US President Donald Trump is headed home to Washington after spending two days with China's Xi Jinping in Beijing. Both leaders struck a cordial tone despite deep differences on Iran and Taiwan.
Live Politics United States of America Trump departs Beijing after whirlwind China visit To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Politics United States of America https://p.dw.com/p/5DfiS Advertisement Skip next section What you need to know What you need to know Donald Trump's Air Force One has left Beijing for the United States Trump and Xi held a working lunch and a tea ceremony at Zhongnanhai, China's equivalent to the White House Trump said Friday that he and Xi made "fantastic trade deals" without providing details China has shown little public interest in getting more involved in solving the war in Iran Xi also suggested differences over Taiwan could put his country and the US on the path toward conflict.
Welcome to DW's coverage of the Trump-Xi summit in Beijing from May 13-15.
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As US President Donald Trump concludes his high-stakes trip to China, we ask: who came out on top in the meeting between the world's two biggest superpowers — Donald Trump or Xi Jinping?
The White House says Trump delivered on his promise, calling him the "dealmaker in chief" who gets results.
Follow along as we speak with DW's chief international editor, Richard Walker, DW correspondent in Taiwan, Rik Glauert, and political analyst Cathryn Clüver Ashbrook from the Bertelsmann Foundation.
China's Xi Jinping spoke about a positive turn in relations between the two countries.
"This visit is a historic and landmark visit. Together, we affirmed the new position of a constructive, strategic and stable China-US relationship," the Chinese president said, according to a readout from the state-run CCTV channel.
"The visit is also beneficial to promoting mutual understanding, deepening trust in each other, and increasing the well-being of the people of both countries," Xi added.
The Chinese leader said both countries should carry out the "important consensus" reached during Trump’s visit and keep the relationship on the right track.
Schoolchildren dressed in some of Air Force One's light blue and white colors waved American and Chinese flags.
"Farewell, farewell," they chanted. "Warm farewell!" Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi saw a smiling Trump off at the airport.
Trump turned at the top of the stairs and pumped his fist and waved before entering the aircraft. But he didn't speak with reporters before departing for home.
But the photo was criticized for a conspicuous lack of women at the table, with a post on social media by Gita Gopinath, an economics professor at Harvard, having garnered many thousand likes and views.
Similarly, Trump and Xi are holding a second round of talks today with a small coterie of people who are all men.
The leaders earlier took a stroll through the gardens and paused for a "friendship photo." Trump told reporters that they had made "fantastic trade deals." Xi also said he was going to send Trump some rose seeds after the US president remarked that the roses there were the most beautiful he had ever seen.
"These are the most beautiful roses anyone has ever seen," Trump remarked while walking past green columns and archways.
Trump said the two leaders had struck "fantastic trade deals" without providing details.
Friday's meeting is expected to focus more on trade.
US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, who is attending Friday's meeting, told Bloomberg TV on Friday it had not yet been decided whether to extend the US-China trade truce beyond its expiry later this year.
Towards the end of 2025, the US suspended steep tariff increases on Chinese goods while China eased export restrictions on rare earth.
Deals on Chinese purchases of farm goods, beef and Boeing aircraft have been firmed up, Greer added, according to the Reuters new agency.
He also said progress was made on establishing mechanisms to manage future trade, with both sides expected to identify $30 billion (€26 billion) of non-sensitive goods.
Xi and Trump are being joined by smaller delegations on Friday.
China's delegation includes Xie Feng, China's ambassador to the United States; Cai Qi, a director of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China; Foreign Affairs Minister Wang Yi; Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister Ma Zhaoxu and He Lifeng, vice premier of the State Council.
As well as US Trade Representative Greer, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer and the US Ambassador to China, David Perdue have joined Trump.
Xi greeted Trump with a handshake at the gardens of the Zhongnanhai, the central leadership compound next to Beijing's Forbidden City.
The two are to take tea and have a working lunch.
"We have a very good relationship, a friendship really," Trump said in an interview conducted in China by Fox News host Sean Hannity.
"I think he’s a warm person, actually," Trump added. "But he’s all business. There’s no games. There's no talking about how the weather is." China's role in smoothing Iran conflict still unclear Earlier on Thursday, Trump said that Xi told him China wants to help negotiate an end to the war and a reopening of the Strait of Hormuz.
However, there was no mention of whether China would continue to purchase Iranian oil.
China buys some 90% of Iran's oil exports, "providing tens of billions of dollars in annual revenue that supports Iran’s government budget and military activities," according to the US government's US-China Economic and Security Review Commission .
In the Thursday evening Fox News interview, Trump also spoke of Iran, suggesting that hunting down Iran's enriched uranium was primarily for political optics.
"I just feel better if I got it, actually, but it's … I think, it's more for public relations than it is for anything else," Trump said.
He warned that he wouldn't be "much more patient" with Iran.
Trump made large investments in both companies in the first quarter of 2026, newly released financial transactions reports show.
He invested up to $7.2 million (around €6.2 million) in Apple during the first three months of 2026, according to data from the US Office of Government Ethics published on Thursday.
The exact amounts are not available as the mandatory reporting only shows approximate ranges.
The largest Apple purchase was made at the beginning of February and was valued between $1 million and $5 million.
Conversely, large sales, ranging from $5 million to $25 million each, involved Microsoft, Amazon and Meta.
The trades also included shares of Oracle, Bank of America, Broadcom and Goldman Sachs.
In total, the data show 3,642 reportable trades valued at between $220 million and around $750 million.
The data doesn't consistently clarify the type of security, such as whether it was a stock or a corporate bond.
Unclear who placed the trades The filings don't make clear in what accounts the transactions took place or who placed the trades.
The president's assets are held in a trust controlled by his children, while some of the transactions in the new filings indicate that a broker acted as an agent.
The White House press office referred questions about the trades from Reuters news agency to the Trump Organization.
An attorney for the Trump Organization did not immediately respond to the news agency's request for comment.
Eric Trump, along with his wife, Lara, posed for photos with Chinese President Xi Jinping before attending a state banquet on Thursday evening.
He was also seen chatting to Xi during a sunny afternoon visit to the Temple of Heaven.
But the younger Trump isn't a government official. Neither is he running a top US company, like Apple, Boeing or chipmaker Nvidia, whose executives have accompanied President Trump to Beijing.
Rather, as the Executive Vice President of the Trump Organization, Eric runs the Trump family business alongside his brother Donald Trump Jr.
The Trump Organization has stressed that Eric is in China "in a personal capacity" in statements to several US media outlets, including The New York Times .
But as the US newspaper writes, the Trump Organization "has flirted with Chinese business deals over the years, raising the question of whether [Eric's] presence could blur the lines between government business and private enterprise." Then there's the fact that Donald Trump lambasted Joe Biden for taking his son Hunter with him on his official plane during a trip to China in 2013 when Biden was vice president.
During his first term, Trump even called on the Chinese government to investigate the Bidens.
"Two years ago, we were, in fact, a Nation in decline. On that, I fully agree with President Xi!" Trump wrote Thursday on his Truth Social Platform.
Trump then proceeded to list what he regards as the achievements of his nearly year-and-a-half in office, saying that Xi congratulated him on the policies he has implemented.
Xi hosted Trump to a warm greeting ceremony early on Thursday ahead of a private meeting to address the war in Iran as well as tensions over Taiwan.
"It was sort of like a statement but I think it was a commitment," Trump said, describing talks with Xi.
Ahead of the summit, US media reported on the potential for a Boeing deal. Bloomberg and other outlets reported that China was considering a deal for about 500 Boeing 737 MAX aircraft, plus discussions for roughly 100 wide‑body jets (787 Dreamliner and 777X).
It was unclear from Trump's statement what aircraft the deal would entail. Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg is part of the business entourage accompanying the US president in Beijing.
The US aviation giant's last China order was $37 million (€31.5 million) for 300 single and dual isle aircraft in 2017 after Trump met Xi for the first time in Beijing.
China's President Xi Jinping called US-China relations the world's most important. 'Achieving the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation and making America Great Again can go hand in hand,' he said during a state welcome dinner for US President Donald Trump. 'We must make it work and never mess it up,' he added. According to China's state media, Xi earlier warned Trump that disagreements over Taiwan could push relations toward conflict.
Trump described the first day of the two-day visit as a 'fantastic day.' He also invited Xi and his wife, Madame Peng, to visit the White House in September. The US downplayed Taiwan in its summary of the talks between Trump and Xi, focusing instead on trade, energy cooperation, and reopening the Strait of Hormuz.
'China is currently the only risk to regional peace and stability,' Taiwan's Ministry of Affairs said in response to Xi's warning on Thursday. The self-governed island also said nothing surprising had emerged from the talks between Xi and Trump. 'So at this point, all we can say is that there has been no surprising information so far and we will continue to maintain close communication with the American side,' Mainland Affairs Council Deputy Head and spokesman Liang Wen-chieh said.
Chinese Premier Li Qiang urged stronger US-China ties through friendship and cooperation while speaking with US business leaders, including Elon Musk, Tim Cook, and Jensen Huang , during Trump's Beijing visit. 'China and the United States have been able to maintain frank and smooth dialogue and communication and actively safeguard a stable and healthy bilateral relationship' despite international turbulence, Li said.
Friday will feature more talks between the two leaders, followed by a tea reception before Trump departs for Washington on Air Force One.
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