Trump Says He’s Received ‘Absolutely Nothing’ So Far
From China’s Xi
April
06, 2017 9:15 PM
President
Donald Trump shakes hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping during a dinner at
Mar-a-Lago, April 6, 2017, in Palm Beach, Florida.
MAR-A-LAGO,
FLORIDA —
U.S.
President Donald Trump said to light laughter at a Thursday evening dinner he
hosted for Chinese President Xi Jinping that after a long discussion, “I have
gotten nothing, absolutely nothing” from his guest. But Trump added that the
two leaders, who chatted earlier at the president’s Florida resort, had quickly
“developed a friendship,” and he predicted that “long term we’re going to have
a very, very great relationship and I look very much forward to it.”
Xi
did not make remarks while reporters were in the Mar-a-Lago dining room, and
Trump did not answer questions about Syria or North Korea directed at him by
journalists.
Earlier,
Trump and members of his administration made it clear they hope to pressure
Beijing into doing more to rein in North Korea’s nuclear weapons development.
Chinese
President Xi Jinping and First Lady Peng Liyuan attend a dinner hosted by U.S.
President Donald Trump at Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate in West Palm Beach,
Florida, April 6, 2017.
Trade
high on agenda
In
remarks to reporters aboard Air Force One, Trump said the roughly $310 billion
U.S. trade deficit with China is high on the agenda.
“We
have been treated unfairly and have made terrible trade deals with China for
many, many years. So that’s one of the things we’re gonna be talking about.”
But
he also appeared to link that issue with U.S. concerns over North Korea’s
nuclear weapons program.
“The
other thing, of course, is going to be North Korea, and somehow they will mix.
They really do mix. So we’re going to be talking about trade, North Korea, and
many other things,” he said, without elaborating.
A
working lunch also is on the agenda for the two leaders Friday.
North
Korea 'a big problem'
Earlier
this week, Trump warned, “If China is not going to solve North Korea, we will.”
His administration is considering sanctions against Chinese banks and companies
that give Pyongyang access to international financing.
China
supplies North Korea with almost all its fuel oil, imported foods, consumer
goods and the raw materials used to construct its weapons program.
But
China also has grown weary of the militaristic aspirations of North Korean
leader Kim Jong Un, who has yet to visit Beijing during his six-year rule. A
series of U.N. sanctions against North Korea have not deterred it from a string
of missile tests, the latest this week.
Trump
and Xi, who oversee the world’s two largest economies, are meeting for the
first time.
On
Wednesday, Trump said dealing with North Korea’s nuclear development program
could have “been made a lot easier if it was handled years ago.” But the U.S.
leader, in office less than three months, said he welcomes the challenge.
“We
have a big problem; we have somebody that is not doing the right thing, and
that’s going to be my responsibility,” Trump said.
Differing
views on climate
According
to advance thoughts on the summit from Beijing, Xi could offer the United
States more Chinese investments, which would create more American jobs, a key
Trump campaign pledge.
Under
former U.S. President Barack Obama, Chinese American relations often were
focused on curbing greenhouse gas emissions in the two biggest polluting
countries in the world. But Xi and Trump have taken sharply divergent paths on
curbing pollution.
The
Chinese government recently canceled construction of more than 100 coal-fired
power plants and is investing at least $360 billion in green energy projects by
2020.Trump, meanwhile, has vowed to bring back mining jobs that have been lost
through automation and closure of U.S. mines, as the country has turned to the
use of cheaper natural gas.
Trump
in the past has described global warming as a hoax perpetrated by the Chinese
to hurt the U.S. economy. Last week, he signed an executive order aimed at
rolling back Obama-era policies regulating carbon emissions.
Beijing
appears to be focused more on atmospherics and slogans at the summit. From what
analysts and officials in Beijing say, China will be watching closely for
telltale signs that Washington may be adopting its view of relations between
the two countries, the so-called “new style of major power relations.”
US
China relations defined
China
expects Trump to reaffirm a pledge that was made by Secretary of State Rex
Tillerson last month, during his visit to Beijing.
“The
two presidents are going to define the nature of the relationship between China
and the United States as characterized by this phrase: no conflict, no
confrontation, mutual respect and win-win cooperation,” said Wang Dong, a
political scientist at Peking University.
Wang
said China hopes the informal get-together will inject some stability into the
relationship and help reduce the uncertainties that have arisen during the
transition to the new administration.
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