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Washington Times

Ten China Falsehoods Exposed by the Trump–Xi Summit

miles_yu
miles_yu
Senior Fellow and Director, China Center
Miles Yu
President Donald Trump speaks with Chinese President Xi Jinping on May 15, 2026, in Beijing, China. (Getty Images)
Caption
President Donald Trump speaks with Chinese President Xi Jinping on May 15, 2026, in Beijing, China. (Getty Images)

The May 2026 Trump-Xi summit revealed a dangerous temptation in American foreign policy: the desire to substitute comforting illusions for strategic clarity.

But illusions do not preserve peace. They invite aggression. The free world must reject Beijing’s false narratives and recognize the Chinese Communist Party for what it is: an authoritarian regime fundamentally hostile to liberty, transparency, democratic civilization and America and all that we represent.

Only clear-eyed realism, not summit theater, can preserve peace and freedom in the Indo-Pacific and beyond.

1. The myth of the “Thucydides Trap”

The Beijing summit revived the tired mythology of the “Thucydides Trap,” the claim that conflict between the United States and China is inevitable because a rising China is displacing a declining America. This theory is not only intellectually bankrupt, but also historically erroneous, because the rising power was defeated in the Peloponnesian war that Thucydides masterfully documented. 

Xi Jinping himself is trapped not by geopolitical reality, but by Marxist-Leninist dogma, which insists capitalism is collapsing and communist victory triumphantly inexorable. The CCP mistakes dogma and propaganda for reality. America remains the world’s leading military, technological and financial power, the global hub of innovation and inspiration, the only superpower capable of shaping global security, trade and alliance environments.

China, meanwhile, faces demographic collapse, economic stagnation, mass unemployment, popular disenchantment and elite political instability. More importantly, the real divide is not “China versus America,” but communist China versus the entire free world.

2. Taiwan is not the core issue

Beijing insists that Taiwan is “the most important issue” in U.S.-China relations. This is false. The central issue is the irreconcilable conflict between the CCP’s authoritarian ideology and the democratic principles of the free world. Taiwan merely exposes and amplifies that contradiction.

Beijing elevates Taiwan because it allows the CCP to avoid scrutiny of its dictatorship, concentration camps, censorship, repression, sponsoring of anti-American terror regimes and predatory economic practices. To filibuster the U.S. president with Taiwan is to nullify U.S. demands for bilateral cooperation on trade, artificial intelligence security management, fentanyl facilitation, regime support for Russia and Iran, reciprocal market access, etc. Taiwan is not the cause of tension; the CCP’s hostility toward freedom and free market is.

3. Taiwan is already independent

Beijing falsely claims that “Taiwan going independent” is provoking instability across the Taiwan Strait. Taiwan is already independent in every meaningful sense.

It has its own government, military, constitution, elections, currency and borders. The Republic of China on Taiwan has never been governed by the People’s Republic of China for a single day. Taiwanese leaders repeatedly state that there is no need to “declare independence” because Taiwan already functions as a sovereign state. The real destabilizing force is the CCP’s refusal to accept reality.

4. Taiwan does not belong to communist China

The summit repeated the falsehood that Taiwan “belongs to China.” History, law, and political reality say otherwise.

Beijing’s obsession with Taiwan is not about territorial integrity but revolutionary ideology. The CCP is driven by what George Kennan identified in the Soviet Union decades ago: an expansionist ideological compulsion. Taiwan is merely the first link in a broader chain of regional aggression.

Beijing threatens Japan in the East China Sea, intimidates the Philippines in the South China Sea, pressures India along the Himalayas, menaces Vietnam, and bullies virtually every neighboring state. Taiwan is not the end goal; it is the opening objective.

5. Xi Jinping Is not a master strategist

Many summit observers portrayed Mr. Xi Jinping as a visionary statesman shaping a new world order of peace and stability. In reality, he is increasingly weak both domestically and internationally.

Under his rule, China’s economy is deteriorating under massive debt, collapsing consumer confidence, and youth unemployment. Political purges inside the Politburo and the People’s Liberation Army reveal deep instability within the regime. Mr. Xi’s endless purges demonstrate paranoia, not strength. Far from commanding admiration, Mr. Xi is increasingly viewed within China as an insecure autocrat obsessed with personal power.

China’s dependence on Western export markets and imported energy also leaves the regime strategically vulnerable. Beijing’s military setbacks and the poor reputation of Chinese weapons systems abroad have further damaged CCP prestige.

6. China is not truly open for business

The summit promoted the illusion that China remains open to foreign business. This is increasingly detached from reality.

Foreign direct investment into China has plummeted. Western, Japanese, South Korean and Taiwanese firms are shifting production elsewhere as “de-risking” accelerates. China’s anti-espionage laws, forced technology transfers, arbitrary regulations, data restrictions and political crackdowns have made the country deeply unattractive for investment.

The CCP demands market access abroad while imposing Orwellian controls at home. Decoupling is no longer theoretical but a fast-developing reality.

7. Communist China is not peace-loving

Beijing continues to market itself as a “peace-loving nation.” History says otherwise. Communist China has consistently relied on coercion, intimidation and aggression.

From the Korean War to the invasion of Vietnam, from border clashes with India to militarization of the South China Sea, the CCP has repeatedly used force to achieve political objectives. Today, China conducts near-daily military intimidation against Taiwan while threatening neighboring states. A regime that openly prepares for war while threatening democratic nations cannot credibly claim to be a force for peace.

8. “Win-win cooperation” is a dangerous illusion

Summit advocates claimed that U.S.-China cooperation can succeed without addressing democracy, human rights, political repression or China’s predatory economic model. This fantasy ignores the nature of the CCP system itself.

Beijing’s so-called “Four Red Lines” are designed to silence criticism while preserving the Party’s authoritarian control. But there can be no genuine stability while the CCP continues genocide against Uyghurs, dismantles Hong Kong freedoms, weaponizes trade, steals intellectual property and suppresses basic liberties. Cooperation detached from moral reality becomes appeasement.

9. “Mutual respect” is Beijing’s propaganda trap

Beijing repeatedly insists the root problem in bilateral relations is that America “does not respect China.” This slogan is deliberately manipulative.

The U.S. respects the Chinese people and Chinese civilization. What it refuses to respect is the CCP’s demand for deference and immunity from criticism. “Mutual respect” in Beijing’s language means silence about dictatorship, aggression and repression. Respect cannot mean surrendering truth or abandoning democratic values.

10. The CCP does not represent China

Perhaps the biggest falsehood of all is the claim that the CCP represents China and the Chinese people. It does not. The CCP is a Leninist ruling apparatus of European origin that maintains power through censorship, surveillance, coercion and fear.

Chinese civilization is thousands of years old; the CCP has ruled for less than eight decades. Millions of Chinese citizens themselves seek freedom, dignity and opportunity outside party control. To criticize the CCP is not to attack China. On the contrary, separating China from the CCP is essential to understanding both.

Read in the Washington Post.