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Bilateral
(L-R) US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping. Photo: The White House/X & Wikipedia

Donald Trump to meet Xi Jinping on Oct 30 amid US-China friction. What can be expected?

| @indiablooms | Oct 24, 2025, at 11:40 am

Washington DC/IBNS: US President Donald Trump will meet Chinese President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Summit in South Korea on October 30.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt on Thursday said the President will depart on Friday night for Japan and South Korea. 
 
After addressing the APEC CEO Summit, Trump will meet Xi in South Korea, Leavitt said.
"On Thursday morning local time, President Trump will participate in a bilateral meeting with President Xi of the People's Republic of China, before departing to return home to Washington DC," the press secretary said. 
 
Speaking of his upcoming meeting with Xi, Trump said he will be speaking to the Chinese President over selling fentanyl to the United States. 
 

The President said, "... I'm meeting with President Xi... The first question I'm going to be asking him about is fentanyl. They make $100 million selling fentanyl into our country. They lose $100 billion with the 20% tariff. So it's not a good business proposition...

"It's one of the things we're talking about... They pay a very big penalty for doing that... We'll see what happens at the end of next week... I'm meeting with President Xi, actually, in South Korea..."

What's expected in the meeting?

1. Trade / Economic Issues

  • Resumption or increase of Chinese purchases of U.S. agricultural goods (e.g., soybeans) — Trump has flagged this. 

  • Rare earths and strategic minerals: China has introduced tighter export controls, the U.S. sees this as a leverage point. 

  • Tariffs and trade structure: The U.S. is pushing for more favourable access / less distortion; China wants to maintain autonomy. 

2. Security / Geopolitical Issues

  • The Taiwan question: While unlikely to be resolved, it is expected to be raised, especially given its strategic as well as symbolic importance.

  • Export controls and technology competition: U.S. concerns about China’s tech policies, China’s push for greater self-reliance. 

  • Possibly cooperation on global issues: such as drug trafficking (notably fentanyl) or Russia/Ukraine, though these may remain peripheral. 

3. Signalling / Diplomacy

  • Both leaders likely want to send a message: Trump to show he can “get a deal”, China to show it won’t be pushed into unacceptable concessions. Analysts see this meeting less as a peace treaty and more as a high-level reset or re-engagement. 
  • The venue (third country, side-lines of APEC) suggests a lower-stakes summit than a dedicated bilateral summit, which may indicate limited ambition. 

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