Trump and Xi conclude 'very successful' talks in Beijing, but no deals announced | BBC News
Trump and Xi conclude 'very successful' talks in Beijing, but no deals announced | BBC News
Trump-Xi Beijing Summit Ends in Smoke and Mirrors: "Very Successful" Talk, Zero Deals
Just hours ago, President Donald Trump wrapped up his final round of talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing. The two leaders showered each other with praise. Trump called the meeting "very successful, world-well-known, and unforgettable." Xi labeled it a "historic and landmark" visit.
Sounds impressive—until you notice the glaring absence of any actual agreements.
All Praise, No Progress
This is classic summit theater. Both sides delivered the expected sound bites, posed for the cameras, and declared victory. Yet not a single concrete deal emerged on trade, technology, or security. Markets barely budged because investors know hype without substance is just noise.
Trump flew home empty-handed on the issues that matter most. China's massive trade surplus, forced technology transfers, and restrictions on American firms remain untouched. Xi, meanwhile, gave nothing away on Taiwan or export controls. The result? A masterclass in diplomatic spin.
Why the Fanfare Falls Flat
Let's be blunt. When leaders resort to words like "historic" and "unforgettable" without numbers to back them up, they're managing expectations downward. Trump's team will spin this as relationship-building. Beijing will claim mutual respect. Both narratives crumble under scrutiny.
Real success would have looked like tariff rollbacks, new purchase commitments, or even a timeline for resuming stalled negotiations. Instead, the two powers kicked the can further down the road while global supply chains stay fragile and businesses continue to hedge.
The Bigger Stakes Nobody Wants to Name
This summit happened against a backdrop of escalating tech rivalry and military posturing in the South China Sea. Trump's visit was meant to signal stability. What it actually signaled is that neither side is ready to compromise.
American farmers and manufacturers still wait for relief from retaliatory tariffs. Chinese consumers face higher prices on imported goods. And the rest of the world watches two superpowers posture instead of lead.
Media Spin Cycle in Overdrive
Watch how the coverage unfolds over the next 48 hours. Outlets friendly to the White House will highlight the warm rhetoric. State media in China will broadcast the "landmark" label on repeat. Both miss the point: diplomacy without deliverables is just expensive travel.
Voters on both sides of the Pacific deserve better than photo opportunities dressed up as breakthroughs. Until concrete agreements land on paper, this was another expensive exercise in avoiding hard choices.
The clock is ticking. Trade imbalances won't fix themselves, and neither leader has shown willingness to blink first. Today's "successful" meeting changes nothing—except the calendar.
Source: BBC News via YouTube — 2026-05-15T10:45:08+00:00.
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