A Summit Marked by Caution between Trump and Xi
Talal
Abu-Ghazaleh
Only days
before a summit marked by caution between US President Donald Trump and Chinese
President Xi Jinping; where major issues are being addressed through reciprocal
pressure rather than traditional de-escalation, the world does not appear to be
heading toward an easy or rapid settlement. Instead, it is entering an emerging
phase of global repositioning, where the rules of trade, the boundaries of technology,
and the standards of international influence are being redefined.
Regarding the
ongoing trade tensions between the US and China, the situation extends far
beyond a temporary dispute over the trade of goods or energy flows. Rather, it reflects
a gradual and far-reaching restructuring of power balances in the World Order;where economic geography increasingly overlaps with technological sovereignty
and trade becomes a direct extension of national security.
China’s recent
action, which consists of banning companies operating on its territory; whether
domestic or foreign, from complying with US sanctions imposed on several
Chinese entities related to the oil-refining sector, reflects Beijing’s shift
from a reactive stance toward a more assertive approach in defining the terms
of engagement. However, interpreting these measures in isolation from the
broader context may overlook a more important dimension of the scene. This is
that sanctions are no longer limited to oil or finance, but extend to reach deeper
layers of global influence, especially technological supply chains,
semiconductors, and artificial intelligence (AI) which can be referred to as “silicon
sovereignty”.
Yet, today’s war
centers on who controls the invisible infrastructure of the global economy: semiconductors,
algorithms, and computing systems that fuel the digital economy itself. From
this perspective, every visible economic measure becomes part of a broader struggle
for long-term technological supremacy.
For its part,
Beijing rejects the American approach of using sanctions as a pressure tool outside
the framework of international legitimacy, considering it an extension of
unilateral policies lacking multilateral authorization. To support its position,
it relies on domestic legislation, such as China's 2021 Blocking Statute, which
was designed to protect companies operating in China from foreign measures it
deems unjustified or illegal within its jurisdiction.
The most
important aspect in this development is not only the content of China’s
response, rather its structural impact on multinational companies, which today
face a dual dilemma; either comply with Chinese law or adhere to US sanctions,
which may result in jeopardizing their interests in one of the world’s largest
markets.
In contrast, it
should not be excluded that Washington may pursue further escalation in the
next phase, extending sectoral sanctions to more comprehensive tools, such as
expanding partial or gradual financial separation between the two economic
systems, or what is known as selective decoupling; which may restructure global
financial and technological flows between the two powers.
If such path
continues to escalate, its impact is unlikely to remain restrained to a
bilateral conflict, but rather it will extend across the global economy. The figures
reflect the depth of interdependence that makes this confrontation highly
sensitive, with annual bilateral trade being close to $700 billion, while US
investment in China exceeds $122 billion, compared to more than $200 billion of
Chinese investment in the US over the past two decades.
Ultimately,
these figures are not just economic indicators, but a connected network of
mutual interests that renders any escalation extremely costly for both parties.
Thus, the recent Chinese stance can be interpreted as a dual message, which is
a rejection of sanctions policy, and an announcement of readiness to engage in
a long-lasting phase of managed confrontation that extends beyond oil and trade
into the foundational infrastructure of the global technology system.