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One of the most watched moments of Donald Trump’s two day Beijing summit did not happen inside a formal meeting room. It happened at the Temple of Heaven, a historic site once used by Chinese emperors to pray for good harvests, where Trump and Xi Jinping took a joint walk together following their first round of bilateral talks at the Great Hall of the People.
As the two leaders stood side by side at the ancient landmark, a reporter called out a direct question asking Trump about Taiwan. Trump did not answer it. He praised China, called it a beautiful country, said the relationship between the two nations is going to be tremendous, and walked on. Xi stood beside him, smiling.
Two Readouts, Two Different Summits
The contrast between the US and Chinese official accounts of the day’s bilateral talks deepened the significance of that moment. The White House readout of the summit made no mention of Taiwan at all, covering trade, agriculture, fentanyl, the Strait of Hormuz, and Iran’s nuclear program without a single reference to the island that China considers its most important bilateral concern.
China’s readout said the opposite. Xi told Trump clearly and on the record that the Taiwan question is the most important issue in China and United States relations and warned that mishandling it could put the entire relationship in great jeopardy. Chinese state media had described Taiwan as the first red line heading into the summit, and Beijing made certain its position was documented publicly even if Washington’s own account left it out entirely.
What US Officials Said Afterward
Secretary of State Marco Rubio told reporters that US policy on Taiwan is unchanged as of today and that the subject did not feature prominently in the discussions. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Trump understands the sensitivities and will speak on the matter in the coming days. A senior White House official said that both sides reiterated their long stated positions and that everyone understands each other’s position. None of these responses confirmed or denied what was actually discussed between the two men in private.
Why This Moment Matters
Taiwan is watching every word, every handshake, and every ignored question from this summit very carefully. Taipei’s government has monitored the Beijing visit closely for any language shift that might suggest a weakening of Washington’s security commitments to the island. Trump’s decision not to answer the question at the Temple of Heaven is not a policy statement, but in diplomatic terms, what a president chooses not to say in public can signal almost as much as what they choose to say.
The second day of summit talks is scheduled to continue before Trump departs Beijing, and both sides have indicated that more meetings between the two leaders are planned for the months ahead, starting with Xi’s invited visit to the White House on September 24.

