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The current lull in US-China tensions should not be mistaken for a stable détente. It's a temporary stalemate born from mutual leverage recognition. Both nations are using this pause to fortify their domestic capabilities and supply chains for the next round of competition.
The summit represents a temporary lull in an ongoing, long-term competition, not a fundamental shift toward resolution. Beijing views it as a tactical 'test of wills' to buy time and strengthen its capabilities while maintaining a competitive mindset.
China's key learning from the past year is not that the U.S. lacks economic leverage, but that it lacks the political will to use it. Beijing perceives an unwillingness in Washington to endure domestic consequences, like higher consumer prices during an election year, to win a trade war.
While publicly announcing a trade truce with China, the Trump administration simultaneously signed deals with other Asian nations to diversify supply chains and bolster defense partnerships, effectively preparing for future confrontation with Beijing.
The recent lack of anti-China rhetoric from the Trump administration, including zero mentions at the State of the Union, is a deliberate tactical truce. The goal is to stabilize relations and create a favorable environment for an upcoming presidential summit with Xi Jinping, which the administration wants to be a major success.
The recent trade truce is a transactional deal focused on marketable items like soybeans and TikTok. It conveniently sidesteps fundamental, long-term conflicts such as China's industrial policy, semiconductor competition, and military tensions, making the truce fragile and the broader relationship unstable.
The deep economic interdependence between the U.S. and China makes a full "decoupling" too costly for either side. Instead of a clean break or a lasting peace, the relationship will likely be defined by a continuous cycle of targeted disputes, negotiations, and temporary agreements.
Beijing believes that as the U.S. midterm elections approach, the Trump administration will feel increasing pressure to secure a tangible "win" or deal. By prolonging negotiations, China aims to maximize its leverage and extract more favorable terms, mapping this strategy from the first trade war.
Despite being rivals, the US and China are in weak economic positions where each nation is the only one that can meaningfully help the other. The US is the world's consumer, and China is the world's producer, creating a tense but necessary codependency for economic stability.
Despite escalating rhetoric, the U.S. and China are unlikely to fully decouple their supply chains. Their relationship is maintained by a fragile equilibrium where the U.S. provides semiconductor chips in exchange for China's critical rare earth minerals, making a return to the status quo the most probable outcome.
Recent trade talks deliberately sidestepped core geopolitical issues like Taiwan and the South China Sea. This highlights that economic agreements are merely treating symptoms. The fundamental problem is a geopolitical power struggle, which will continue to undermine any economic progress.