Trump Expects Taiwan On Agenda For Xi Meet, Predicts Trade Deal

“I think when we finish our meetings in South Korea, China and I will have a really fair and really great trade deal together,” Trump told reporters at the White House.

China has significantly reduced imports of US soybeans in response to Trump's aggressive trade war. (Photo: NDTV Profit)

President Donald Trump listed rare earths, fentanyl, soybeans and Taiwan as the US’ top issues with China, underlining the divisive topics the two sides plan to tackle at the negotiating table as a fragile trade truce nears its expiration.

“I don’t want them to play the rare earth game with us,” Trump said on Air Force One on Sunday as he headed back to Washington from Florida. Days earlier, the US leader threatened an additional 100% tariff on Chinese products after Beijing vowed to exert broad controls on the minerals.

Trump also said the US wanted China “to stop with the fentanyl,” a reference to his accusation that the Chinese government has failed to curb exports of the drug and its precursor chemicals, contributing to the American opioid crisis. Another key demand was for the world’s No. 2 economy to resume soybean purchases.

Trump followed those comments on Monday by saying he anticipated discussing China’s territorial ambitions regarding the self-governing island of Taiwan when he meets with his counterpart, Xi Jinping, next week at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in South Korea, while sidestepping questions about whether he expected China to propose trade concessions in exchange for greater control over the island.

“I assume that’s going to be one of the things, but I’m not going to talk about that now,” Trump told reporters during a meeting with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.

Defense cooperation agreements with Australia could serve as a deterrent to Chinese military action against Taiwan, Trump said, downplaying the chances of a military conflict in the region.

“Now that doesn’t mean it’s not the apple of his eye, because probably it is, but I don’t see anything happening,” Trump said of Xi.

Also Read: India Will Be To Services, What China Has Been To Manufacturing: NSE Chief Economist

The president reiterated his threat to follow through on his tariff hike on Chinese goods “if there isn’t a deal” by his Nov. 1 deadline, and take other actions including cutting off shipments of commercial airline parts. But he also stressed he plans to keep the Xi meeting and said Beijing’s leadership has been “very respectful” of the US.

“I think when we finish our meetings in South Korea, China and I will have a really fair and really great trade deal together,” Trump told reporters at the White House.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has said the US and China will hold talks later this week in Malaysia. That came after he met virtually with Vice Premier He Lifeng on Friday, discussions that Chinese state media described as a constructive exchange of views.

A little over a week ago, Trump raised the prospect of setting a sky-high tariff rate and canceling his first in-person meeting with Xi since he returned to the White House, angry over the Chinese government’s vow to exert broad controls on rare-earth elements.

That threatens a trade truce that is set to run out on Nov. 10 unless extended. Months of tentative stability in the US-China relationship have been upended in recent weeks after Washington broadened some tech restrictions and proposed levies on Chinese ships entering US ports. China responded with parallel moves and outlined tighter export controls on rare earths and other critical materials.

When asked in an interview with Fox News on Sunday about his latest threat to raise the tariff on Chinese goods, Trump said the levy was “not sustainable” though “it could stand.”

Soybeans have been a key source of leverage for China in the trade dispute. Last year, China bought some $12.6 billion worth of the oilseed but this year that figure is zero. China has instead turned to purchases from South America.

Frustrations among US farmers — key to his support base — are mounting, with many running out of storage for unsold beans and facing pressure from lower prices. They are eagerly awaiting aid from Washington, which is held up because of the government shutdown.

In August, Trump urged China to quadruple its buying of soybeans from the US. Underscoring his frustration that it isn’t happening, last week he threatened to stop imports of cooking oil from China, which he accused of intentionally “causing difficulty for our Soybean Farmers.”

The fentanyl issue has long been seen as an area where the two sides could make progress, though it still bedevils ties.

Earlier this year, Trump imposed tariffs of 20% on all Chinese goods over the flow of illegal fentanyl into the US. Those fees stack on top of his Liberation Day levies. In June, Beijing tightened controls over two chemicals that can be used to make the drug but China has also repeatedly said it is up to the US to fix its drug problem.

The issues raised by Trump “are highly tangible and resonate with specific, powerful domestic constituencies in the US,” said Sun Chenghao, a fellow at the Center for International Security and Strategy at Tsinghua University in Beijing. “By focusing on these, Trump aims for quick, demonstrable victories that can be communicated easily to the public, rather than engaging in the protracted and technically complex negotiations required to alter China’s fundamental industrial model.”

When asked at a regular press briefing in Beijing on Monday about Trump’s remarks, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said that a “trade war does not serve the interests of either party, and both sides should negotiate and resolve relevant issues on the basis of equality, respect and mutual benefit.”

China has tried to ease concern over the escalation of curbs on rare earths — critical to making fighter jets, smartphones and even car seats — to soften an international backlash.

In discussions on the sidelines of the International Monetary Fund’s annual meetings last week, Chinese delegates told their counterparts from around the world that tightened export controls will not harm normal trade flows, Bloomberg News reported earlier, citing people familiar with the matter.

The officials said China sought to build a long-term mechanism with the measure, and it was introduced as a response to US provocations such as the expansion of sanctions to capture subsidiaries of blacklisted companies, according to the people, who asked not to be named because the exchanges were private.

Also Read: Trump Says US Will 'Be Fine' With China As Trade Talks Near

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