🚨 Trump and Xi just reshaped US-China relations — and Taiwan was nowhere in the official statement.
That omission is louder than any headline.
The White House released a summary of President Donald Trump’s China visit, highlighting massive trade deals, investment agreements, and cooperation on Iran — but made zero mention of Taiwan, even though it was reportedly one of the most intense topics discussed behind closed doors.
🇺🇸🇨🇳 Key takeaways:
✈️ China approved an initial purchase of 200 Boeing aircraft.
🌾 Beijing committed to buying $17B in US agricultural products annually from 2026 to 2028.
🪨 China agreed to address US concerns over critical rare earth shortages.
☢️ Both leaders agreed that Iran must not obtain nuclear weapons.
🌍 Trump will host Xi in Washington later this year.
But the biggest signal came from what was left unsaid.
Xi reportedly warned Trump that mishandling Taiwan could push the two superpowers toward conflict.
Trump later admitted they “talked a lot about Taiwan” and even suggested a planned US arms package for Taipei could be used as a negotiating chip.
That comment is raising serious concerns in Taiwan.
The White House instead emphasized a new framework of “strategic stability” — a three-year plan to manage tensions while expanding economic cooperation.
Translation?
The US and China are making deals worth hundreds of billions, while the future of Taiwan remains uncertain behind closed doors.
Markets may focus on Boeing, rare earths, and trade.
But geopolitically, Taiwan remains the most sensitive and dangerous issue in the room. 🌏