A consummate dealmaker and showman, President Donald Trump has already declared victory and grabbed global attention ahead of his crucial meeting with Xi Jinping, scheduled for late Wednesday.
“I think we’re going to have a deal,” Trump said Wednesday in Gyeongju, South Korea. “I think it’ll be a good deal for both.”
The president claimed a U.S. trade deal with China was negotiated behind the scenes before he ever set foot in the region for his weeklong diplomatic swing through Asia, culminating in his highly anticipated face-to-face encounter with Xi.
“We don’t just meet in a vacuum; we’ve had a lot of discussions,” Trump said after landing in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on Saturday. Again on Monday, he vowed, “We are going to come away with the deal.”
Extreme volatility in relations between Washington and Beijing has thrust the leaders of the world’s two biggest economies straight into the limelight of an international drama with far-reaching economic consequences.
The Trump-Xi meeting is potentially the most consequential hour in global geopolitics this year.
Neil Thomas, Asia Society Policy Institute’s Center for China Analysis
“The Trump-Xi meeting is potentially the most consequential hour in global geopolitics this year,” Neil Thomas, a political analyst at the Asia Society Policy Institute’s Center for China Analysis, told MSNBC.
With the full backing of the Chinese Communist Party and ironclad control over his military, “Xi is going into this meeting on a political high,” Thomas said.
He and other national security and trade analysts do not foresee any significant diplomatic breakthrough emerging from Wednesday night’s forum in South Korea — regardless of any deal Trump is touting.
“I think going forward, no significant improvement can be achieved during the Trump administration,” cautioned Zongyuan Zoe Liu, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. “There is no trust.”
Henrietta Levin, who served in the State Department and National Security Council under both the Biden and the first Trump administrations, also voiced skepticism.
“The U.S.-China relationship has been overtaken by negotiation to manage retaliation,” Levin said. “Often these meetings are a springboard for a more stable period in U.S.-China relations. However, I don’t think we can take that for granted.”









