China, Trump and Taiwan
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U.S. President Donald Trump had said arms sales to Taiwan would be on the agenda for his talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping which ended Friday.
Trump’s summit with Xi deferred the real Taiwan test: whether U.S. arms sales to Taipei will preserve credible support under strategic ambiguity, and how far Beijing will go to enforce its red line. U.S. President Donald Trump bids farewell to China’s ...
Trump raised doubts about arms sales to Taiwan and whether the U.S. would defend the island, rattling a sensitive relationship amid threats from Beijing.
President Donald Trump spoke about Taiwan after a two-day visit to China, where he said he discussed Iran, and trade deals with Chinese President Xi Jingping.
President Trump warns Taiwan not to expect unconditional U.S. military support, saying he does not want to travel 9,500 miles to fight a war with China.
After a two-day summit in Beijing, the President signaled that U.S. support for the self-governing island is negotiable.
During Donald Trump's visit to China, Chinese President Xi Jinping reportedly maintained a very tough stance over the Taiwan issue.
Chinese officials have made many more attempts to dilute America’s commitment to help Taiwan defend itself. And successive American presidents have rebuffed them. But as Donald Trump prepares to visit Beijing,
Donald Trump's return from his recent high-stakes trip to China is seeing him face growing anger from sections of his hardcore MAGA base after failing to secure major trade or diplomatic breakthroughs during talks with the nation's president Xi Jinping,