Trump says he and Chinese President Xi Jinping feel 'very similar on Iran'

The second round of talks on Friday followed a state banquet the day before.

ByMeghan Mistry, Fritz Farrow and Nicholas KerrABCNews logo
Friday, May 15, 2026 11:17AM
Trump says he and Xi Jinping feel 'very similar on Iran'

President Donald Trump said Friday that he and Chinese President Xi Jinping feel "very similar on Iran" in wanting the war to end andprohibiting Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon as the two started their second day of meetings in their high-stakes summit.

"We did discuss Iran. We feelvery similarin Iran. We want that to end. Wedon'twant them to haveanuclear weapon.We want the [Strait of Hormuz]opened.We'reclosing it now. They closed it, and we closed it on top of them, but we want the straits open, and we want them to get it ended, becauseit'sa crazy thing," Trump said at a photo opportunity before the two leaders had tea and a working lunch.

Trump said they had discussed a number of issues, "and I thinkwe'revery muchinagreement." Representatives from China did not offer further comment on what was discussed in the meetings.

Chinese President Xi Jinping, right, and U.S. President Donald Trump attend a meeting on the sidelines of their visit to the Zhongnanhai Garden in Beijing, Friday, May 15, 2026.
Chinese President Xi Jinping, right, and U.S. President Donald Trump attend a meeting on the sidelines of their visit to the Zhongnanhai Garden in Beijing, Friday, May 15, 2026.
Evan Vucci/Pool Photo via AP

He also said the two leaders "made some fantastic trade deals."

Before Friday's meeting Trump met Xi to tour the gardens at Zhongnanhai, the Chinese Communist Party leadership compound.

Xi said he picked the location "especially to reciprocate the hospitality extended to me in 2017 at Mar-a-Lago."Xi said Trump was interested to learn about the plants in the garden including the Chinese roses. Xi said he "agreed" to gift Trump seeds for those roses.

The meetings come amid some tension on the issue of Taiwan -- an issue about which Xi issued a stark warning to the U.S. during the leaders' first sit-down -- and questions about the role of China in ending the war with Iran.

Trump was seeking to bolster international support amid a push to reopen the Strait of Hormuz as the U.S. war with Iran stretches on. China is Iran's principal oil consumer.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry, responding to inquiries to confirm whether Trump and Xi discussed Iran, sidestepped the question but reiterated China's position that the ceasefire and negotiations should continue and that the Strait of Hormuz should be reopened.

"There is no need to continue this war that should not have happened," a spokesperson for the Foreign Ministry said. "Finding a solution earlier is beneficial to the United States and Iran, as well as to the countries in the region and even the whole world."

"Since the door of dialogue is open, it should not be closed again," the spokesperson said.

Trump and Xi also attended a state banquet earlier during the visit.

On the first day of the summit, the U.S. president was greeted with pomp and pageantry upon his arrival in Beijing and again before his bilateral meeting with Xi at the Great Hall of the People that lasted for more than two hours.

Regarding the issue of Taiwan, Xi said that if the issue of Taiwan is handled "improperly," the two nations could "come into conflict," according to China's official state broadcaster Xinhua. However, Xi did say that if the issue is handled "properly," "bilateral relations can remain generally stable."

Tech and trade have also been key themes during the talks.

Trump said before the trip that he planned to ask Xi to "open up" the Chinese economy. CEOs Elon Musk of Tesla and SpaceX, Tim Cook of Apple and Jensen Huang of NVIDIA, among others, traveled with the president to Beijing.

Trump said the business leaders joined him to "pay respects" to Xi.

"We asked the top 30 in the world. Every single one of them said 'yes,' and I didn't want the second or the third in the company. I wanted only the top. And they're here today to pay respects to you and to China, and they look forward to trade and doing business, and it's going to be totally reciprocal on our behalf," Trump said.

The White House said one of Trump's goals going into the summit with Xi is to secure purchasing agreements with China in the aerospace, agriculture and energy sectors and the CEOs traveled with the president to help push for that.

U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said on Friday that the U.S. expects China to buy tens of billions of dollars worth of American agricultural products in the next few years.

"We expect to also see an agreement for double-digit billion purchases ... over the next three years, per year, coming out of this visit, and that's more general, that's aggregate, that's not just soybeans, that's everything else," Greer told Bloomberg.

Greer didn't provide any more specifics about the terms of the agreement he said the administration expects.

Before their meeting at the Great Hall of the People on Thursday, Trump called Xi a "great leader" and touted their relationship.

"Such respect for China, the job you've done.You're a great leader. I say it to everybody. You're a great leader," Trump said. "Sometimes people don't like me saying it, but I say it anyway, because it's true. I always say the truth."

"We've had a fantastic relationship. We've gotten along," Trump said. "When there were difficulties, we worked it out. I would call you, and you would call me, and whenever we had a problem -- people don't know -- whenever we had a problem, we worked it out very quickly, and we're going to have a fantastic future together."

Xi told Trump that China and the U.S. "both stand to gain from cooperation and lose from confrontation."

"We should be partners, not rivals," he continued." We should help each other succeed and prosper together and find the right way for major countries to get along well with each other in the new era."

ABC News'Karson Yiu, Mariam Khan, Michelle Stoddart and Kevin Shalvey contributed to this report.

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