Wary mood to mark Xi-Trump summit with irritants aplenty on both sides: analysts
Observers noted the number of recent strategic and trade blows, including the war on Iran, have not derailed the meeting from going ahead Scott Kennedy, senior adviser with the Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), said that both sides had been “picking up some chits which they might be able to negotiate on during the meeting”. “Each side has enormous leverage over the other, managing their interdependence in a way that doesn’t lead to escalatory spirals,” he added. “Let’s face it, it will push a lot of other things off the agenda,” said Lyle Goldstein, Brown University’s Asia programme director. “Trump is focused on it because he wants it off his desk.” Both sides want the strategic Strait of Hormuz opened, a chokepoint for China’s energy and trade links and generator of US inflation.