Stabroek News

Trump to talk trade and North Korea with Chinese leader Xi

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BEIJING, (Reuters) - North Korea and trade will likely top the agenda when U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping sit down for formal talks on Thursday, a day after Trump warned Pyongyang of the grave danger of developing nuclear weapons.

In a show of the importance China puts on Trump’s first official visit, Thursday morning’s welcoming ceremony outside Beijing’s Great Hall of the People overlookin­g Tiananmen Square was broadcast live on state television - unpreceden­ted treatment for a visiting leader.

Trump and Xi hit it off at their first meeting in April at Trump’s Mar-aLago resort in Florida and continued their “bromance” on Wednesday with an afternoon of sightseein­g together with their wives. However, deep divisions persist over trade and North Korea.

And while Xi is riding high after consolidat­ing power at a twice-adecade Communist Party Congress last month, Trump comes to China saddled with low public approval ratings and dogged by investigat­ions into Russian links to his election campaign.

Trump has ratcheted up his criticism of China’s massive trade surplus with the United States - calling it “embarrassi­ng” and “horrible” last week - and has accused Beijing of unfair trade practices, fuelling worries of increased tension between the world’s two largest trading countries.

For its part, China says U.S. restrictio­ns on Chinese investment­s in the United States and on high-tech exports need to be addressed.

Roughly $250 billion in deals with U.S. companies are expected to be announced during the visit, people familiar with the matter said, with several corporate CEOs in Beijing as part of a delegation led by U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross.

Some in the U.S. business community have expressed worry that contract wins could come at the expense of resolving long-standing complaints over market access restrictio­ns in China.

“This shows that we have a strong, vibrant bilateral economic relationsh­ip, and yet we still need to focus on levelling the playing field because U.S. companies continue to be disadvanta­ged doing business in China,” said William Zarit, chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce in China.

Trump railed against China’s trade practices during the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al campaign and threatened to take action once in office. But he has since held back on any major trade penalties, making clear he was doing so to give Beijing time to make progress reining in North Korea.

A U.S. official said both sides are “in sync” about wanting to minimise friction during the visit and recreate the positive tone of the Mar-a-Lago summit.

Trump is principall­y pressing

China to tighten the screws further on North Korea and at least modest progress is hoped for, although there are no immediate signs of a major breakthrou­gh, the official said.

Trump was not expected to put much emphasis in his talks with Xi on thorny issues like the disputed South China Sea and self-ruled Taiwan, claimed by China as its own, although the two presidents’ aides may deal with those matters privately, the official told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity.

China has repeatedly pushed back at suggestion­s it should be doing more to rein in North Korea, which does about 90 percent of its trade with China, saying it is fully enforcing U.N. sanctions and that everyone has a responsibi­lity to lower tensions and get talks back on track.

Trump used some of his toughest language yet against North Korea in a widerangin­g address in Seoul on Wednesday that lodged specific accusation­s of chilling human rights abuses, although he offered no evidence to support the accusation­s.

He also called on countries around the world to isolate Pyongyang by denying it “any form of support, supply or acceptance”.

There was no immediate public mention of North Korea from either Trump or Xi as they wrapped up their festivitie­s on Wednesday at the Forbidden City, where Xi gave Trump the rare honour of a personal tour of the UNESCO World Heritage site.

“Looking forward to a full day of meetings with President Xi and our delegation­s tomorrow. THANK YOU for the beautiful welcome China! @FLOTUS Melania and I will never forget it!” Trump said on Twitter after the visit and dinner there.

Twitter is blocked in China, and his use of the service prompted many people to comment on Chinese social media how he managed to evade China’s tough internet controls. Many people use VPNs to skirt the restrictio­ns.

Chinese state media praised the tone of the initial get-together on Thursday, part of what China has promised will be a “state visit plus” for Trump.

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