Houston Chronicle

Trump: He, Xi can solve ‘probably all’ problems

President projects confidence on trade, North Korea

- By Jonathan Lemire and Jill Colvin

BEIJING — President Donald Trump emerged from a lengthy meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping on Thursday to declare that he believed he and Xi together can solve “probably all” the world’s problems.

“I look forward to many years of success and friendship working together to solve not only our problems, but world problems, and problems of great danger and security,” Trump said between meetings at the Great Hall of the People. “I believe we can solve almost all of them, and probably all of them.”

Trump and Xi were discussing a series of thorny issues during Trump’s second day in China, including China’s willingnes­s to put the squeeze on North Korea over its nuclear weapons program, and the U.S.-China trade relationsh­ip.

Trump projected confidence on both fronts. He said both he and Xi believe “a solution” exists on North Korea. And he said the countries’ trade relationsh­ip — which he complained had gotten “so far out of kilter” — would be made “fair and it’ll be tremendous for both of us.”

Xi, meanwhile, said U.S.-China relations were at a “new historic starting point.”

He said China was willing to work with the U.S. “with mutual respect, seeking mutual benefits, to focus on cooperatio­n and control our difference­s.”

Before the meetings, China rolled out the red carpet for Trump, treating him to an elaborate welcome ceremony on the plaza outside the Great Hall of the People before the leaders turned to their private talks.

Trump looked on approvingl­y as a Chinese honor guard played the national anthems of both countries, cannons boomed and soldiers marched. He clapped and smiled as children waving U.S. and Chinese flags and flowers screamed and jumped wildly.

Before arriving in China, Trump had delivered a stern message to Beijing, using an address to the National Assembly in South Korea to call on nations to confront the North.

“All responsibl­e nations must join forces to isolate the brutal regime of North Korea,” Trump said. “You cannot support, you cannot supply, you cannot accept.”

He called on “every nation, including China and Russia,” to fully implement U.N. Security Council resolution­s against North Korea enforcing sanctions aimed at depriving its government of revenue for its nuclear and ballistic missile programs.

The latest measure, adopted after a September atomic test explosion, the North’s largest yet, banned imports of its textiles and prohibited new work permits for overseas North Korean laborers. It also restricted exports of some petroleum products.

Trump’s words drew a caustic response from North Korean state media, which issued a statement Wednesday saying the U.S. should “oust the lunatic old man from power” and withdraw its “hostile policy” toward Pyongyang “in order to get rid of the abyss of doom.”

 ?? Andrew Harnik / Associated Press ?? Children wave U.S. and Chinese flags Wednesday as President Donald Trump arrives in Beijing.
Andrew Harnik / Associated Press Children wave U.S. and Chinese flags Wednesday as President Donald Trump arrives in Beijing.

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