A press release from China’s Ministry of Overseas Affairs after the assembly famous that Mr Xi had mentioned that China and the US needs to be companions and associates. “That is what historical past has taught us and what actuality wants,” he had mentioned, including: “I’m able to proceed working with you to construct a stable basis for China-US relations and create a sound environment for the event of each international locations.”
Mr Trump, although flexing America’s muscle forward of the assembly by greenlighting the Pentagon to resume nuclear tests on par with China and Russia, had additionally made optimistic noises on commerce within the lead-up to Busan. At an Oct 28 lunch with APEC (Asia-Pacific Financial Cooperation) enterprise executives in Gyeongju, he mentioned that making offers with China was “higher than combating and going by all kinds of issues”.
PRAGMATIC ENGAGEMENT
The 2 presidents have reportedly spoken on the telephone thrice this yr. That, plus the summit in Busan – and now the doable April 2026 assembly in China – signifies that regardless of a vigorous China hawk foyer in Washington DC, pragmatic engagement with China continues.
However whether or not this assembly shifts something structurally in US-China relations stays to be seen.
The US’ baseline view stays that China is a risk to its international dominance, and China resents America’s tariffs and containment methods. However each side no less than agree on one factor – that neither can afford an actual battle, whether or not over commerce or the rest.
Nirmal Ghosh, a former overseas correspondent and US information bureau chief, is an writer and impartial author primarily based in Singapore.

