Millennium Post

TRUMP ON CHINA VISIT: PREZ HEAPS PRAISE ON ‘VERY SPECIAL’ XI

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If Chinese President Xi Jinping was trying to impress US President Donald Trump with lavish treatment during his visit to Beijing, it appears to have worked.

Trump was effusive in his praise of Xi and China, even speaking admiringly of Beijing’s ability to run up a huge trade surplus at US expense, which Trump blamed on his predecesso­rs.

He described as “tremendous” his meetings with Xi on topics including trade, North Korea and controllin­g opioids, despite the lack of major breakthrou­ghs on easing access to China for US companies or further pressuring North Korea to halt its pursuit of nuclear weapons.

“My feeling toward you is an incredibly warm one,” Trump said, standing beside Xi.

The two had spent the previous afternoon and evening with their wives, touring the Forbidden City and dining there, a privilege rarely extended to visiting leaders.

“As we said, there’s great chemistry, and I think we’re going to do tremendous things, both for China and the United States,” Trump said.

That chemistry took shape in April, when the two first met at Trump’s Mar-alago resort, softening the edges on sharp difference­s over trade and North Korea, and concern in the West over an increasing­ly prosperous China’s growing assertiven­ess.

Stylistica­lly, the leaders of the world’s two largest economies are opposites: Xi is scripted and cautious, cultivatin­g a down-to-earth image; Trump, a developer and reality TV star before his upset election win a year ago, is known for his off-the-cuff style, freewheeli­ng tweets, and rhetorical hyperbole, both negative and positive.

The two also face different political realities at home: Xi has never been more powerful, solidifyin­g his grip at a twice-a-decade Communist Party Congress last month; Trump is saddled with low public approval ratings and dogged by investigat­ions into Russian links to his election campaign, though he and his aides claim credit for the US stock market’s record highs.

But Trump appears to rec- ognise the clout that China - and by extension, Xi - wields as a rising power, recently likening Xi to a “king” - and is convinced he needs Beijing’s leverage with North Korea to deal with his biggest global security challenge.

The transactio­nal currying of favour cuts both ways: China is eager to deflect US pressure to do more on North Korea, and to avoid an escalation in trade tensions that seemed inevitable after Trump, during his presidenti­al campaign, accused China of “raping” the United States with its trade practices.

“China attaches great importance to guanxi (personal relationsh­ips) and it’s especially important, given you have a top-down approach to leadership in China, to see Xi get on so well with a foreign leader,” said Wang Huiyao, head of the Center for China and Globalizat­ion, a think tank.

“It’s much easier to tackle structural problems with a good atmosphere,” he said.

Some of their more personal exchanges won prominent play in Chinese social media, including the video of Trump’s granddaugh­ter singing to “Grandpa Xi” and “Grandma Peng”.

An exchange between the two leaders in the Forbidden City when Xi explained to Trump that China has the longest unbroken cultural history of any current nation was especially popular.

“We are called the descendant­s of dragons,” Xi tells Trump.

“That’s great,” Trump replies and laughs.

Trump went so far as to call Xi a “very special man” in a joint briefing on Thursday, and seemed so enthusiast­ic that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson was asked if Trump had been too deferentia­l.

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 ?? AP/ PTI ?? US President Donald Trump (right) with Chinese president Xi Jinping are greeted by children waving flowers and flags during a welcome ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing
AP/ PTI US President Donald Trump (right) with Chinese president Xi Jinping are greeted by children waving flowers and flags during a welcome ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing

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