Trump’s China trip an attempt to ‘save face’ – analyst to RT

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The US delegation came hoping Beijing would offer deals easing tensions caused by Washington’s foreign policy blunders, such as Iran war, Danny Haiphong says US President Donald Trump’s China visit was an attempt to “save face” and seek relief after the Iran war destabilized the global economy, geopolitical analyst Danny Haiphong has told RT. According to Haiphong, the US is now in a “far weaker position” than China and is seeking closer ties with Beijing to stabilize its economy and global standing.US-China relations have been strained for years over trade, technology, and security, with Trump’s tariff hikes last year escalating tensions into a full-scale trade war before both sides agreed to a temporary pause. Expectations for a breakthrough were high ahead of Trump’s May 13-15 China visit – his first in nearly a decade – but no major deals or clear breakthroughs were officially announced before the trip ended Friday.In an interview on Thursday, Haiphong argued that the US delegation came to China “hoping to essentially get saved from the crisis of their own making” in Iran and its global fallout. US-Israeli strikes on Iran triggered retaliation against countries hosting US bases and led to the de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz – a route for roughly 20% of global oil and LNG supplies – sending energy prices soaring. Read more Xi promised not to send military equipment to Iran – Trump “The US was the one who requested this meeting, and it’s the US economy as a whole and the global economy that is suffering because of [its] aggressive and illegal war on Iran that produced an overheated global economy and an oil crisis that is now blowing up,” Haiphong said. The analyst argued that Trump “really needed this meeting” to “find some way to cool this overheating economy.”“What it amounted to was the Trump administration and all of these executives coming with their hands out hoping that China will give them deals that will ease some of this tension,” he said, referring to Trump’s delegation of CEOs ranging from SpaceX and Tesla’s Elon Musk to Boeing’s Kelly Ortberg. Read more Rubio responds to China’s warning over Taiwan Haiphong said the summit was largely “about the optics” and projecting strength for the US, arguing that relations between Washington and Beijing will not genuinely improve unless the US abandons its “saber rattling” and makes major policy concessions.“The world has changed. The US is in a far weaker position. China is in a far stronger position. It really is the US that has to hold on to the ties that it has with China in order to try to save face and strengthen its hand,” he said.Following the summit, both leaders praised the talks as progress toward stabilizing the bilateral relationship. Xi said the sides had agreed on “constructive strategic stability” for the coming years, while Trump claimed “a lot of different problems” had been settled. READ MORE: Trump’s China strategy is closer to Kissinger than Biden However, the meeting also highlighted ongoing geopolitical tensions: Xi warned Trump that mishandling Taiwan – the self-governed island claimed by China and armed by the US – could lead to “clashes and even conflicts.”