Trump tells reporters he is still deciding fate of new
Taiwan weapons package, says not “asking for any favors” on
Iran.US President
Donald Trump speaks to reporters on board Air Force One after his departure from Beijing Capital Airport on his way back to the
United States [AFP]Published On 15 May 2026United States President
Donald Trump has departed
China following a three-day trip, touting several broad trade deals but suggesting little progress on key issues related to
Taiwan or the
Iran" class="entity-link entity-event" data-entity-id="120801" data-entity-type="event">US-Israeli war in
Iran.Trump’s visit, the first of his second term, was filled with pomp and circumstance, including a greeting from waiving children and a military honour guard, a private tour of a secretive former imperial garden, and the Confucian 15th-century Temple of Heaven.Recommended Stories list of 3 itemslist 1 of 3How Xi-Trump summit failed to yield
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Iran conflict is becoming a problem for BRICSend of listBy the end, both sides characterised the visit as a success, even if their accounts of what was agreed to varied.Speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One, Trump said he and Xi discussed
Taiwan, with
China’s leader telling him he opposed independence for the self-governing island Beijing claims as its own.“I heard him out. I didn’t make a comment,” Trump said. “I made no commitment either way.”Shortly after greeting Trump on Thursday, Xi had called
Taiwan the most “important issue in
China-US relations”.“If mishandled, the two nations could collide or even come into conflict, pushing the entire
China-US relationship into a highly perilous situation,” Xi added.Trump told reporters on Friday he had not made a decision on US arms sales to
Taiwan, an issue with deep support within the
US Congress that Beijing vehemently opposes.The US does not have official ties with
Taiwan, but has for years provided billions of dollars in military aid. It acknowledges, but does not endorse, Beijing’s territorial claim to the island.US lawmakers have approved a massive new weapons sale to
Taipei, which still requires Trump’s sign-off.“I will make a determination,” Trump told reporters. “I’ll be making decisions. But, you know, I think the last thing we need right now is a war that’s 9,500 miles [15,289km] away.”For its part,
Taiwan’s foreign minister said on Friday that
Taipei would seek to deepen ties with the US, citing increasing regional “risks”.US-Israeli war in IranOn
Iran, Trump said he and Xi spoke at length about the US-Israeli war, and their shared desire for the Strait of Hormuz to be reopened.Some Trump administration officials have called on Beijing to use its leverage over Tehran to help break an ongoing deadlock in ceasefire negotiations, though the president downplayed the issue during the trip.The White House announced little in the way of concrete progress upon Trump’s departure.Trump told reporters on Air Force One he was not “asking for any favours” on
Iran.Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, speaking to reporters on Friday about Trump’s visit, also gave little indication that
China’s approach to the conflict had changed.“
China encourages the US and
Iran to continue resolving their differences and disputes, including the nuclear issue, through negotiations, and advocates the swift reopening of the Strait of Hormuz on the basis of maintaining a ceasefire,” he said.Trade deals toutedTrump, who travelled with a delegation of top US business leaders, concluded his visit touting a series of “fantastic trade deals for both countries”.In an interview with Fox News on Friday, he said that included
China agreeing to buy 200 jets from US aviation manufacturer Boeing. Such a deal would mark the first purchase of US deals in more than a decade.The White House has also said
China could soon begin buying more US oil and farm goods.But further details of any agreements were not immediately released, and
China has been far more circumspect. No new agreements were mentioned in
China’s official statement recapping the visit.Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang on Friday said both sides agreed to establish a trade council and an investment council. He said they would continue discussions on tariff adjustments and agricultural market access.Trump, meanwhile, gave no update on whether a trade war truce reached in October of last year, which saw Washington surge tariffs on
China and Beijing, in turn, threaten to impose export controls on rare earth minerals, had been extended.Trump said he and Xi “did not discuss tariffs”.