
There was a revealing asymmetry in the photographs from Donald Trump’s latest meetings with Xi Jinping. Trump, the man who once treated diplomacy like a televised arm-wrestling contest, appeared oddly diminished; one arm tucked behind his back, posture stiff, smile strained in the peculiar way of a politician trying to disguise anxiety as confidence. Xi, meanwhile, looked exactly as the Chinese leader always tries to look, unmoved, patient, perfectly comfortable with history unfolding in his direction.
Body language analysis is often junk science masquerading as insight but sometimes the theater tells the truth before the communiqués do. Trump did not travel into a negotiation from a position of triumph. He arrived carrying inflation that refuses to behave, farmers angry about shrinking margins and unstable export markets and a restless political base still waiting for the return of an America that no longer exists outside campaign slogans and faded memories.
The deeper problem is not merely economic. It is psychological. Trump’s political mythology has always depended on the promise of restoration. The factories would hum again. Cheap gas would return. Manufacturing towns would revive. America would resume its uncontested place atop the global pyramid simply because Trump willed it so loudly enough. But history does not reverse itself on command. Entire electorates can spend decades voting against time and still lose.
Xi understands this better than most Western leaders. China’s long-term strategy has never depended on charisma or emotional spectacle. It is built on endurance. Beijing thinks in decades while Washington thinks in election cycles and cable-news segments. That difference now shows everywhere.
China dominates critical supply chains. It extends influence through ports, infrastructure, lending and trade agreements stretching from Africa to Latin America. Its military projects power farther from its shores each year. Even countries wary of Beijing increasingly treat China not as an ideological ally but as an unavoidable economic gravity field. They may distrust China; they simply distrust dependence on America more.
Trump once boasted that trade wars were “easy to win.” Instead, many American farmers became collateral damage in a geopolitical experiment they never asked to join. Soybean growers, cattle producers and small agricultural exporters learned a brutal lesson; global markets do not reward patriotic rhetoric. They reward stability. China diversified suppliers. Brazil benefited. Others stepped in. And many of the old relationships never fully returned.
That lingering resentment matters because farmers were not merely another voting bloc for Trump. They were central characters in his national story, the hardworking Americans supposedly abandoned by cosmopolitan elites and rescued by populist nationalism. Yet nostalgia is a poor substitute for economic planning. The “good old days” are politically useful precisely because they cannot be tested against present reality.
Meanwhile Xi projects continuity. He does not need applause lines. He does not need rallies. He only needs the appearance of steady ascent. Even China’s serious internal problems, youth unemployment, demographic decline, property-sector instability, do not erase the broader perception that Beijing is expanding its influence while Washington struggles to define its own role.
That is why the Taiwan issue suddenly feels so delicate. Trump has always approached alliances transactionally and transactional diplomacy becomes dangerous when facing authoritarian powers skilled at exploiting ambiguity. Beijing watches carefully for signs that American commitments are negotiable. Any hint that Taiwan could become part of a larger bargain sends tremors across Asia.
Perhaps Trump believes flexibility is strategic. Perhaps he thinks unpredictability keeps adversaries off balance. But there is a fine line between strategic ambiguity and visible uncertainty. Xi, unlike many American politicians, rarely mistakes patience for weakness. He understands that exhausted powers often compromise gradually; convincing themselves each concession is temporary and manageable until the balance of influence has quietly shifted.
The images from Beijing captured more than two leaders meeting across polished tables. They captured an uncomfortable truth about the current century. America still possesses immense power, wealth, innovation and military reach. But confidence has eroded into improvisation. China, despite all its vulnerabilities, increasingly behaves like a nation convinced that time itself is on its side.
And perhaps the most unsettling part for Washington is this Xi no longer needs to defeat America outright. He only needs America to keep doubting what it once was.









