In what is set to be one of the most consequential encounters in years, US President Donald Trump arrives today in Beijing, where he will meet with his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping.The Trump-Xi summit is less about reconciliation than it is about managing an increasingly adversarial relationship in which economic interdependence survives despite collapsing strategic trust. Washington and Beijing are no longer negotiating the terms of partnership, but the boundaries of coexistence within an increasingly fragmented international order.The summit takes place amid a widening technological divide, continuing trade tensions, and the destabilising effects of the conflict in West Asia. The prolonged disruption around the Strait of Hormuz has intensified inflationary pressures globally while creating fresh political pressures for President Trump ahead of the November midterm elections.China has simultaneously used the crisis to position itself as a stabilising power with leverage over Tehran, particularly after hosting Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi in Beijing shortly before Trump’s visit. For Washington, Chinese cooperation in restoring stability in the Gulf has become an important, if unstated, objective of the summit. Yet the challenges facing the summit extend far beyond immediate geopolitical bargaining.Domestic political pressures in the US further complicate the summit. Rising inflation, declining approval ratings, and the approaching elections increase the pressure on Trump to project the image of a diplomatic victory. Yet any overt attempt by Washington to frame the summit in triumphalist terms is unlikely to sit well with the Chinese leadership, which remains acutely sensitive to perceptions of strategic concession or “loss of face.”The problem is compounded by the clash of negotiating cultures themselves: Trump’s transactional, headline-driven diplomacy sits uneasily alongside a Chinese negotiating culture rooted in strategic patience and incremental pressure. US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping participate in a welcome ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, Nov. 9, 2017. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File)This is where Harvard scholar Daniel Shapiro’s idea of the “tribe effect” becomes relevant — an adversarial, self-righteous, and closed mindset that pushes rival powers to magnify differences, treat their own positions as morally superior, and increasingly view compromise as weakness rather than strategy. These tensions are likely to shape the contentious agenda before both sides.The ‘5 Bs’ and the ‘3 Ts’Story continues below this adThe competing priorities of both sides are reflected in what officials and analysts have described as Washington’s “5 Bs” and Beijing’s “3 Ts.”Washington’s priorities revolve around Boeing aircraft, beef, beans (soyabeans), and the proposed Board of Trade and Board of Investment, a framework aimed at stabilising commerce in “non-sensitive” sectors while insulating strategic industries such as semiconductors and artificial intelligence from deeper confrontation. The approach reflects Washington’s growing preference for negotiated reciprocity over multilateral trade mechanisms that many within the Trump administration view as inadequate in dealing with China’s state-directed economic system.China’s priorities, meanwhile, revolve around Taiwan, tariffs, and technology. Beijing seeks a longer-term trade truce while pushing back against tightening US export controls, investment restrictions, and technology barriers.Also Read | Why China blocked Meta’s $2-bn deal for Manus AI, and what this means for US-China tech raceUS restrictions on advanced semiconductors and AI ecosystems have accelerated Beijing’s push for technological self-reliance even as slowing growth increases pressure on the leadership to stabilise external economic conditions. At the same time, Beijing wants greater access for its electric vehicles and other clean-energy exports to global markets as it recalibrates its export strategy amid growing geopolitical fragmentation.AI, semiconductors, and the new battlegroundStory continues below this adIf trade and tariffs once defined the US–China rivalry, artificial intelligence and advanced semiconductors have now become the central battlegrounds of strategic competition. The summit may also see the first serious high-level discussions on the risks posed by increasingly powerful frontier AI systems — one of the few areas where Washington and Beijing still recognise the need for limited cooperation despite deepening mistrust.Artificial intelligence has emerged as another major fault line in the relationship. The release of Anthropic’s “Claude Mythos Preview” — an advanced AI system capable of autonomously identifying software vulnerabilities and executing complex cyber operations — has intensified global concerns over the risks posed by increasingly powerful AI agents.While both sides have shown limited willingness to open communication channels on AI safety and misuse, deep mistrust continues to overshadow cooperation. That mistrust was evident in China’s recent decision to block Meta’s $2 billion acquisition of Manus, an AI startup with Chinese roots, signalling Beijing’s determination to retain frontier AI talent and intellectual property within its strategic ecosystem.The episode underscored how technological competition is increasingly shifting from hardware access to the control of talent, data, and innovation ecosystems. These developments are likely to further harden adversarial perceptions on both sides, bringing the underlying “tribe effect” into even sharper relief.India and the challenge of multi-alignmentStory continues below this adWhatever the immediate outcome of the Beijing summit, strategic and foreign policy circles in India will watch the developments closely. A prolonged phase of institutionalised rivalry between the US and China is likely to add new pressures to an already fragmenting global order.India’s strategy of multi-alignment will increasingly be tested as trade networks, technological ecosystems, and geopolitical partnerships become more polarised. The challenge for New Delhi will lie in preserving strategic flexibility while continuing to build issue-based coalitions without becoming overly dependent on any single power bloc.As Trump and Xi meet in the Great Hall of the People, the objective is no longer reconciliation, but stabilisation. The summit may produce temporary truces, symbolic gestures, and carefully negotiated bargains, but the larger reality is harder to obscure: The US and China are learning not how to restore strategic trust, but how to manage enduring rivalry without allowing it to spiral into systemic rupture. The summit’s significance may lie less in what it resolves than in the fact that both sides still recognise the necessity of engagement despite deepening hostility.The defining feature of the emerging order may not be a new Cold War, but a world in which rivalry itself becomes institutionalised.Story continues below this adG Venkat Raman, a professor at IIM Indore, is a Fulbright and Institute of Chinese Studies fellow.