M A Hossain,
History rarely announces itself in real time. When President Richard Nixon landed in Beijing in 1972 to meet Mao Zedong, the world understood immediately that something foundational had shifted. The United States was opening relations with a revolutionary China it had spent decades isolating. Seven years later, Deng Xiaoping toured America in a cowboy hat, symbolizing a China eager to integrate into the global economy rather than overturn it.
Donald Trump’s upcoming meeting with Xi Jinping in Beijing will not carry the same theatrical grandeur. No photographs from the Great Hall of the People are likely to enter history textbooks beside Nixon and Mao. Yet dismissing the summit as ordinary diplomacy would be a mistake. The significance lies not in spectacle but in what the meeting quietly reveals about the changing balance of global power — and about which country increasingly appears more disciplined, patient and strategically coherent.
For much of the post-Cold War era, Washington operated under the assumption that economic dominance and military superiority were permanent features of the international system. China was viewed as a manufacturing platform, not a civilizational rival. American policymakers believed Beijing would eventually liberalize politically as it integrated economically into the Western order. That prediction now looks remarkably naive.
Today’s China is not the weak, isolated state Nixon encountered half a century ago. It is the world’s second-largest economy, the central trading partner for much of Asia, the Gulf, Africa and Latin America, and a technological competitor capable of challenging American supremacy in areas once considered untouchable. More importantly, China has achieved this transformation without military adventurism on the scale repeatedly pursued by Washington since 2001. That contrast matters.
The United States arrives in Beijing carrying the burdens of strategic exhaustion. Trump’s confrontation with Iran has exposed once again a recurring American weakness: an unmatched ability to start conflicts without a corresponding ability to conclude them decisively. From Iraq to Afghanistan and now the Persian Gulf, American power often appears tactically overwhelming but strategically incoherent.
China, meanwhile, has played a different game entirely. Beijing maintained relations with Tehran while avoiding direct entanglement. It continued purchasing Iranian oil, encouraged mediation through Pakistan, and positioned itself as a potential diplomatic broker rather than a combatant. This is not altruism. China’s dependence on stable energy flows through the Strait of Hormuz gives it every reason to prevent prolonged instability. But realism in foreign policy is not a vice. It is usually a sign of maturity.
Western analysts frequently portray China as an aggressive revisionist power preparing to overturn the global order. The reality is more complicated. Beijing certainly seeks greater regional influence, particularly in the South China Sea and across the Indo-Pacific. Its ambitions regarding Taiwan are also unmistakable. But China’s preferred instrument of expansion has historically been commerce, infrastructure and political leverage — not shock-and-awe invasions.
Even on Taiwan, where rhetoric often becomes apocalyptic, Beijing’s behavior suggests caution rather than recklessness. Xi Jinping has repeatedly emphasized reunification as a historic objective, yet China has avoided the kind of catastrophic military gamble that Russia undertook in Ukraine. Chinese strategists understand something Washington often forgets: wars between major powers are easier to begin than to control.
This is partly why Beijing appears increasingly focused on long-term political influence rather than immediate military confrontation. The upcoming Taiwanese elections matter more to China than dramatic amphibious operations across the Taiwan Strait. Patience, not impulse, has become the defining characteristic of Chinese statecraft under Xi. That patience is equally visible in technology policy.
Only a few years ago, the United States believed export controls and semiconductor restrictions could permanently slow China’s technological rise. The famous “small yard, high fence” doctrine aimed to block Beijing from accessing advanced chips and AI infrastructure. Yet the strategy produced mixed results. China accelerated domestic innovation, invested massively in indigenous semiconductor capacity, and expanded partnerships across the non-Western world.
Washington has since quietly softened some restrictions because American firms were losing market share while China continued developing alternatives anyway.
This represents a broader truth about twenty-first century geopolitics: containment is far harder against an economy deeply embedded in global supply chains. The Soviet Union could be isolated. China cannot. It manufactures critical goods, processes rare earth minerals, dominates industrial infrastructure and increasingly shapes technological standards across emerging markets.
Artificial intelligence now represents the next battlefield. Both Beijing and Washington seek leadership in AI, quantum computing and advanced automation. Yet there is an irony here. The United States often frames the competition as a defense of liberal technological values against authoritarianism. But global audiences increasingly judge countries less by ideology and more by competence. And competence is precisely where China has gained ground.
While American politics descends into polarization, institutional paralysis and culture wars, Beijing presents itself — fairly or unfairly — as a state capable of long-term planning. The Belt and Road Initiative, despite setbacks and criticism, demonstrated strategic ambition on a scale Western democracies rarely attempt anymore. China built ports, railways, industrial zones and energy corridors while America spent trillions on wars that produced little lasting stability.
This does not mean China is without problems. Its economy faces serious structural pressures: demographic decline, youth unemployment, debt accumulation and the lingering effects of the property crisis. Predictions of inevitable Chinese dominance are as simplistic as earlier claims of inevitable Chinese collapse. But relative decline in international politics is often about perception as much as raw numbers. And here Trump has inadvertently strengthened Beijing’s narrative.
His repeated attacks on NATO allies, erratic tariff wars, withdrawal from international agreements and unilateral military decisions have weakened the image of the United States as a predictable guarantor of global order. Countries across Asia, the Middle East and even Europe increasingly hedge between Washington and Beijing because they no longer fully trust American consistency.
China has exploited this opening skillfully. It presents itself as the defender of stable trade, infrastructure connectivity and state sovereignty against what many nations view as American volatility. Whether one fully accepts that narrative is almost beside the point. In geopolitics, perceptions accumulate into influence.
The Beijing summit therefore matters less for whatever trade agreement eventually emerges and more for what it symbolizes. Twenty years ago, American presidents met Chinese leaders from a position of unquestioned superiority. Today the atmosphere is different. Washington still possesses immense military, financial and technological advantages, but the aura of inevitability has faded.
The United States remains powerful. China remains constrained. Neither side is truly ascendant in the triumphant way nationalist commentators on both sides imagine. Yet one country increasingly appears reactive while the other appears patient. That distinction may define the coming era.
When historians look back on this decade, they may not remember the precise wording of any communique issued after Trump and Xi meet in Beijing. They may not remember tariff percentages or soybean purchases either. What they may remember instead is that this was the period when the world slowly recognized that American primacy was no longer absolute — and that China, through discipline more than drama, had become indispensable to the shape of the international order.
M A Hossain is a senior journalist and international affairs analyst, based in Bangladesh. He can be reached at: writetomahossain@gmail.com
This article published at :
1. European Times, EU : 13 May,26