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U.S. President Donald Trump will visit Beijing from May 13-15 for a two-day summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping — the first visit by a U.S. president to China since 2017 and one postponed earlier because of the Iran war.
U.S. officials say Trump will press Beijing to use its influence over Tehran, including curbing purchases of Iranian oil and dual-use goods, while the two sides weigh extending a truce on rare earth exports.
Talks are expected to cover Taiwan, nuclear arms, artificial intelligence and trade; planned outcomes include forums to facilitate investment, possible purchases of Boeing planes and U.S. agricultural and energy goods, and proposals for a Board of Trade and Board of Investment.
Officials caution any institutional agreements may require follow-up work, and many sources predict limited breakthroughs given tensions, recent sanctions on China-linked firms and U.S. domestic political timing.






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