After all the hype, chest-thumping, and promises of a historic breakthrough, Donald Trump’s much-publicized summit with Xi Jinping appears to have produced exactly nothing of substance for the United States.
According to Chinese officials and multiple reports emerging from Beijing, Trump returned home without securing a single major victory on any of the key issues his administration had promoted ahead of the trip. Despite all the talk about “the art of the deal,” the summit increasingly looked less like a diplomatic triumph and more like an expensive photo-op tour.
The trip reportedly got off to an awkward start when Chinese officials greeted Trump with a lower-level reception team and schoolchildren rather than the kind of full ceremonial welcome he had hyped beforehand. While Xi Jinping later rolled out the red carpet for the cameras and publicly praised the relationship between the two countries, China ultimately gave up virtually nothing meaningful in negotiations.
There was:
— No agreement on Chinese cooperation regarding the ongoing war in Iran
— No concessions involving Taiwan
— No breakthrough on advanced H200 chip restrictions
— No meaningful progress on rare earth exports or critical minerals
— No release of imprisoned Hong Kong pro-democracy publisher Jimmy Lai
— And far fewer Boeing aircraft purchases than Trump had publicly suggested were coming
By the end of the trip, Trump appeared to leave Beijing largely empty-handed, while Xi projected calm confidence on the global stage.
Critics argue the outcome reflects the broader weaknesses of Trump’s foreign policy approach. After years of alienating allies, escalating tariff fights, launching new military conflicts, and constantly shifting positions on trade, the administration entered negotiations with far less leverage than it once had.
China clearly understood that dynamic — and many observers believe Beijing used the summit primarily as an opportunity to showcase its growing global influence while offering few actual concessions in return.
While Trump spent much of the visit praising his “great relationship” with Xi and posing for highly choreographed photographs, there was little concrete progress on any of the major issues facing the two countries. No movement on trade imbalances. No major chip agreement. No strategic breakthrough on Taiwan. No meaningful help on Iran.
For all the grand promises leading into the summit, the end result appeared to reinforce concerns that the administration talks tough internationally but struggles to produce tangible diplomatic wins when it matters most.

But he did accomplish something – he proved again he doesn’t know his ass from a walnut; he confirmed that he can’t be trusted and that he doesn’t give a damn about Taiwan and he openly demonstrated that he is in league with his corrupt family by allowing his son to travel on our tax dollars to China so that he can cut a back room deal. Any bets on how much his billionaire traveling companions had to pony up to Trump for the free ride on our tax dollars.