President Trump announces delay of Beijing meeting with Xi Jinping due to escalating Iran conflict, with world map and flags in background.
President Trump announces delay of Beijing meeting with Xi Jinping due to escalating Iran conflict, with world map and flags in background.
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Trump confirms delay of Beijing meeting with Xi amid Iran conflict

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US President Donald Trump has confirmed a delay to his planned trip to Beijing to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping, due to the escalating US-Israel war with Iran. The visit, originally scheduled for March 31 to April 2, has been postponed by five or six weeks. Trump stated that China is fine with the delay and relations remain strong.

On March 17-18, 2026, US President Donald Trump announced at the White House a postponement of his planned Beijing visit from March 31 to April 2—the first by a US president since 2017—due to the ongoing US-Israel war against Iran. Trump said he needs to stay in Washington to oversee the conflict. Speaking on Tuesday after a bilateral meeting with Irish leader Micheal Martin for St Patrick's Day, Trump told reporters: “We’re working with China. They were fine with it … I look forward to seeing President Xi. He looks forward to seeing me, I think.” He described US-China economic ties as “very good” and the relationship as improved, adding the meeting would happen “in about five or six weeks.” The BBC reported Trump said on Monday the delay was for about a month solely to manage the war, denying prior comments to the Financial Times linking it to China's help on the Strait of Hormuz. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, leading Paris talks, stated the postponement was unrelated to China's Iran stance or trade issues, emphasizing Trump's need to coordinate from DC. China's foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian said on Tuesday: “China and the US are in communication on the timing of President Trump’s visit to China.” Chinese analysts described the delay as a strategic opportunity for more substantive results without derailing stabilisation momentum. Recent US-China Paris negotiations on investments, tariffs, and sanctions saw minor progress, with Chinese trade representative Li Chenggang noting consensus on some issues and expectations for further talks.

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X discussions confirm Trump's postponement of the Beijing summit with Xi Jinping by five to six weeks amid the US-Israel-Iran conflict, with China reportedly agreeable. News outlets like Reuters and SCMP dominate shares, emphasizing impacts on trade talks and foreign policy. Sentiments include neutral reporting, skepticism about the war's prolongation weakening US leverage, and views of strategic prioritization. Analysts note risks to US-China relations amid oil disruptions and Hormuz tensions.

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Illustration of Donald Trump and Xi Jinping's handshake in Beijing for Trump's state visit.
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China confirms Donald Trump state visit to Beijing from May 13 to 15

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China’s foreign ministry announced on Monday that US President Donald Trump will pay a state visit to the country from May 13 to 15 at the invitation of President Xi Jinping. It will be the first such trip by a US president since 2017.

The anticipated meeting between the US and Chinese presidents will take place from May 13 to 15 in Beijing, though the encounter is marked by tensions surrounding the war between Iran and Washington.

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U.S. President Donald Trump departed for Beijing on Tuesday for a high-stakes summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping. The meeting aims to ease tensions in their strategic rivalry and foster cooperation on issues such as Iran.

Reuters reported on Friday that a US$14 billion arms package to Taiwan, possibly the largest ever, is ready for US President Donald Trump's approval and could be announced after his visit to Beijing. Despite the delay in the Trump-Xi summit, Taiwan's Defence Minister Wellington Koo Li-hsiung reassured on Tuesday that Taipei had received no indication of any sales delay. Broader concerns loom as the US depletes ammunition stockpiles in the war on Iran.

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Kurt Campbell, a former Biden administration official, expects the rescheduled Trump-Xi summit to go well despite the Iran conflict, with both leaders being ‘extraordinarily polite and engaged’. He said China is prepared to invite President Trump to Beijing under almost any circumstances to stabilise US-China relations, at least for a period.

A week after the initial direct talks, President Donald Trump announced the second round of US-Iran negotiations will begin this week in Islamabad, Pakistan, despite fresh clashes in the Strait of Hormuz. Vice President JD Vance will skip the meetings over Secret Service security concerns about short notice, with Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner leading the US side. Trump warned of devastating strikes if Iran rejects the deal.

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Chinese President Xi Jinping and U.S. President Donald Trump met in Beijing last week and agreed to build a constructive, strategically stable bilateral relationship. The summit is expected to guide ties between the world's two largest economies for the next three years and beyond.

 

 

 

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