US and China Reach Trade Framework

US and China Reach Trade Framework

The United States and China have reached a preliminary deal on a range of trade issues, representatives from both sides said on Oct. 26, after two days of negotiations in Malaysia.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said that a “very substantial framework” was established with Chinese trade negotiators in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, that would avoid additional 100 percent tariffs on Chinese products.

“President Trump gave me a great deal of negotiating leverage with the threat of the 100 percent tariffs,” Bessent said in an interview on NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Oct. 26. “I believe we’ve reached a very substantial framework that will avoid that and allow us to discuss many other things with the Chinese.”

He said he expected Beijing to offer “some kind of a deferral” on its imposition of sweeping rare earth export controls.

“They had threatened to put a global, export licensing regime, and I believe that they are going to delay that for a year while they reexamine it,” Bessent said in a later interview with ABC.

He mentioned that China agreed on “substantial agriculture purchases for U.S. farmers.”

Although Bessent didn’t disclose details, he said he is confident that when the deal with China is made public, “[U.S.] soybean farmers will feel very good about what’s going on, both for this season and the coming seasons, for several years.”

The two sides also agreed that Beijing would begin to help the United States with the precursor chemicals for the fentanyl epidemic in the United States, Bessent added.

Meanwhile, China’s commerce ministry issued a statement confirming that Vice Premier He Lifeng had reached an initial consensus after engaging in “frank, in-depth, and constructive” conversation with Bessent and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer.

The two sides discussed issues including port fees, the extension of the trade truce, fentanyl, agricultural products trade, and export controls, according to the statement published on the website of China’s Ministry of Commerce on Oct. 26.

The two sides agreed to iron out the specific details of the framework and go through their respective internal approval processes, it added.

“The U.S. position is tough,” China’s international trade negotiator, Li Chenggang, told reporters in Kuala Lumpur earlier on Oct. 26.

China and the United States had “more than a day of very intense discussion,” he added.

President Donald Trump has expressed high expectations of meeting Chinese leader Xi Jinping next week on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit.

The Chinese regime’s foreign ministry said earlier this week that Xi will attend the regional summit in South Korea and hold bilateral meetings with foreign leaders but wouldn’t confirm a sit-down with Trump.

Trump said at a White House press briefing on Oct. 22 that he wants a “deal on everything.” He has said he wants China to commit to buying soybeans, curbing exports of fentanyl precursor chemicals, and fair trading terms, including on rare earths.

Speaking to reporters on Oct. 24 on the South Lawn of the White House before departing for a week-long Asia tour, Trump told reporters that the issues of Taiwan, imprisoned Hong Kong pro-democracy activist Jimmy Lai, and Russia’s war in Ukraine would also be raised during the upcoming meeting with the communist regime leader.

BBC Boss Resigns Over Doctored Trump Video

Trump Promises $2,000 Tariff Dividend to Americans

2,500+ Weekend Flights Canceled

PBS Executive Arrested for Meth After Traffic Stop

Ukraine Hits 2 Russian Cities, Disrupting Power

IRS Ends Free 'Direct File' Program

Shooter Opens Fire on Border Agents in Chicago

Man Crashes Into Florida Bar: 4 Killed, 11 Injured

Biden Slams Trump in 1st Post-Election Speech

Trump Admin Revokes 80K Visas

Trans Lawmaker Pleads Guilty to Child Exploitation

US to Establish Military Base in Syria

Pelosi Made $130M in Congress Stock Trades

Report: J6 Pipe Bomber Identified as Capitol Cop

Turkey Issues Arrest Warrant for Netanyahu

Brennan, Strzok, Page Subpoenaed in Russiagate Probe

Judge Blocks National Guard Deployment to Portland

Trump Orders DOJ Probe Into Meatpackers

Maine Elects Convicted Killer to City Council

Supreme Court Blocks Full SNAP Payments