President Donald Trump will arrive in Beijing on Wednesday evening for his first trip to China since 2017. Compared with that visit almost a decade ago, Trump is in a far weaker position to push his agenda, and Chinese President Xi Jinping is better positioned to exploit his vulnerabilities.
It’s a high-stakes visit during which Trump, in face-to-face meetings with Xi, is expected to negotiate issues including the war with Iran, trade, artificial intelligence and Taiwan. But Trump will start on his back foot.
The president’s ill-fated “excursion” in Iran will be top of mind for him and Xi, but it weighs on them differently. The choice to enter the war alongside Israel is arguably the biggest political error of Trump’s career. He has caused a global economic crisis, his poll numbers have plunged to new lows, the isolationist wing of his party has turned against him, and his already poor international reputation is in tatters. Trump needs the war to end as quickly as possible to forestall a lingering economic downturn before the midterm elections.
While the U.S. and China have a shared interest in ending the war, Trump is more desperate for it.
By contrast, Xi, who is in the middle of an unprecedented third term, has only consolidated political power in China over the past decade. He remains confident as a global player and is not pressed over Iran in the same way Trump is. To be sure, China wants the war to end: It imports oil through the Strait of Hormuz, and no country is immune to a possible global recession triggered by an endless war. But China’s energy independence means it’s much more resilient than the U.S. in the face of spiking oil prices. And if Iran is able to take its time to negotiate favorable terms for ending the war, then China may benefit from its empowerment —with, for example, more nuclear capabilities and some degree of control over Hormuz — as a counterbalance to U.S. power in the Middle East.
So while the U.S. and China have a shared interest in ending the war, Trump is more desperate for it. He will want to persuade Xi to diplomatically press Iran to accept a deal as aggressively as possible, and will in effect be asking for help to sort out his own mess. China has been encouraging Iran to engage in diplomacy, but it doesn’t have to do the U.S.’ bidding, and Trump’s desperation leaves him with less political capital to burn on other issues.









