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    Trump to travel to China next month, with US trade policy in focus

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    By Trevor Hunnicutt and Michael Martina

    WASHINGTON, Feb 20 (Reuters) - U.S. President ‌Donald Trump will travel to China from March 31 to April 2 for a highly anticipated meeting between the leaders of the world's ​two biggest economies, a trip announced as the Supreme Court overturned Trump's sweeping tariffs against imported goods.

    A White House official confirmed the trip on Friday, just before the highest U.S. court dealt Trump a stinging defeat by striking down ⁠many of the tariffs he has used in a global trade war, including some against rival China.

    Trump's talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping on an extended visit to Beijing had been expected to revolve around extending a trade truce that kept both countries from further hiking tariffs.

    RULING RAISES QUESTIONS FOR U.S.-CHINA RELATIONS

    But the Supreme Court's reversal created new questions for tense U.S.-China relations that had ​recently stabilized after Trump trimmed tariffs on China in exchange for measures from Beijing, including cracking down on the illicit fentanyl trade and pausing export restrictions on critical minerals.

    Twenty percent tariffs on China's U.S.-bound exports were imposed under the International ‌Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEEPA, which the Supreme Court ruled Trump had overstepped. Those tariffs were tied to national emergencies related to fentanyl distribution and trade imbalances.

    Other duties on Chinese goods, including those implemented under legislated trade authorities, known as Section 301 and Section 232, remain in place.

    It was not immediately clear how many of the tariffs Trump would restore, but he said at a ⁠press conference that he would impose a new 10% global tariff for 150 days.

    Trump's last trip to China in 2017 was the most recent by a U.S. president.

    "That's ⁠going to be a wild one," Trump told foreign leaders visiting Washington on Thursday about the upcoming China visit. "We have to put on the biggest display you've ever had in the history of China."

    The Chinese embassy in Washington did not respond to a request for comment. Beijing has not confirmed the trip.

    TRUMP SEES TRADE IMBALANCE AS NATIONAL EMERGENCY

    The Trump administration has said the global tariffs were necessary because of national emergencies related to trade imbalances that have weakened U.S. manufacturing.

    Trump had already been "playing defense" in the trade war, given the effectiveness of Beijing's threat to cut off rare earths, said ‌Scott Kennedy, a China economics expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. The tariff defeat likely "cements his weakness in their eyes," he said.

    "They (Chinese officials) like the direction of ⁠travel of the bilateral relationship in which the U.S. is diminished and they want to keep things from re-escalating," Kennedy said.

    The visit would ‌be the leaders' first in-person talks since an October meeting in South Korea, where they agreed on the trade truce.

    While ​the October meeting largely sidestepped the sensitive issue of Taiwan, Xi raised U.S. arms sales to the island when the two leaders spoke this month.

    Washington announced its largest-ever arms sale approval with Taiwan in December, including $11.1 billion in weapons that could ostensibly be used to defend against a Chinese attack. Taiwan expects more such sales.

    China views Taiwan as its own territory, a position Taipei ‌rejects. The U.S., bound by law to provide Taiwan with the means to defend itself, has formal diplomatic ties with China, but ​it maintains unofficial ties with Taiwan and is the island's most important arms supplier.

    Xi ⁠also said during the February call that he would consider further increasing soybean purchases, according to Trump. Struggling U.S. farmers are a major political constituency ‌for Trump, and China is the top soybean consumer.

    Although Trump has justified several hawkish policy steps from Canada ⁠to Greenland and Venezuela as necessary to thwart China, he has eased policy toward Beijing in the past several months in areas from tariffs to advanced computer chips and drones.

    The global trade war Trump initiated after he began his second term as president in January 2025 has alienated other trading partners, including allies.

    Critics had argued that imposing steep tariffs on countries across the board actually insulated ​Beijing from the tariff barrage and reduced incentives to move supply ‌chains out of China.

    Friday's ruling could indirectly increase pressure on Beijing if the effective tariff rates on other countries, particularly in Southeast Asia, fall more than on China, said Martin Chorzempa, a senior ⁠fellow at the Peterson Institute of International Economics.

    "Unlike with many other countries, there is a well-established, ​much more legally durable mechanism for most of the tariffs on China that make them less affected than those on other countries," Chorzempa said.

    (Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt and Michael Martina, ​additional reporting by Katharine Jackson;Editing by Andrei Khalip, Colleen Jenkins, Rod Nickel, Patricia Zengerle)

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