torsdag 14. mai 2026

Trump offers platitudes while Xi warns of possible confrontation during China summit

Chinese leader Xi Jinping offered stark warnings about avoiding possible clashes between his nation and the U.S. on Thursday and even cautioned visiting President Donald Trump that Washington’s handling of its relations with Taiwan could lead to “conflicts” that might put “the entire relationship in great jeopardy.”

The stern tone was a sharp contrast to Trump, who opened the highly anticipated summit with Xi by praising his Chinese counterpart and declaring that “it’s an honor to be your friend.”

The contrast underscored just how far apart the leaders remain on thorny issues including the war in Iran, trade disputes and Washington’s relationship with Taiwan — and suggested that Trump and Xi’s highly anticipated meetings are likely to be longer on pageantry and symbolism than major breakthroughs.

Live updates: Xi and Trump wrap up bilateral meeting after 2 hours of talks

U.S. President Donald Trump is in Beijing for a crucial series of meetings with Chinese leader Xi Jinping. Few breakthroughs are expected on divisive issues such as the Iran war, trade, technology and Taiwan.
In a closed-door meeting, Xi warned Trump that differences over Taiwan, a self-governed island that Beijing claims as its own territory, could bring U.S. and China to clashes or conflict, Chinese state media reported. Trump in December authorized an $11 billion arms package for Taiwan, but has not yet moved forward with delivery.

Trump hopes to focus talks on trade and deals for China to buy more agricultural products and passenger planes, setting up a board to address their differences and avoid a repeat of the trade war ignited last year after Trump’s tariff hikes. The visit occurs at a delicate moment for Trump’s presidency, as his popularity at home has been weighed down by the U.S. and Israel’s war with Iran and rising inflation as a consequence of that conflict.

BRICS foreign minister meet in India as Iran war, oil prices and divisions test the bloc's unity

Foreign ministers from the BRICS nations began a two-day meeting in New Delhi on Thursday as the expanding bloc faces divisions over the war in Iran, rising energy prices and growing global economic uncertainty.

The meeting brings together diplomats from Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa along with newer member countries. It comes as the war in Iran has disrupted global energy supplies and driven up oil prices and coincides with U.S. President Donald Trump’s meeting with Chinese leader Xi Jinping in Beijing.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi and Russia’s top diplomat Sergey Lavrov are attending. China is represented by Ambassador Xu Feihong while Foreign Minister Wang Yi remains in the Chinese capital during Trump’s visit.

The Coming Food Crisis in South Asia

Disrupted oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz may appear, at first glance, to be another episode of energy market instability. But the implications, especially for South Asia, run much deeper. Disruptions in oil supply are not only causing a surge in fuel prices; they are a clear warning of an impending food crisis driven by fertilizer shortages, rising production costs, and increasingly fragile agri-food systems. A similar pattern was evident during the 2007-2008 global crisis, when fertilizer prices nearly tripled, and global food prices surged by more than 50 percent.

Modern agri-food systems depend heavily on energy, not only for transport and irrigation but also for fertilizer production. Nitrogen fertilizers, in particular, rely on natural gas. When energy supplies tighten, production slows and prices increase. What begins as an energy shock can quickly move into the agricultural system.

Jury convicts man accused of running secret Chinese spy outpost in New York City

A man accused of running a secret Chinese spy outpost from a nondescript office building in Manhattan’s Chinatown neighborhood was convicted Wednesday of acting as an illegal foreign agent.

Lu Jianwang, 64, was also convicted of obstructing justice by deleting text messages that U.S. prosecutors said included orders from Beijing to silence, harass and intimidate pro-democracy dissidents. He was acquitted on a related conspiracy charge.

The weeklong trial in Brooklyn federal court pitted U.S. concerns about China’s crackdown on dissidents against the defense’s contention that prosecutors twisted a well-meaning Chinese American community leader’s bureaucratic misstep to put him in prison.

Trump-Xi summit: a new arms control era can begin in Beijing

US President Donald Trump is meeting Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing, with the arms control architecture, global and bilateral alike, in collapse. The Eleventh Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) Review Conference, now underway in New York, is sliding toward a third successive failure to produce a consensus document.

New START expired on February 5, leaving the US and Russia without binding limits on their strategic arsenals for the first time since the 1970s. The global arms control system is on life support at a time of unprecedented global nuclear risks.

Every permanent member of the Security Council (P5) is now expanding their nuclear capabilities. Artificial intelligence is entering the targeting, surveillance, and decision-support systems that surround nuclear forces, compressing the time leaders have to think before they act.

Why Trump will ‘limp’ into China and likely leave empty-handed

Since 2013, Chinese leader Xi Jinping has been looking for a strategy to make Asia’s biggest economy great again. Little did he know it would be Donald Trump’s presidency. Fifteen months ago, as Trump 2.0 got underway, the White House radiated confidence. Trump advisers argued that sweeping tariffs would pressure Beijing to yield, redirecting the gains of a US$53 trillion economic relationship sharply in Washington’s favor.

Trump’s arrival in Beijing this week comes at a moment when, to use his own phrasing, Xi’s China “holds all the cards.”

China’s state-run Global Times goes even further, arguing that the United States is limping into the visit like a “giant with a limp” as the Iran conflict spirals, oil prices surge past US$100 a barrel, tariffs strain relations with US allies, and court rulings chip away at Washington’s leverage abroad.

onsdag 13. mai 2026

US-China head-to-head: Explained in 11 maps and charts

US President Donald Trump will meet Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing on May 14 and 15, following weeks of delays due to the US-Israel war on Iran.

The talks are expected to focus on trade relations and mark the first time a US president has visited China in nearly a decade. In recent decades, the US and China have emerged as the world’s dominant superpowers, frequently seen as locked in a contest for who sits atop the world order. A quarter of a century ago, by contrast, the US dwarfed China in most major indicators, but today, Beijing is regarded as the factory of the world and is outpacing its Western counterpart in many regards.

In this head-to-head, we measure the two countries in terms of economics, military, resources and technology.

Trump and Xi to meet in Beijing: The key issues shaping the China summit

United States President Donald Trump has departed for Beijing ahead of a high-stakes summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping, after weeks of unsuccessful US efforts to persuade China to help bring Iran back to negotiations and ease tensions around the Strait of Hormuz.

The leaders of the world’s two largest economies are due to meet on Thursday and Friday during Trump’s first visit to China since 2017, with talks expected to focus on trade, Taiwan, artificial intelligence and the war involving Iran. Here is what we know about the upcoming summit and the key issues expected to dominate the agenda.

Trump and Xi dialed down the trade war, but challenges lurk at their China summit

President Donald Trump claims that America has increasingly profited from trade with China, largely playing down the tensions over rare earth minerals, tariffs and emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence that could rupture relations between the world’s two largest economies.

Trump departs Tuesday for a summit in Beijing with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, in what could potentially be the first of four meetings this year.

“We’re doing a lot of business with China and making a lot of money,” Trump said last week. “We’re making a lot of money — it’s different than it used to be.”

The summit is primarily about keeping the economic relationship stable, with only modest policy announcements expected. A trade truce reached last October likely will be extended, while China may announce plans to buy American soybeans, beef and Boeing airplanes. U.S. officials also have teased the creation of a Board of Trade to keep the sides talking on economic issues.

The shadowy network of Chinese oil refineries funding Iran

A few hundred miles from where Chinese leader Xi Jinping will roll out the red carpet for President Donald Trump this week, a shadowy ecosystem has long been at work pumping billions of dollars into Iran’s economy – now helping keep Tehran afloat in defiance of the US.

These are the ports, pipelines, and oil refineries of Shandong province and its borderlands, where the hulking architecture of oil storage tanks and spindly profiles of smokestacks jut up from barren, coastal flatlands. Here, so-called “teapot refineries” – small, independent oil companies that operate with the permission of Beijing – quietly process US-sanctioned Iranian crude into gas, diesel and petrochemicals for the world’s second largest economy.

Pomp and pageantry: for Chinese officials preparing for a Trump visit, every second counts

With brisk strides, Chinese leader Xi Jinping will descend 39 red-carpeted steps outside Beijing’s Great Hall of the People, a political landmark at the very heart of the Chinese capital.

Each step is timed so that he walks past top officials from the Chinese and US delegations, reaching a discreet point on the red carpet within seconds of the arrival of his guest, US President Donald Trump. On cue, ceremonial music begins.

This level of precise, by-the-second planning, demonstrated during Trump’s first visit to Beijing in 2017, will be on show again from Thursday, with the US president expected to visit to the Temple of Heaven, an ancient place of worship where emperors once prayed for good harvests, and Zhongnanhai, the secretive headquarters of the ruling Communist Party – about which little is publicly revealed.

Trump to land in China ahead of crucial Xi meeting

US President Donald Trump will soon land in China’s capital for the start of a multi-day state visit that carries global consequences, as the world’s two largest economies frame their trade relationship — and the tone of their rivalry. After Trump’s first night in Beijing, he will meet with Chinese leader Xi Jinping to discuss a range of thorny issuesincluding tech, trade and Taiwan.

The US-Israeli war with Iran, and ensuing global energy crisis, looms over the trip. Trump is expected to encourage Xi to push China-ally Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint vital to oil trade, and agree to a peace deal. Traveling with Trump are top officials and more than a dozen business leaders including Tim Cook and Elon Musk. Catch up on all the key developments here.

China First: How China Sees the World Now

President Donald Trump is scheduled to meet with China’s president, Xi Jinping, in Beijing on Thursday for a two-day summit. The question that hovers over the encounter is deceptively simple: what does China want?

This question has been posed since the founding of the People’s Republic and carries a sharper edge today. In early March, the Center for International Security and Strategy at Tsinghua University, one of China’s most prominent foreign affairs think tanks, gathered the “good and great” of Beijing’s strategists, some former senior Chinese officials, and a contingent of foreign scholars for its annual dialogue. The conversation circled around the same question: What does China want?

Former Philippine ‘drug war’ police chief runs away from government agents to avoid international arrest warrant

Scurrying through the backhalls and stairwells of the Philippine Senate, trailed by aides and falling over at least once, the large, bald man was trying to evade local agents. At the center of this comedic cat-and-mouse chase was Senator Ronald Dela Rosa, a longtime ally of former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, who has gone from a powerful enforcer of a bloody drug crackdown to a wanted criminal on the run.

The scene was captured on CCTV and quickly became talk of the entire country.

Prosecutors at the International Criminal Court (ICC) accuse Dela Rosa of conspiring with Duterte in alleged crimes against humanity, during a brutal anti-drug campaign that killed thousands.

tirsdag 12. mai 2026

Torbjørn Færøvik: "The Genius" Will Not Have an Easy Time in Beijing

Tomorrow Donald Trump lands in Beijing. Since he does not read books and lacks knowledge about many things, he may know precious little about what happened in 1972, when Richard Nixon broke the ice and opened a new chapter in relations between the United States and China.

It was almost unbelievable. On a chilly February day 54 years ago, a smiling Nixon walked into Mao’s study and said: “Mr. Chairman! History has brought us together. The question is whether we, with our different ways of thinking, can achieve a breakthrough that will serve not only our two countries, but the whole world.”

“Seize the hour, and seize the day!” Mao muttered. He was ill and weakened, and could barely speak.

The United States and China had long been bitter enemies and had no diplomatic relations. But now there they sat, Mao and Nixon, each in an armchair, smiling at one another. The meeting lasted just under an hour. Days later, they agreed on a joint communiqué that created the framework for their future relationship. The visit did not end in full normalization, but it was nevertheless a strategic breakthrough for both countries.

Why the EU sees Chinese solar tech as a major security risk

The European Commission has moved to block EU funding for Chinese-made solar technology over fears it could pose a security threat to Europe's power grid and even cause major blackouts.

The decision, which was confirmed on May 4, reflects growing concern in Brussels that Europe's dependence on Chinese green technology is making the bloc vulnerable to security threats. The commission's funding ban is focused on solar inverters, which are often described as the brain of a solar power system. These solar inverters are the devices that convert solar energy into usable electricity. They are connected to the internet and can often be accessed remotely for maintenance and software updates.

US: LA area mayor to plead guilty to acting as Chinese agent

A mayor of a city in Southern California has agreed to plead guilty to a charge of acting as a foreign agent of the Chinese government, US officials said on Monday. Eileen Wang, the mayor of Arcadia, was charged in April to a single felony count of acting in the United States as an illegal agent of a foreign government, the US Attorney's Office in the Central District of California said on Monday.

The charge carries a maximum term of 10 years in prison in the US. A19-page plea deal was unsealed ​with the charging document on Monday. Wang resigned as mayor within hours of her case being made public, Arcadia City Council's website showed. She was elected to a five-person city council in November 2022 and assumed the position of mayor in February, on a rotating basis.

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