‘s whirlwind tour of Asia this week culminated in a much-anticipated sit down with Chinese President on the sidelines of the annual summit hosted this year by .
So far, details of the meeting have . The will lower in exchange for cracking down on chemicals used to make fentanyl. Trump said China would buy “tremendous amounts” of soybeans from the US, after Beijing had cut off purchases amid an escalating trade war.
An “amazing meeting” with Xi concluded, Trump left town before the APEC summit’s main event: the leaders’ meeting on Friday, which Xi is expected to attend. South Korea has planned days of talks around the summit’s theme “building a sustainable tomorrow.”
Whether the latest truce between the US and China will be sustainable remains a question mark.
“US-China relations will remain intensely competitive, and even if a few small deals are reached and the temperature is lowered for a while, countries need to be prepared for renewed friction that could have consequences for their interests,” Bonnie Glaser, managing director of the German Marshal Fund’s Indo-Pacific Program, told DW.
A US-China truce, for now
Trump began his second term in office by , allies and competitors alike. The tariff rates presented on “Liberation Day” in April defied economic logic, leaving countries wondering how to respond. Since then, many of the tariffs have ended up exempted, rolled back or delayed, complicating long-term planning on sourcing and supply chains.
Competition with China has been at the forefront of US trade policy since Trump’s first term. The scattershot tariffs in April were surprising, partly because they went far beyond what had been expected, namely that Trump would limit aggressive trade policy to China.
However, since Trump’s first term, Beijing has learned to push back. At one point, both sides had threatened tariffs well over 100% before de-escalating. The saw Trump renew threats of 100% tariffs after Beijing threatened to restrict the export of high-tech critical rare-earth minerals, .
The commotion almost scuttled plans for the Trump-Xi talks in South Korea, before both sides .
But despite the current detente, which is said to include a “one-year truce,” the overall economic landscape remains volatile. Trump is known for his unpredictability, such as slapping a 10% tariff on Canada last week over an .
“Washington’s tumultuous trade negotiations — from China to India to Korea — have left many of its Asian allies questioning whether the United States still sees economic integration as a strategic asset or a bargaining chip,” Alison Szalwinski, vice president and a China adviser at The Asia Group, a public policy and strategy consultancy, told DW.
Amid this tense geopolitical landscape, forums like APEC will find it more difficult to achieve multilateral outcomes under the current geopolitical climate, Andrew Yeo, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution’s Center for Asia Policy Studies, wrote ahead of Trump’s Asia tour.
This has “contributed to the steady marginalization of summits in favor of using large gatherings like APEC to schedule smaller meetings on the sidelines,” Yeo said.
How APEC helped open up China to the world
The US was a founding member of APEC, launched in 1989 to promote open trade and economic cooperation in the Asia Pacific. The results have been overall lower average tariffs in the region, along with more integrated supply chains and cross-border investment.
China joined APEC in 1991, in its first entry into a multilateral economic organization as part of Beijing’s “reform and opening up” policy launched by Deng Xiaoping in the late 1970s.
Participation in APEC discussions pushed China toward market-oriented reforms, transparency and regulatory modernization, and encouraged liberalized trade and investment policies.
This preceded China’s membership in the in 2001, which helped spark the growth of China’s export machine.
Flash forward to 2025, and APEC host South Korea has listed expected deliverables from the summit to include cooperation on harnessing artificial intelligence among APEC economies in an “inclusive and sustainable manner,” and responding to demographic changes like aging populations and labor shortages.
Big deals on the sidelines
But with the Trump-Xi talks wrapped up and and South Korea inked earlier in the week, the summit has already lost some of its luster, with the leader of its largest economy heading home on a plane before the event had even kicked off.
After Trump’s and Japan, both countries agreed to what amounts to a $900 billion (€777 billion) investment in the US economy in exchange for tariff relief, with deals comprising energy, artificial intelligence and critical minerals.
Brookings Asia fellow Patricia Kim wrote that Asian middle powers like South Korea are caught between the US and China.
“They are focused on negotiating trade deals with Washington while managing economic exposure to Beijing. Across the region, governments are hedging rather than leading in an increasingly transactional landscape,” Kim said.
US Asian allies hedge amid uncertainty
And while South Korea and Japan make their own deals with Trump, there are signs both countries are hedging against an unreliable US by deepening their trade and security cooperation with other regional partners in the face of more transactional US policies.
“The share of Korean and Japanese exports heading to the US is falling, for example, despite the trade deals that both countries announced with Washington in July. Neither country, however, is looking to multilateral institutions such as the WTO or APEC to resolve its trade negotiations with the US,” Jeremy Chan, a senior analyst for Northeast Asia and China at political risk consultancy Eurasia Group, told DW.
Diplomatic engagement is also picking up between South Korea and Japan. Before meeting Trump for the first time in August, South Korean President Lee Jae-myung met Japan’s then-Prime Minister Ishiba Shigeru in Tokyo.
“Seoul used to consult with Washington before engaging with Tokyo; now the opposite is true, as relations between South Korea and Japan have improved, and both countries face similar challenges in negotiating contentious trade and investment agreements with the US without harming security ties,” Chan said.
At APEC, Lee will hold his first meeting with Japan’s new prime minister, , a conservative who is poised to moderate formerly hawkish foreign policy views on South Korea.
“In a world in which the US is less reliable, Japan and Korea will need each other more, with shuttle diplomacy between Seoul and Tokyo likely to continue,” Chan said.
Szalwinski from The Asia Group said that countries have been hedging for some time by “doubling down on smaller, results-oriented ‘minilateral’ arrangements, oftentimes oriented around more narrow or tangible shared interests.”
What role does APEC now play?
However, in an ever-growing transactional world, big tent groupings like APEC are still needed to provide a forum for dialogue.
Even if Trump did not attend the leaders’ summit itself, and the talks with Xi took place in the city of Busan, away from the main summit site in Gyeongju, APEC did provide a neutral venue for a meeting between the US and China at a critical time.
And the sit-down did lead to tentative steps towards de-escalation, like another round of Trump-Xi talks in Beijing slated in 2026. According to Chinese state news agency Xinhua, during their meeting Xi told Trump that China and the US should not fall into a “vicious cycle of retaliation” against each other.
“Uncertainty is contributing to the general perception, which started several years ago, of eroding confidence in multilateralism, but it’s not necessarily killing it,” Szalwinski said.
Edited by: Karl Sexton
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