The long-awaited U.S.–China meeting in South Korea on Oct. 30 ended with a truce that lowered tariffs and halted a spiraling trade war between the world’s two biggest economies.
China is now buying soybeans again after a months-long hiatus. The rare-earth minerals will flow out again. And the tit-for-tat port fees are on pause.
The two national leaders both hailed the meeting as highly positive. President Donald Trump rated it a 12 out of 10. Chinese Communist Party (CCP) leader Xi Jinping called it “a new start.”
But behind the friendly banter, the question of how long the detente lasts—and whether the CCP will renege on its promises—is another matter.
“It’s a diplomatic painkiller,” Sun Kuo-hsiang, an international affairs professor at Taiwan’s Nanhua University, told The Epoch Times. “It alleviates the symptoms for the moment but leaves the root cause untouched.”
“Most cease-fires are very fragile,“ Balding, founder of New Kite Data Labs, an open-source intelligence entity that researches the Chinese economy, told The Epoch Times. ”They don’t last a long time.”
A Delay Game?
The landmark meeting on Oct. 30 was the first face-to-face encounter between Trump and Xi in more than six years.After their talk, Trump said the two had “agreed on many things, with others, even of high importance, being very close to resolved.”
With the agreement came a rollback of threats and retaliatory measures from the preceding months. China’s reciprocal tariffs, imposed since March, will pause and its purchases of U.S. soybeans will resume. The sweeping rare-earth export controls imposed in October will stop for a year. Beijing also promised to crack down on the smuggling of fentanyl precursors in return for a 10 percent China tariff cut.

But absent from the deal are glaring issues that overshadow the bilateral relationship. Among them are the fate of Taiwan, human rights, China’s military aggression in the Indo-Pacific region, structural issues with China’s industrial policy, TikTok, and semiconductors.
“There’s a lot of issues that they just didn’t deal with,” Balding said.
Sooner or later, he said, these issues will come back and break the temporary calm.
Beijing has indicated that it will fight for core interests. Several days after coming to the deal, Chinese Ambassador Xie Feng brought up Taiwan and human rights as among Beijing’s “red lines” in a video address.
The U.S. side, he said, should “avoid crossing them and causing trouble.”
Even the existing pledges remain abstract and tentative, according to Sun. The trade deal is up for review yearly. So are China’s loosening of rare-earth restrictions and Washington’s suspension of duties on China-linked vessels. In a year, any geopolitical headwinds, from the Russia–China relationship to Taiwan Strait tensions, could cause priorities to shift, Sun said.
The lack of details in the agreement gives Beijing a loophole to exploit, according to Yeh Yao-yuan, chair of the International Studies Department at the University of St. Thomas.
“Talking one way and acting in another—this is typical of the Chinese Communist Party,” Yeh told The Epoch Times.
Because the U.S.–China pact is short on specific targets, he said, the regime can play the delay game and not deliver anything tangible.

False Hopes
The gap between promises and reality is a constant concern in Washington’s dealings with China.In his first term, Trump sought to address Beijing’s unfair trade practices and the massive U.S.–China trade deficit by launching a trade war.
“The Chinese Communist Party doesn’t have a very good history on keeping promises,” Lucia Dunn, professor emeritus of economics at Ohio State University, told The Epoch Times.
Yeh called it doublespeak.
“Anything that doesn’t go in its favor, the [CCP] just won’t do it,” he said. “It will keep pushing them off.”
Decades of market manipulation, strategic state support, and aggressive investment have allowed China to capture rare earths and effectively hold the world to ransom. The recent export curbs are now spurring a reckoning.

Forced Concessions
China has come to the negotiating table with a crisis brewing on the homefront.In Kangle, a once-thriving garment hub in southeastern China, people crowd around hunting for odd work. With jobs drying up, migrant workers in several cities have packed up early to go home; one major textile factory sent its entire workforce on a four-month vacation, citing dwindling orders.
Weighed down by such economic pressure, China is seeking breathing room, according to analysts.
“Xi has to make concessions—only ... they are half-hearted concessions,” Yeh said.
Still, both sides appear eager to disentangle from each other.
Bessent said, “We’re going to go at warp speed over the next one, two years, and we’re going to get out from under the sword that the Chinese have over us—and they have it over the whole world.”

The ‘New Norm’
Bessent said the United States is looking to “de-risk” rather than decouple. But Balding said those are just buzzwords.“I think you'd be hard-pressed to find clear definitions of those,” he said. “I’m not stuck on a word.”
In the long term, decoupling seems to be the inevitable trend, according to Wang Guo-chen, a research fellow at the Chung-Hua Institution for Economic Research.
“Both are preparing to decouple, it’s just that for now, neither is ready for the costs,” Wang told The Epoch Times.
The new dynamic marks a shift from the “mutual dependence and mutual benefit” that China has long promoted, according to political economist Davy J. Wong.
“Security and autonomy is the new norm,” he told The Epoch Times.
This makes any cooperation fleeting by nature, according to Yeh.
“When you are partners, everything is easy, but now the relationship has changed from partnership to competition, and not just any type of competition—it’s a life and death battle,” he told The Epoch Times.
On a deeper level, the split between Washington and Beijing is ideological, according to analysts.
The Chinese word for China translates to “the Middle Kingdom” in English. Balding said that although people in the West often understand the word “middle” to mean “between,” the Chinese term is closer to “center,” as in, “the planets revolve around the sun in the middle.”
“That’s how China thinks of itself,” he said. “It thinks it’s returning to the place it belongs, as the center of the world, as the center of the universe around which all other states and issues revolve.
“That puts it in very much fundamental disagreement with the United States to start off with, but a lot of other countries from there as well.”


















