and China clashed over fentanyl and trade at a UN drugs meeting. China wants to be removed from the state department's annual list of "major drug transit or illicit drug producing countries", due to be updated in September.
#Trump #Xi Jinping #US-China Relations
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Entertainment May 13, 2026

Cannes: The Beautiful Grueling Circus That Defines Cinema

Agnès Poirier reflects on the Cannes Film Festival as a unique, exhausting yet magical experience t…
The Unparalleled Experience of CannesNothing prepares you for the shock that is the Cannes film festival: the adrenaline, the fatigue, the elation and the emotion, but also the hunger, the anger, the magic and the ridicule. For young cinephiles, and for almost everybody who works in the film industry, it is the mecca of cinema and has been so for nearly eight decades. Anyone going for the first time this week, as I did 25 years ago, should not listen to the old grognards – Cannes' battle-worn veterans – who will lament that the festival has become an abominable circus and swear this year will be their last. It is a circus, and you can bet they will be back for as long as their knees can take it. For there is nothing quite like it.From Resistance to Global Cinema HubBorn to counteract Benito Mussolini's Venice film festival, its first edition was planned for September 1939, but Adolf Hitler had other plans. The previous year, under pressure from Berlin and Rome, the Venice film festival's top prize, the Coppa Mussolini, was handed to Leni Riefenstahl's propaganda film Olympia, prompting the French, British and American delegates to walk out. Hence Cannes, conceived as the festival of the "free world". More than 80 years later, for all its sins, it has remained faithful to that founding promise.The Expansive Scale of Modern CannesOver the decades, Cannes has mutated into an ever-hungrier mammoth, needing more space, and more venues, as it attracts an increasing number of journalists and professionals. A purpose-built Palais des Festivals had to be erected in the 1980s. "The bunker", as we have come to call it, is not exactly beautiful but brutally efficient at managing Cannes' mind-boggling crowds. This year, about 40,000 accredited festival-goers are descending on the French Riviera from 140 different countries, with dozens of films selected across all sidebars. At the same time, the Marché du Film, running alongside the festival since the late 1960s, is gathering about 16,000 participants, with thousands of films and projects up for sale. Cannes is both a summit for the cinema elite and a giant film bazaar.Three Worlds Colliding at La CroisetteFor 11 days in May, three different worlds lead parallel lives – critics, deal-makers and red-carpet royalty – colliding almost by accident on the seafront boulevard known as La Croisette. Hundreds of critics watch multiple films a day with monastic discipline. When they give in to parties, they bitterly regret it the next morning. You can spot some of us sleeping through entire screenings; how some colleagues manage to review films is a mystery. I remember a well-known French critic who had such vivid dreams in the darkness that he became convinced they were scenes in the films. His reviews were full of brilliant analysis of moments that did not exist.We critics rush between screenings, press conferences, interviews, our desks and the bunker's free espresso machines, often forgetting to eat or even pee. Downstairs, in the bunker's basement, and in hotel suites and rented apartments, the film market runs day and night: buyers juggle numbers, producers charm, directors and screenwriters fight for their vision. Above them floats Cannes' top layer – stars and "talent" spending hours in hair and makeup before climbing the 24 steps of the red carpet in borrowed couture and jewellery. When people in the industry groan, "oh God, it's Cannes again", it is this collision of financial anxiety, choreographed glamour and sheer exhaustion they are bracing themselves for.The Magic and Meaning Behind the GlamourThese worlds sometimes collide in the most poetic or grotesque ways. One morning, rushing to my first screening at 7.30am, I was walking along the Croisette when I saw, coming towards me, slightly dishevelled in a tuxedo, Jack Nicholson on his way back to his hotel after a long night. I smiled, he smiled back. He was alone, no bodyguards, no chaperones. Those were the days. I also shared a lift with Takeshi Kitano in full samurai attire, and I will never forget turning into a hotel corridor and finding myself nose to nose with Max von Sydow – Ingmar Bergman's medieval knight from The Seventh Seal. My cinephile heart skipped a beat.One of my favourite sidebars in Cannes, alongside the competition where you watch the year's best crop of films, is Cannes Classics, showing restored world masterpieces and documentaries about cinema. I always start the festival there: it is the best way to reset and begin afresh. Then I am ready for the 10-day onslaught of motion pictures, and for the magic moment that precedes each Cannes screening – the festival's own jingle, a palm ascending the red carpet from underwater and then into the sky, lifted by the ethereal arpeggios of Camille Saint-Saëns's Carnival of the Animals.Cannes: Enduring Symbol of Cinematic ResistanceIn 1955, Cannes gave its first official Palme d'Or to Delbert Mann's Marty; half a century later I found myself befriending its wonderful star, Betsy Blair, on the Croisette. I had the joy of seeing Ken Loach twice climbing those steps to collect the Palme, escorted by police outriders from Nice airport as if he were a head of state. I watched Iranian directors Jafar Panahi and Mohammad Rasoulof showing films at peril to their lives. For all the craziness of the red carpet and the samurai outfits, Cannes never forgets that it was founded as a gesture of resistance. That, as much as the glamour and the exhaustion, is why we keep going back.
#Cannes Film Festival #Agnès Poirier #cinema
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Entertainment May 13, 2026

Brett Ratner Joins Trump on China Trip to Scout Rush Hour 4 Locations

Brett Ratner, director of the Rush Hour movies, is accompanying Donald Trump on his trip to China t…
The Unlikely Entourage Member Brett Ratner, the director behind the Rush Hour movies and a documentary on Melania Trump, is accompanying Donald Trump to China for his summit with Xi Jinping. Ratner was among the group of CEOs and top executives from major US tech and finance firms, including Apple’s Tim Cook, Tesla’s Elon Musk and BlackRock’s Larry Fink, who boarded Air Force One. Scouting for Rush Hour 4 Locations Trump’s spokesperson, Victoria Palmer-Moore, said he would use the trip to scout for filming locations for the latest instalment of the Rush Hour franchise. She added that Ratner plans to shoot “a lot” of Rush Hour 4 in China. The Rush Hour Franchise Revival The original Rush Hour was an instant hit in 1998, topping the US box office charts upon its release. Its sequel Rush Hour 2 was also a huge commercial success in 2001, before Ratner’s critically and commercially disappointing Rush Hour 3 was released in 2007. Despite rumours of a fourth film circulating for almost two decades, with Chan suggesting in 2017 that he and Tucker had agreed upon a new script, development had stalled until Trump intervened in late 2025. Ratner's Comeback Trump’s support has allowed Ratner to make a comeback in Hollywood after being sidelined after accusations of sexual misconduct during the #MeToo movement in 2017. Ratner denies all of the allegations. In 2026, Ratner released Amazon-backed documentary Melania, which followed the first lady during the 20 days before Trump’s second inauguration. The China Connection The president is reportedly a huge fan of Rush Hour, which revolves around detectives James Carter and Yan Naing Lee – played by Chris Tucker and Jackie Chan respectively – as they navigate their cultural differences and investigate crimes in Hong Kong, Paris and Los Angeles. Last November, Trump encouraged billionaire Larry Ellison, the primary financial force behind Paramount Skydance, to bring back the franchise once Paramount went through with its controversial purchase of Warner Bros.
#Brett Ratner #Donald Trump #Rush Hour
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Politics May 13, 2026

Trump heads to Beijing for high‑stakes summit with Xi as Iran war looms

Donald Trump will land in Beijing for the first U.S. presidential visit to China in nearly a decade…
Trump’s Beijing Arrival Sets Stage for a High‑Stakes SummitDonald Trump is scheduled to land in Beijing on Wednesday evening, marking the first visit by a U.S. president to China in nearly ten years. The two‑day meeting with President Xi Jinping is framed as a chance to restore U.S. prestige after the protracted war in Iran.Diplomatic and Business Agenda of the VisitThe delegation will include more than a dozen American business leaders, notably Elon Musk of Tesla and Tim Cook of Apple. Trump has promised a “big, fat hug” from Xi and expects headline‑grabbing deals, including a new board of trade to coordinate bilateral purchases.Economic Stakes: 500 Boeing Jets and a Fragile Trade Truce500 Boeing 737 Max jets are slated for sale – one of the largest orders in the aircraft maker’s history.The U.S. and China remain under a “fragile tariff truce” established last autumn.China’s economy is under pressure from sluggish domestic demand and a prolonged property crisis.Geopolitical Ripple: Iran War, Taiwan, and Global EnergyThe Iran‑Israel conflict has entered its third month, with Tehran tightening control of the Strait of Hormuz, a route that carries roughly a fifth of the world’s oil supply.Washington has sanctioned several Chinese firms for allegedly supporting Iranian oil shipments.Trump’s willingness to discuss U.S. arms sales to Taiwan could signal a shift in the long‑standing U.S. policy of not consulting Beijing on Taiwan matters.Looking Ahead: Scenarios for the Trump‑Xi DialogueAnalysts see three possible outcomes: a breakthrough that eases sanctions on China and secures Iranian de‑escalation; a stalemate that leaves the tariff truce intact but no substantive progress on Iran; or a deterioration that could reignite trade tensions and complicate U.S. commitments to Taiwan.
#Donald Trump #Xi Jinping #Elon Musk
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