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AdvertisementBeijing: US President Donald Trump has landed in Beijing for his highly anticipated summit with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, with the Iran war, trade and artificial intelligence the key talking points of their high-stakes meeting.
President Donald Trump is greeted by China’s Vice President Han Zheng as he arrives on Air Force One at Beijing Capital International Airport in Beijing. APThe president was to be greeted by Chinese Vice President Han Zheng; Xie Feng, China’s ambassador to Washington; Ma Zhaoxu, executive vice minister of foreign affairs; as well as the US envoy to Beijing, David Perdue, according to the White House.Chinese youth, a military honor guard and military band join Chinese officials to welcome US President Donald Trump as he arrives on Air Force One at Beijing Capital International Airport.Getty ImagesThe welcoming ceremony is to include some 300 Chinese youths, a military honour guard and a military band.AdvertisementPresident Donald Trump walks to his motorcade as he is greeted by Chinese officials at Beijing Capital International Airport. Getty ImagesThe US president has no public events beyond his arrival on Wednesday’s schedule, but is set to meet with Xi a series of times on Thursday and Friday.Trump’s state visit to China – the first by a US president in almost a decade – comes saddled with the baggage of the Iran war, which has triggered a global energy crisis, and injected fresh tensions into the talks due to Beijing’s close diplomatic ties with Tehran as the largest buyer of its oil.Both Trump and Xi are seeking to stabilise their fragile trade truce, secured in South Korea in October, across two days of talks at the Great Hall, an evening banquet, and visits to the Temple of Heaven and Zhongnanhai, the Chinese leadership compound.Many analysts regard the Middle East conflict as having shifted leverage further in China’s favour since the two leaders last met on the sidelines of the APEC summit last year.AdvertisementPresident Donald Trump waves from the stairs of Air Force One on his way to China to meet President Xi Jinping.APAs he departed Washington for Beijing on Tuesday (US time), Trump downplayed the prospect of the war hanging over the summit talks.“I don’t think we need any help with Iran. We’ll win it one way or the other, peacefully or otherwise,” he told reporters before boarding Air Force One.Trump is expected to seek “wins” on trade by locking in Chinese purchases of American food and aircraft, saying he’ll be talking to Xi about trade “more than anything else”.Other US officials have indicated the Iran war will be a key agenda item, including US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who this month urged China to help reopen the Strait of Hormuz.AdvertisementThe war, launched by the US and Israel in February, has drained US military stockpiles, worsened cost-of-living pressures for Americans ahead of crucial midterm elections in November, and eroded US standing on the international stage.“The Chinese are acutely aware that this is a major concern for the Americans, and as a result, it’s a substantial source of leverage for Beijing,” said Evan Medeiros, from the Asia Group, and a former China adviser on the Obama administration’s National Security Council.“The question is: is Trump willing to pay whatever price Beijing puts on their Chinese co-operation on the Iran issue?”Xi is widely expected to use the talks to emphasise China’s claims to Taiwan, and to seek to convince Trump to roll back US weapons sales to the democratic island or harden the US’s official stance towards Taiwan independence from “does not support” to “opposes”.Trump’s visit comes days after Taiwan’s opposition-controlled parliament approved only two-thirds of a $US40 billion special defence budget to buy orders of US weapons authorised by Washington last year.AdvertisementTrump has delayed signing off on another $US14 billion arms package for months, triggering speculation among analysts that it could be used as a negotiating chip.Meanwhile, Chinese state media and officials were prefacing the US president’s arrival with strong statements about Taiwan as the most high risk “red line” in US-China relations.“We firmly oppose the United States engaging in any form of military ties with China’s Taiwan region, and firmly oppose the United States selling weapons to China’s Taiwan region,” Zhang Han, a spokesperson for China’s Taiwan Affairs Office, said on Wednesday.People ride a public bus past Tiananmen Gate in Beijing. Trump’s last visit to China was in 2017. Getty ImagesCommuters wait at a traffic light next to a police officer near Tiananmen Square, as the city gets ready to welcome the US president.Getty ImagesAdvertisementAccompanying Trump is a bevy of America’s top chief executives, including Apple’s Tim Cook, Tesla and SpaceX boss Elon Musk and chipmaker Nvidia’s boss Jensen Huang, who was a last-minute addition to the travelling party.Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is part of a contingent of business leaders joining Trump on his visit to China.APHe is also accompanied by family members Eric and Lara Trump and cabinet officials including Secretary of State Marco Rubio. One notable name absent from the travel party is first lady Melania Trump, who is not accompanying the US president.Her absence, first reported by the South China Morning Post, would suggest the serious nature of the visit, with pageantry giving way to hard-nosed negotiations.First lady Melania Trump is not joining the US president on the trip.APAdvertisementThe Trump administration is hoping to begin the process of establishing a “Board of Trade” with China to address differences between the countries. The board could help prevent the trade war ignited last year after Trump’s tariff rises, an action China countered through its control of rare earth minerals. That led to a one-year truce last October.Despite Trump’s outward confidence, China appears to be entering the meeting from “a much stronger place”, said Scott Kennedy, a senior adviser on Chinese business and economics at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think tank.China would like to reduce tech restrictions on accessing computer chips and find ways to reduce tariffs, among other goals.“But even if they don’t get much on any of those things, as long as there’s not a blow-up in the meeting and President Trump doesn’t go away and look to re-escalate, China basically comes out stronger,” Kennedy said.AdvertisementWith APGet a note directly from our foreign correspondents on what’s making headlines around the world. Sign up for our weekly What in the World newsletter.SaveYou have reached your maximum number of saved items.Remove items from your saved list to add more.ShareLicense this articleMore:Trump diplomacyTrade warsChina relationsXi JinpingDonald TrumpUSAChinaMiddle East at warIranAIOilLisa Visentin is the North Asia correspondent for The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age based in Beijing. She was previously a federal political correspondent based in Canberra.Connect via X or email.AdvertisementAdvertisement