How US-China ties have crumbled – and where Xi and Biden could rebuild

A highly anticipated meeting between Chinese leader Xi Jinping and U.S. President Joe Biden in San Francisco on Wednesday will be an opportunity for the heads of state to show the world – and their own people – that they can responsibly manage relations between the two superpowers.

Since Mr. Xi last visited the United States in 2017, Sino-U.S. relations have spiraled, reaching a low point not seen since the 1970s. Messrs. Xi and Biden last met face-to-face a year ago in Bali, Indonesia.

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U.S.-China ties have measurably and dramatically deteriorated in recent years. But this also presents an opportunity for growth – one both countries’ leaders feel a responsibility to act on.

The two have much to discuss when they rendezvous on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit this week, including regional tensions and the wars in Ukraine and Gaza. While major breakthroughs will require more time, experts say this meeting is likely to result in modest progress on issues ranging from military-to-military communications to counternarcotics and climate. 

The Biden-Xi meeting itself marks headway in steadying ties between Washington and Beijing, which frayed due to tensions over trade, technology, Taiwan, human rights, and other issues.

“Both sides are trying to present to the rest of the world that they have things under control,” says Oriana Skylar Mastro, author of the forthcoming book “Upstart: How China Became a Great Power.” That, she says, requires “predictable, high-level engagement.”

When Chinese leader Xi Jinping meets U.S. President Joe Biden in San Francisco on Wednesday, it will be first and foremost an opportunity for the two heads of state to show the world – and their own people – that they can responsibly manage relations between the two superpowers.

Asian countries’ leaders, especially, will be eager for signs that China and the United States are making progress in stabilizing relations at the Biden-Xi meeting, to be held on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit. A regional forum with 21 members mainly in Asia and the Americas, APEC accounts for nearly half the world’s trade and about 62% of its gross domestic product.

Messrs. Xi and Biden no doubt have much to discuss, from regional tensions – in the Taiwan Strait, South China Sea, and Korean Peninsula – to the wars in Ukraine and Gaza, and existential issues such as global warming. The two leaders last met face-to-face a year ago in Bali, Indonesia.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

U.S.-China ties have measurably and dramatically deteriorated in recent years. But this also presents an opportunity for growth – one both countries’ leaders feel a responsibility to act on.

While no major breakthroughs are expected, experts say the meeting is likely to result in modest progress on issues ranging from military-to-military communications to counternarcotics and climate. 

To be sure, the Biden-Xi meeting – a product of months of intensive diplomacy by both sides – itself marks headway in steadying ties between Washington and Beijing, which frayed due to tensions over trade, technology, Taiwan, human rights, and other issues.

“Both sides are trying to present to the rest of the world that they have things under control,” says Oriana Skylar Mastro, author of the forthcoming book “Upstart: How China Became a Great Power.” That, she says, requires “predictable, high-level engagement.”