Iran, China and AI collide in Trump's legacy-defining week

· Axios

Three generational forces will converge this week — first in Washington, then in Beijing — in what could prove a hugely consequential stretch of Donald Trump's presidency.

Why it matters: The coming days carry stakes measured in decades: war and peace in the Middle East, the trajectory of the U.S.-China relationship, and the rules governing the AI revolution.

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State of play: Trump's China summit was once seen as a de facto deadline for stabilizing the Iran war. But with Air Force One set to land in Beijing on Wednesday evening, the conflict remains unresolved.

  • On Sunday, the U.S. finally received Iran's response to a one-page memorandum aimed at ending the war and establishing a framework for nuclear negotiations.
  • Trump rejected the offer as "unacceptable" and accused Iran of "playing games" with the U.S. — leaving him days to recalibrate, escalate or arrive in Beijing empty-handed.

Zoom in: Trump's presidency has long been building toward this week's summit with Xi Jinping, which White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly described as a trip of "tremendous symbolic significance."

  • Beneath the pageantry sits the defining geopolitical question of the century: whether the world's two superpowers can manage their rivalry, or are destined for economic rupture and military confrontation.
  • Trump is expected to bring a roster of CEOs to Beijing as he pursues investment pledges and business deals aimed at easing tensions in an increasingly fraught economic relationship.

The intrigue: Washington and Beijing have escalated a quiet sanctions war over Iran in the weeks leading up to the summit, turning the Middle East conflict into another front in their widening geopolitical rivalry.

  • The Trump administration on Friday sanctioned three Chinese satellite firms for providing imagery that enabled Iranian strikes on U.S. forces — part of a broader U.S. push to choke off Chinese support for Tehran.
  • Beijing has refused to bend. Earlier this month, China deployed its "blocking statute" for the first time, ordering Chinese firms to ignore U.S. sanctions on five refineries accused of buying Iranian crude.

Between the lines: Trump has long believed his personal relationship with Xi is stronger — and more pragmatic — than many China hawks in Washington understand.

  • Critics in both parties fear Trump's appetite for grand bargains and personal diplomacy could undermine U.S. support for Taiwan, which Xi is determined to bring under Beijing's control as soon as 2027.
  • Taiwan looms over the summit as both a military tinderbox and the heart of the semiconductor industry that's powering the AI economy.

Zoom out: Trump and Xi are expected to discuss AI for the first time amid mounting alarm over the enormous cyber risks posed by frontier models like Anthropic's Mythos.

  • While details remain fluid, Trump is expected to unveil executive action on AI safety as soon as Monday.
  • The White House's evolving posture marks a pivot from its earlier laissez-faire approach to AI, driven by fears that the technology is advancing faster than governments can control it.

What to watch: A senior U.S. official said Trump and Xi will explore whether to open formal lines of communication on AI safety and security risks, echoing the Cold War logic that drove nuclear hotlines and arms-control talks between rival superpowers.

  • The prospect of AI coordination is striking, given that the Trump administration just accused China-backed actors of systematically siphoning knowledge from America's leading AI companies.

The bottom line: War, trade and technology will converge this week into a singular test of Trump's legacy. The outcome could shape the global balance of power long after today's partisan battles fade from memory.

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