Le représentant Ro Khanna appelle à un renforcement de l'influence américaine dans les discussions de Trump avec la Chine

Le représentant Ro Khanna a exhorté le président Trump à obtenir des résultats concrets lors de sa visite actuelle en Chine, notamment la reprise des achats de soja et l'accès à des minéraux critiques.

S'exprimant sur NPR, le démocrate de Californie et membre haut placé du comité spécial de la Chambre sur la compétition stratégique entre les États-Unis et la Chine a souligné plusieurs priorités pour les entretiens avec le dirigeant chinois Xi Jinping. Il a déclaré que le président devait insister pour que la Chine reprenne ses achats de soja américain, qu'elle a largement abandonnés au profit de ceux du Brésil et de l'Argentine, afin de réduire le déficit commercial et de soutenir les agriculteurs américains confrontés à des coûts d'engrais élevés liés à la guerre en Iran.

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Diplomatic meeting between Chinese Premier Li Qiang, Foreign Minister Wang Yi, and US Senators in Beijing discussing cooperation.
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China urges practical cooperation with US in senate meeting

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Chinese Premier Li Qiang and Foreign Minister Wang Yi met a bipartisan US Senate delegation in Beijing on Thursday, calling for more dialogue and cooperation between the two countries ahead of President Donald Trump's planned visit.

In a House Foreign Affairs Committee session, a top State Department official articulated the administration’s stance: seeking a constructive relationship with China while withholding trust. The comments come ahead of President Trump’s trip to China from March 31 to April 2, his first since returning to office, to meet with Xi Jinping. Congressional hearings reflect bipartisan concern over persistent tensions in advanced technology markets.

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In February 2026, the United States at the inaugural Critical Minerals Ministerial sought to rally more than 50 countries and the European Union around a landmark framework to loosen China’s control over the global critical minerals trade. The effort aims to counter Beijing’s dominance in the sector.

China and the US are likely to secure several “very positive” outcomes but not a “grand bargain” at their presidential summit in Beijing in April, according to James Zimmerman, board chief of the American Chamber of Commerce in China. He said discussions are underway about Beijing setting up a fund to encourage Chinese investors to make manufacturing investments in the US, similar to those encouraged from Japan, Taiwan, and South Korea. China has shown receptiveness to such proposals but would require “protection” in return.

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A US court ruling on tariffs has lowered effective duties, easing tensions and steering the upcoming April summit between Xi Jinping and Donald Trump towards stability rather than escalation. Analysts say the decision strengthens China's negotiating position, with the summit expected to focus on extending a fragile truce rather than major concessions.

Former US envoy Nicholas Burns stressed that top-level engagement between the US and China is irreplaceable. Speaking via video link to the Yale Centre Beijing, he said US President Donald Trump would be right to focus on economic issues during his trip to Beijing for talks with President Xi Jinping. Burns noted numerous issues dividing the two countries that threaten peace.

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The U.S. Trade Representative’s office announced on Monday that it will seek further reductions in foreign tariffs and non-tariff barriers, enforce reciprocal trade deals, and consider new unfair trade practices investigations. These pledges form part of the Trump administration’s 2026 Trade Policy Agenda, released over a week after the Supreme Court struck down President Donald Trump’s tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.

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