Donald Trump and Xi Jinping at a Beijing summit discussing trade deals involving Boeing and soybeans, with references to Taiwan and Iran
Donald Trump and Xi Jinping at a Beijing summit discussing trade deals involving Boeing and soybeans, with references to Taiwan and Iran
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Trump touts Boeing, farm-export pledges after Beijing summit with Xi as Taiwan and Iran loom

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President Donald Trump returned from a mid-May trip to Beijing for talks with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, portraying the visit as a success and pointing to what he described as new trade commitments involving Boeing aircraft and large purchases of U.S. agricultural goods, including soybeans. The discussions unfolded against the backdrop of the war with Iran and renewed scrutiny of U.S. policy toward Taiwan, as Trump weighed whether to proceed with a major arms package for the island.

Trump described the trip as “an incredible visit” and said China had agreed to buy American-made airplanes through Boeing and to purchase “billions of dollars” in U.S. farm goods, including soybeans.

“The farmers are going to be very happy. They’re going to be buying billions of dollars of soybeans.”

The trip had been delayed because of the war with Iran, according to NPR’s account of the visit. Trump’s return to Washington also came as he faced domestic political pressure tied to inflation and gasoline prices, issues discussed in the same NPR segment.

Beyond trade, the summit drew attention for its implications for Taiwan. NPR reported that Trump did not commit during the trip to moving ahead with a multibillion-dollar U.S. arms package for Taiwan and said he would decide “shortly,” a stance that prompted concern among supporters of robust U.S. backing for the island.

On Iran, NPR said China did not publicly offer the help the administration had sought to pressure Tehran, though Trump said he discussed Iran with Xi and claimed Xi privately offered to help without providing details.

Separately, the White House later issued a fact sheet describing the Beijing meetings as producing “historic deals,” including an “initial purchase” approval for 200 Boeing aircraft and agricultural purchase targets extending beyond soybeans. Independent reporting has noted that some of the trade pledges were described publicly in broad terms, with limited detail released at the time about timing and implementation.

Что говорят люди

Users on X highlighted Trump's Boeing jet deals and agricultural trade pledges from the Beijing summit with Xi, while raising concerns over limited progress on Taiwan arms and Iran stability. Optimistic posts focused on economic wins, skeptical ones noted no major geopolitical breakthroughs, and neutral analyses emphasized managing tensions without concessions.

Связанные статьи

Donald Trump boarding his plane after meeting with Xi Jinping in Beijing
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Trump leaves China after summit with Xi yields limited results

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US President Donald Trump left Beijing on Friday after a three-day state visit to China. He held summit talks with President Xi Jinping focused on trade, Taiwan and artificial intelligence, though few major agreements were confirmed.

Chinese officials pressed the US to reduce the scale of arms deliveries to Taiwan during President Donald Trump’s recent trip to Beijing. The demands were raised as early as the start of the year.

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President Donald Trump met with Chinese leader Xi Jinping in Beijing this week for talks focused on trade, investments, and regional security issues. The two leaders discussed potential deals but made limited concrete progress.

Representative Ro Khanna urged President Trump to secure concrete gains during his current visit to China, including renewed soybean purchases and access to critical minerals.

Сообщено ИИ

U.S. President Donald Trump called Japanese counterpart Sanae Takaichi from Air Force One on Friday to explain his recent discussions with Chinese leader Xi Jinping. The conversation touched on Taiwan and other Indo-Pacific issues.

President Donald Trump spoke Tuesday at a Mack Trucks plant in Macungie, Pennsylvania, where he leaned heavily on his administration’s past economic actions and briefly addressed questions about public backing for defense spending connected to the U.S. war with Iran.

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