China's Xi Says There Are No Winners in a Tariff War as He Visits Southeast Asia

Chinese President Xi Jinping shakes hands with Vietnam's National Assembly Chairman Tran Thanh Man, in Hanoi, Vietnam, April 14, 2025. (Reuters)
Chinese President Xi Jinping shakes hands with Vietnam's National Assembly Chairman Tran Thanh Man, in Hanoi, Vietnam, April 14, 2025. (Reuters)
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China's Xi Says There Are No Winners in a Tariff War as He Visits Southeast Asia

Chinese President Xi Jinping shakes hands with Vietnam's National Assembly Chairman Tran Thanh Man, in Hanoi, Vietnam, April 14, 2025. (Reuters)
Chinese President Xi Jinping shakes hands with Vietnam's National Assembly Chairman Tran Thanh Man, in Hanoi, Vietnam, April 14, 2025. (Reuters)

China's leader Xi Jinping said no one wins in a trade war as he kicked off a diplomatic tour of Southeast Asia on Monday, presenting China as a force for stability in contrast with US President Donald Trump's latest moves on tariffs,

Although Trump has paused some tariffs, he has kept in place 145% duties on China, the world's second-largest economy.

"There are no winners in a trade war, or a tariff war," Xi wrote in an editorial jointly published in Vietnamese and Chinese official media. "Our two countries should resolutely safeguard the multilateral trading system, stable global industrial and supply chains, and open and cooperative international environment."

Xi's visit lets China show Southeast Asia it is a "responsible superpower in the way that contrasts with the way the US under President Donald Trump presents to the whole world," said Nguyen Khac Giang, a visiting fellow at Singapore’s ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute.

Xi was greeted on the tarmac by Vietnam's President Luong Cuong at the start of his two-day visit, a mark of honor not often given to visitors, said Nguyen Thanh Trung, a professor of Vietnamese studies at Fulbright University Vietnam. Students of a drum art group performed as women waved the red and yellow Chinese and Communist Party flags.

While Xi’s trip likely was planned earlier, it has become significant because of the tariff fight between China and the US. The visit offers a path for Beijing to shore up its alliances and find solutions for the high trade barrier that the US has imposed on Chinese exports.

In Hanoi, Xi met with Vietnam’s Communist Party General Secretary To Lam, his counterpart. "In the face of turmoil and disruption in the current global context, China and Vietnam’s commitment to peaceful development, and deepening of friendship and cooperation and has brought the world valuable stability and certainty," he said.

He also met with Vietnam's Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh. The two sides signed a series of memorandums in areas including strengthening cooperation in supply chains, railroad development and environmental protection, according to AP footage of the signed documents.

Nhan Dan, the official mouthpiece of Vietnam's Communist Party, said that China and Vietnam will speed up a $8 billion railway project connecting the two countries in a deal that was approved in February.

The timing of the visit sends a "strong political message that Southeast Asia is important to China," said Huong Le-Thu of the International Crisis Group think tank. She said that given the severity of Trump's tariffs and despite the 90-day pause, Southeast Asian nations were anxious that the tariffs, if implemented, could complicate their development.

Vietnam is experienced at balancing its relations with the USand China. It is run under a communist, one-party system like China but has had a strong relationship with the US.

In 2023, it was the only country that received both US President Joe Biden and China’s Xi Jinping. That year it also upgraded the US to its highest diplomatic level, the same as China and Russia.

Vietnam was one of the biggest beneficiaries of countries trying to decouple their supply chains from China, as businesses moved here. China is its biggest trading partner, and China-Vietnam trade surged 14.6% year-on-year in 2024, according to Chinese state media.

That trade relationship goes both ways.

"The trip to Vietnam, Malaysia, and Cambodia is all about how China can really insulate itself," said Nguyen Khac Giang, an analyst at Singapore’s ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute, pointing out that since Xi became the president in 2013, he has only visited Vietnam twice.

But the intensification of the trade war has put Vietnam in a "very precarious situation" given the impression in the US that Vietnam is serving as a backdoor for Chinese goods, said Giang. Vietnam had been hit with 46% tariffs under Trump's order before the 90-day pause.

China and Vietnam have real long-term differences, including territorial disputes in the South China Sea, where Vietnam has faced off with China’s coast guard but does not often publicize the confrontations.

After Vietnam, Xi is expected to go to Malaysia next and then Cambodia.



Concern in Israel Over US-Iranian Talks in Rome

Trump and Netanyahu at the White House on January 27, 2020 (dpa)
Trump and Netanyahu at the White House on January 27, 2020 (dpa)
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Concern in Israel Over US-Iranian Talks in Rome

Trump and Netanyahu at the White House on January 27, 2020 (dpa)
Trump and Netanyahu at the White House on January 27, 2020 (dpa)

Israel has expressed concern that the Trump administration would relieve sanctions against Tehran as the second round of Iran-US talks wrap up in Rome with an agreement to establish a framework for a potential nuclear deal.

Oman, which is mediating the nuclear negotiations between both countries, said the discussions “aim to reach a fair, lasting, and binding agreement that will guarantee an Iran without nuclear weapons and without sanctions, while preserving its ability to develop peaceful nuclear energy”.

Hours after the end of the second round of US-Iran talks, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he remains firmly committed to preventing Tehran from obtaining a nuclear weapon.

Israel’s Hayom daily newspaper quoted a source close to the White House as saying that US-Iran talks are expected to collapse soon.

It said an Israeli non-governmental source recently spoke with a senior US official who said Israel need not fear the progress being made in talks between US envoy Steve Witkoff and Iranian representatives over Iran's nuclear program.

The source said “a breakdown in the Iran-US talks is expected in a few weeks when the Americans present their full list of demands”.

The Israeli source also quoted the US official as saying that, “Trump is not confused. He is conducting the negotiations in his own way and knows exactly what he is doing”.

“We need to let Trump manage the situation as he sees fit. He has a unique method, but he knows what he's doing,” the US official added.

Israel insists that any negotiation with Iran must lead to the complete dismantling of its nuclear program.

Meanwhile, Reuters said Israel has not ruled out an attack on Iran's nuclear facilities in the coming months despite Trump telling Netanyahu that Washington was for now unwilling to support such a move, according to an Israeli official and two other people familiar with the matter.

Over the past months, Israel has proposed to the Trump administration a series of options to attack Iran’s facilities, including some with late spring and summer timelines, the sources said. The plans include a mix of airstrikes and commando operations that vary in severity and could set back Tehran's ability to weaponize its nuclear program by just months or a year or more, the sources said.

The New York Times reported on Wednesday that Trump told Netanyahu in a White House meeting earlier this month that Washington wanted to prioritize diplomatic talks with Tehran and that he was unwilling to support a strike on the country’s nuclear facilities in the short term.

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa'ar denied on Saturday, in statements to the British Daily Telegraph, reports regarding Trump’s obstruction of an Israeli strike against Iranian nuclear facilities.

“I am a member of the security cabinet, and all the intimate forums, and I don’t remember such a decision,” Sa’ar said. “I don’t think that such a decision was taken. But Israel is committed to the objective of preventing Iran from having nuclear weapons. If that objective can be achieved by a diplomatic path, it is accepted.”

Asked whether he fears that Steve Witkoff, Trump’s negotiator, may be angling for a soft, Obama-style deal with Iran, Sa’ar pointed to a more hawkish recent post by Witkoff on X. “Steve Witkoff tweeted emphasizing that he is looking for the dismantling of the Iranian nuclear project, both enrichment and weaponization,” he said.

Sa’ar added that the current administration is committed to dealing with this issue. “It has put it very high on its agenda. The most important thing is the objective. Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon.”

The Israeli minister added, “We saw [how Iran] helped Russia during the war on Ukraine, with weapons, drones and intelligence,” warning of “the great danger” of allowing “the most extremist regime in the world to have the most dangerous weapon in the world. Iran’s missiles have the ability to reach Europe today.”

He then warned about a contagion of possessing nuclear weapons in the region. “If Iran will have nuclear weapons, then we will have a nuclear race in the Middle East.. and this will have hard consequences on security, not only in the Middle East.”

Meanwhile, Israel's Channel 14 said a deal between the US and Iran would be better for the Iranians than the one signed under the Obama administration.

“Sanctions are expected to be lifted, billions of dollars injected, while Iran’s arms of terrorism, including Hamas and Houthis, would start operating again. Tehran’s proxies are still active in Iraq, Yemen, and even Africa, suggesting that threat is re-emerging,” the channel said.