US President Donald Trump said he and Chinese President Xi Jinping made progress on a TikTok agreement and would meet face-to-face in six weeks in South Korea to discuss trade, illicit drugs and Russia’s war in Ukraine.
The two sides appeared to lower tensions during the first call in three months between the leaders of the two superpowers, but it was not immediately clear that the call had yielded the expected firm agreement over the fate of the popular short-video app.
The leaders did agree to further talks on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum that starts on October 31 in Gyeongju, South Korea, and that Trump would visit China early next year, the US president said. He also said Xi would come to the US at a later date. Reuters previously reported that the two sides were planning such a meeting.
“We made progress on many very important issues including Trade, Fentanyl, the need to bring the War between Russia and Ukraine to an end, and the approval of the TikTok Deal,” Trump wrote on social media.
“The call was a very good one, we will be speaking again by phone, appreciate the TikTok approval, and both look forward to meeting at APEC!” Trump wrote. Beijing’s final approval of a framework deal reached by the two sides earlier this week is one of the hurdles Trump needed to clear to keep TikTok open.
Congress had ordered the app shut down for US users by January 2025 if its US assets weren’t sold by Chinese owner ByteDance. Trump’s statement did not detail what such progress was and China’s statement made no reference to any agreement on TikTok specifically. Trump had signaled multiple times this week that a deal might be forthcoming.
“On TikTok, Xi said China’s position is clear: the Chinese government respects the will of firms and welcomes companies to conduct business negotiations on the basis of market rules to reach a solution consistent with Chinese laws and regulations while balancing interests,” according to the meeting summary in Xinhua. Trump and Xi’s phone call began at 8am, a US official said, and the first statements from China followed just shy of three hours later.
“Beijing is banking on optics and time, while Washington is chasing a TikTok headline and a summit, and hopes, I think, for more wins later,” said Craig Singleton, a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defence of Democracies, a think tank. “I think the Chinese are very happy with the current dynamic.” The White House did not respond to a request for comment.
Trump has declined to enforce the TikTok law while his administration looks for a new owner, but also because he worries a ban on the app would anger TikTok’s huge user base and disrupt political communications.
“I like TikTok; it helped get me elected,” Trump said during a Press conference on Thursday. “TikTok has tremendous value. The United States has that value in its hand because we’re the ones that have to approve it.”