City
Epaper

Trump arrives in South Korea for high-stakes summits with Lee, Xi

By IANS | Updated: October 29, 2025 08:15 IST

Seoul, Oct 29 US President Donald Trump arrived in South Korea Wednesday ahead of high-stakes summits with President ...

Open in App

Seoul, Oct 29 US President Donald Trump arrived in South Korea Wednesday ahead of high-stakes summits with President Lee Jae Myung and Chinese President Xi Jinping on the occasion of an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) gathering in the southeastern city of Gyeongju.

Trump, who is on his first Asia trip of his second term, comes to the US ally nation focused on securing deals in trade and investment following months of market turmoil and tensions over his threats to impose sweeping tariffs on imported goods.

After departing Tokyo aboard Air Force One earlier in the day, Trump landed at Gimhae International Airport in the southeastern city of Busan.

Trump will meet Lee in Gyeongju later Wednesday for their second summit in about two months. Whether the two sides will be able to finalize a framework trade deal reached in July remains a key point of interest as Seoul and Washington have put out differing assessments of where their negotiations stand.

The framework deal called for South Korea to invest US$350 billion in the US in exchange for Washington's lowering of "reciprocal" tariffs from 25 per cent to 15 per cent, but the agreement has yet to take effect due to gaps over details of the investment package.

Trump said Friday that a trade deal with South Korea was "pretty close to being finalized."

In a Bloomberg interview conducted the same day, however, Lee struck a different tone, Yonhap news agency reported.

"The method of investment, the amount of investment, the timeline and how we will share the losses and divide the dividends -- all of these remain sticking points," he said.

Trump's two-day state visit to South Korea has drawn keen attention for reasons that extend beyond issues concerning just Seoul and Washington.

His highly anticipated summit with Xi on Thursday -- their first meeting since 2019 -- will be watched closely for any breakthroughs in the escalating US-China trade war.

China recently tightened export controls on rare earths, which are critical for the production of high-tech military and commercial products, including fighter jets and robots, while Trump responded with a threat to impose an additional 100 percent tariff on Chinese goods starting November 1.

The world's two largest economies have other trade issues to resolve as well. China stopped buying soybeans from the U.S. this year, potentially hurting American farmers that are a key Trump voter base. The US has separately used tariffs to pressure China to stop the flow of fentanyl.

Trump has expressed optimism about his upcoming meeting with Xi.

"When we leave South Korea, it could be wrong, but I think we'll end up with a very strong trade deal," he said last week. "Both of us will be happy."

Besides the two summits, Trump's visit to South Korea has touched off talk of a potential meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.

The two leaders met three times during Trump's first term -- in Singapore in June 2018, in Vietnam in February 2019 and in the inter-Korean truce village of Panmunjom in June that year.

The meetings were aimed at yielding an agreement on dismantling North Korea's nuclear weapons program in exchange for US concessions, including sanctions relief, but broke down over differences on how to match their steps.

Trump has repeatedly expressed his openness to reengaging Kim, even if it means extending his stay in South Korea.

The North has yet to respond to the overtures.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiMumbai: DRI Seizes Chinese Firecrackers Worth Rs 4.4 Crore at Nhava Sheva Port

InternationalDelegation of Indian MPs participates in Asian Parliamentary Assembly meeting in Moscow

HealthHeritage Foods acquires 51 pc stake in Get-A-Way ice cream's parent Firm

EntertainmentDelhi High Court criticizes PIL filed against ‘The Taj Story’, backs film’s release

BusinessHeritage Foods acquires 51 pc stake in Get-A-Way ice cream's parent Firm

International Realted Stories

InternationalPakistan's billion-dollar seizure only photo-op ahead of new FATF evaluations: Report

InternationalJapanese PM bats for 'new golden chapter' in India-Japan strategic partnership

InternationalLee asks Trump to allow South Korea to have fuel for nuclear-powered submarines

InternationalHegseth calls South Korea's push for OPCON transfer 'great,' depicts it as 'combat credible partner'

InternationalAU congratulates Cameroonian President Biya on re-election