President Donald Trump recently confirmed several stops on his upcoming Asia tour, during which he is expected to hash out trade deals, talk investments, and speak with Chinese Communist Party leader Xi Jinping days before a potential 100 percent tariff on Chinese goods goes into effect.
While Trump has hosted several Asian heads of state in Washington already, this is his first trip to the region in his second term.
Malaysia
Malaysia is hosting the Association of Southeast Asian Nations summit from Oct. 26 to Oct. 28, and Trump is expected to attend on the first day.Malaysian officials have said that Trump is “looking forward” to joining the signing of a cease-fire deal between Thailand and Cambodia, one of several peace deals Trump has helped broker.
“During the summit, we hope to see the signing of a declaration, known as the Kuala Lumpur Accord, between these two neighbors to ensure peace and a lasting ceasefire,” Malaysian Minister of Foreign Affairs Mohamad Hasan told reporters.
Conflict between Thailand and Cambodia broke out in July, as 43 people were killed and 300,000 were displaced during five days of fighting. Trump called the heads of state of the two countries on July 26, and they negotiated a cease-fire in Malaysia on July 28.
Japan
Trump is scheduled to travel to Japan on Oct. 27 for a three-day visit.South Korea
South Korea is hosting the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) from Oct. 31 to Nov. 1.The South Korean presidential office has stated that Trump is expected to visit ahead of the summit, from Oct. 29 to Oct. 30.
“I think we could see drama that APEC is not used to,” said John Delury, a scholar of U.S.–China relations and Korean Peninsula affairs who is based in Seoul, South Korea.
“Because there is such a siege really going on from the Trump administration in terms of withdrawing from multilateral forums like APEC this has really heightened the importance of this effort to bring together leaders from around the Asia Pacific and to focus on kind of the old agenda of ... economic globalization, of free trade.”
Trump has said that he is expecting to meet with Xi during his stop in South Korea and that any trade agreements made between the two leaders would certainly have ripple effects on APEC member nations.
South Korean officials said on Oct. 20 that they expect to be able to reach their country’s own trade deal with the United States during the upcoming in-person talks.
The country’s chief policy officer, Kim Yong-beom, has visited Washington to meet with U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick. Upon the trip’s conclusion, he said they had made progress on most items and only needed to iron out “one or two” more.
On July 30, Trump announced that a deal had been struck in broad terms for the United States to reduce tariffs on South Korean goods to 15 percent and for South Korea to invest $350 billion in the United States.
Lutnick said in a media appearance after the announcement that while the deal had been agreed upon, nothing had been signed.







