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Donald Trump and his allies intensified anti-China rhetoric during his presidency, accusing Beijing of economic theft and drug trafficking. This culminated in a trade war marked by escalating tariffs between the US and China.
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When Donald Trump strode onto a stage at a campaign rally in Indiana in 2016, he made one thing clear: China was America's chief economic antagonist.
"We can't continue to allow China to rape our country," he told a crowd in Fort Wayne. "We have the cards. Don't forget it."
The ferocious anti-China rhetoric didn't let up - through a decade of rallies, his 2024 campaign and into his second term.
Trump arrived back at the White House alongside key allies who made China-bashing a calling card: Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Vice-President JD Vance and senior economic counsellor Peter Navarro - all united in accusing Beijing of "ripping off" America, stealing technology at an industrial scale and flooding US streets with fentanyl.
Tariffs soon followed, climbing from 10% in February 2025 to 145% by mid-April's "Liberation Day". China struck back, slapping the US with 125% tariffs and blocking rare earth exports. A trade war was underway.
Then came this week's visit to Beijing.
Trump stepped onto a red carpet at the Great Hall of the People to hundreds of flag-waving children and a military band belting out the Star-Spangled Banner.
"It's an honour to be with you," Trump told Chinese President Xi Jinping. "It's an honour to be your friend, and the relationship between China and the US is going to be better than ever before."
The man who once said China was raping America was now calling its leader his friend.
Trump soon hailed "fantastic trade deals", although details and figures are few and far between. Chipmaker Nvidia was reportedly given a go-ahead to sell semiconductors to 10 Chinese companies and Boeing secured an order for 200 aircraft. Citi was granted an approval to operate a securities business in China.
But amid the pleasantries and softened positions, hardline positions against China reflect the traditionally more hawkish stance of Trump's Republican Party.
Less than a week before the summit, the US state department sanctioned three Chinese firms for providing satellite imagery to Iran to help strike US forces in the Middle East.
And outstanding issues remain - chiefly Taiwan, the self-ruled island viewed by Beijing as a renegade province. Trump delivered few details on the fate of a delayed $14 billion arms sale viewed as essential by Democrats and Republican China "hawks" alike.
Ahead of the visit, a bipartisan group of senators sent a letter urging Trump to move ahead with the sale and "formally" notify his Chinese counterpart.
"On Taiwan, he [Xi] feels very strongly. I made no commitment either way," Trump told reporters on Air Force One, adding that he would make a "determination over the next fairly short period" about the arms sale.
Notably, the Chinese read-out of the meeting made Taiwan its central point, arguing that a failure to address the issue could lead to "clashes and even conflicts, putting the entire relationship in great jeopardy". The White House read-out made no mention of Taiwan.
Donald Trump criticized China for economic theft, technology stealing, and flooding US streets with fentanyl.
Tariffs on Chinese goods increased from 10% in February 2025 to 145% by mid-April's 'Liberation Day'.
China retaliated by imposing 125% tariffs on US goods and blocking rare earth exports.
Key allies included Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Vice-President JD Vance, and senior economic counsellor Peter Navarro.

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The Chinese statement was read as a threat by some within the broader Make America Great Again movement.
"I am shocked, given how much people wanted to make this into a positive spirit, he [Xi] started with a threat," former Trump strategist Steve Bannon told Politico. "It was so brazen and so blatant, that they made this at the very top."
However, even the most ardent China hawks on Capitol Hill and among Trump's allies stayed largely silent after the trip, offering little reaction to Trump's friendly tone and non-committal statements on Taiwan.
For China experts in the US, the lack of reaction came as no surprise.
"If you had 50 presidential summits in one month or one year, it still wouldn't change the fact that there are some issues on which the US and China are simply never going to agree," David Firestein, president and CEO of the George HW Bush Foundation for US-China Relations told the BBC.
"That doesn't mean it's not going to be a successful summit," he added.
Trump's softening rhetoric and tone, Firestein added, could reflect an acknowledgement that the tactics used in the years after his last visit in 2017 have not worked.
"We still have the same problems today with market access, intellectual property rights, subsidies…the list goes on," he said. "None of those problems have been solved after eight years of having these tariffs on the books."
David Sacks, a fellow for Asia studies at the Council on Foreign Relation, said that the softening of Trump's tone will likely trickle down to other officials, Republican lawmakers and Trump's wider base.
"Unlike the first Trump administration, and frankly, any other US administration in recent memory, this is much more top down," he said. "I think those in the administration are, mostly, in the role of implementation."
Sacks' comments were echoed by Stephen Orlins, president at the National Committee on US-China Relations.
"When Trump opines, people follow," he said. "And the base follows."
Trump, however, still faces a dilemma with Taiwan.
Pressure will remain - from both sides of the political spectrum - for Trump to formalise the pending $14bn weapons sale ahead of President Xi's visit to the White House in September.
"I think that Congress will continue to write letters urging the administration to approve the sales to Taiwan," Sacks said.
Until then, he continued, each time "senior administration officials go before Congress they will continue to be asked about the status of those arms sales to Taiwan".
A decision from the Oval Office, however, is by no means guaranteed.
"A large US arms sale to Taiwan between now and September would potentially imperil that visit," Sacks added. "The $14-billion package is actually now a big question."