Published On 29 Oct 2025
Trump-Xi meeting live: China and US to negotiate rare earths, tariffs


Published On 29 Oct 2025

New York City, United States – Sitting in a room filled with hordes of Jewish New Yorkers, Zohran Mamdani, was applauded and applauded at the progressive Brooklyn synagogue’s Erev Rosh Hashanah service last month.
One of the Democratic mayoral nominee’s most recent appearances and events during the Jewish High Holy Days was a clear step in the right direction: increasingly engaging with the largest concentration of Jews in any American metropolitan area and holding firmly anti-Zionist views prior to the November 4 general election.
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Mamdani has a strong stance on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict historically, even founding a Students for Justice in Palestine while he was a student at Bowdoin College. His long-standing, unapologetically pro-Palestinian stance became a rallying point for his platform as well as a source of criticism from opponents a little over a decade later as his name began to become known.
Progressive Jewish organizations like Bend the Arc, Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP), Action, and Jews for Racial and Economic Justice (JFREJ), which have each published statements on their websites to expose Israel’s role in the conflict in Gaza, have endorsed Mamdani and gotten their support.
In addition, he has been the target of attacks from far-right activists, Jewish Democrats on Capitol Hill, and Zionist activist groups because of his unwavering support for the Boycott, Divest, and Sanctions (BDS) movement and his refusal to refer to Israel as a Jewish state.
Despite mixed responses, Mamdani is clearly in the lead among Jewish voters overall in a multiway race.
According to a public opinion poll conducted by Zenith Research  in July, Mamdani held the lead among Jews and Jewish subgroups by 17 points. Mamdani still held the lead, 43-33, in the race against Mayor Eric Adams, who would eventually step down.
According to Adam Carlson, the founding partner of Zenith Research, “I understand that there are many cleavages within the Jewish community.” No group is a monolith, and as a pollster, I believe that if you have a large sample size, you can break it out and discover some nuances. What we found was a better-than-expected result for Mamdani among Jewish voters in New York City.
A portion of this support was shared by Beth Miller, the political director of the Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) Action) and a Kolot Chayeinu member, at Mamdani’s last-minute Erev Rosh Hashanah.
“He basically swarmed at the end because people were so excited that he was there,” Miller said. And that’s not because he’s famous; rather, because people are excited about what we can all build together as mayor.
JVP Action, a day-one supporter of Mamdani, is just one organization in a growing number of Jewish organizations supporting Mamdani, similar to JFREJ, which has helped to spearhead outreach efforts among NYC’s diverse Jewish communities.
Since Mamdani’s candidacy for state assembly in 2020, JFREJ’s electoral arm, The Jewish Vote, has backed him. Since then, Mamdani and JFREJ have collaborated on campaigns, canvasses, and protests.
At protests along with Mamdani, Alicia Singham Goodwin, the political director of JFREJ, has been personally detained.
Regarding the arrests, Goodwin stated to Al Jazeera, “That’s the kind of thing that gives me faith in his commitments.” He “is willing to take big risks for the things that matter.”
JFREJ has aided a lot in spreading Mamdani’s message by phone banking Jewish voters and knocking on doors.
We are prepared to meet our neighbors with our analysis of how the city needs to move in order to achieve affordable housing, universal childcare, or to stop the real rise in anti-Semitism and hate violence, according to Goodwin. Zohran, in our opinion, is the best choice for both those goals and all the other issues that surround us.
The mayoral candidate has also been strategic in his efforts to win the Jewish vote, despite the fact that Mamdani’s 50 000 volunteer canvassing army has done a good job.
According to Val Vinokur, professor of literary studies and director of the Jewish culture minor at The New School, “He has definitely modulated his rhetoric and has made a concerted effort to reach out to liberal congregations.” To the dismay of his anti-Zionist supporters, he has become more palatable to some progressive Zionists.
His response to the ongoing backlash over the phrase “globalise the intifada” is just one example of Mamdani’s subdued rhetoric.
The phrase, which pro-Palestinian activists used, sparked conflict between Mamdani and Jewish individuals. Some people see it as a call for solidarity with the Palestinian resistance, while others see it as violent and anti-Semitic.
Before the June election, Mamdani resisted using the expression, but according to The New York Times, he has since said he will “discourage” its use.
Mamdani acknowledged the atrocities committed by Hamas’ attack in a four-paragraph statement on X, followed by a statement on the end of the Gaza war, which marked the second anniversary of the attack.
Carlson remarked, “It got s*** on from all sides.” He made no one happy, which is, in my opinion, the right course of action. The mayor’s job sometimes involves pleasing no one, and I believe he is now learning that. If he wins as mayor, it’s like a microcosm of what he’ll be up against. Sometimes you have to make a little snub at everyone for making a compromise.
The NYC Jewish community has a wide range of political viewpoints and positions on Israel and Palestine, as Carlson’s Zenith Research poll revealed. Although the community can be distinguished between secular and traditional practices in terms of adolescence and age, it becomes clear that these differences are not always so clear as Jewish support for Mamdani increases.

While it’s true that there are significant trends in how younger American Jews view Palestinians more progressively and sympathetically, Miller said that as long as Zionism has existed, there have been anti-Zionist Jews, she added. Elders in their 70s, 80s, and 90s who have been anti-Zionist since Israel’s creation have taught me a lot because they never believed that an ethnostate to represent them was what they needed or wanted.
Alternately, these trends in the Jewish community of New York cause Zionist organizations like Betar to exist worldwide.
It’s heartbreaking to see Jews supporting Zohran Mamdani, the Jewish people’s official supporter of Zionism, according to Oren Magnezy, Betar’s global spokesperson.
American anthropologist Jonathan Boyarin, who is also a Mann professor of contemporary Jewish studies at Cornell University, wondered if anti-Zionism had helped Palestinians in particular but criticized Mamdani’s pathos.
There are “two kinds of people who confuse anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism,” according to one commentator. Zohran Mamdani doesn’t fall under either of those categories, Boyarin said.
In the end, experts like Vinokur predict Mamdani will prevail, minus the Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa’s exit. Vinokur anticipates Mamdani to win the Jewish vote regardless.
Vinokur predicted that despite and not because of his anti-Zionist beliefs, he would win the Jewish vote. Youthful Jewish voters are overwhelmingly liberal, have been sparked by his campaign’s energy, and ultimately want to improve the city’s quality of life, living, and access.
The Mazals, a JFREJ annual gala fundraiser, celebrated Mamdani’s message and campaign. More than 1, 000 people attended a night filled with music, ritual, and tradition that included New York Comptroller Brad Lander and Mamdani.

In light of rising trade frictions between China and Washington, United States President Donald Trump anticipates “a lot of problems” will be resolved when he meets with him in South Korea on Thursday for a high-stakes meeting.
Relations between the two world powers have been strained in recent years, with Washington and Beijing imposing tit-for-tat trade tariffs topping 100 percent against each other this year, the US restricting its exports of semiconductors vital for artificial intelligence (AI) development and Beijing restricting exports of critical rare-earth metals which are vital for the defence industry and also the development of AI, among other issues.
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Officials from Washington and Beijing have been in talks about a trade deal since August in an effort to lower trade tensions. They also created a framework for it during meetings in Malaysia over the weekend.
On the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in Gyeongju, South Korea, on Wednesday, Trump said an expected trade deal between China and the US would be good for both countries and “something very exciting for everybody”.
Only a meeting between Trump and Xi will reveal whether a trade deal is actually being worked out.
Expectations for the agreement are modest, with analysts expecting the two world powers to continue to clash over their myriad differences long-term.
Trump is scheduled to meet Xi on Thursday in the port city of Busan in southeastern South Korea. The meeting is scheduled to begin at 11:00 AM (GMT).
It will be the first time the leaders have met in person since Trump returned to the White House in January.
The US president last met Xi in 2019 on the eve of the Group of 20 (G20) summit in Osaka, Japan, during Trump’s first term.
“I think we’re going to have a great meeting with President Xi of China, and a lot of problems are going to be solved”, Trump told journalists on Wednesday on Air Force One while en route to South Korea.
The leaders “will exchange views on bilateral relations and issues of mutual interest,” according to a statement released by China’s ministry of foreign affairs on Wednesday.
Discussions are likely to include:
Both sides will want to maintain an uneasy rivalry, according to Alejandro Reyes, an adjunct professor at the University of Hong Kong’s Department of Politics and Public Administration, but for various reasons.
“For Washington, the goal is to show that its tough line on China has delivered results. After signing trade agreements with Malaysia, Cambodia, and Japan that directly link market access to national security cooperation, the Trump administration will attend this summit. These deals require America’s partners to align with US export controls and supply-chain rules – essentially making ‘ economic security ‘ a shared obligation”, he said.
Beijing’s top priority is to project restraint and perseverance. The meeting comes just after the fourth plenum, which reaffirmed Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s authority and set the direction for the next five-year plan. He continued, “China’s message is that it has withstanded Western pressure and is now focusing on domestic stability and growth.”
But discussions on disputes over trade tariffs, critical rare-earth metals, AI technology and geopolitical strategies, the issues that most define the current relationship between the US and China, according to Reyes, are not going to be easy to resolve.
He claimed that the mistrust is now structural and is a result of how both nations view power and security.
Stopping the flow of drugs, particularly fentanyl, a potent synthetic opiate that is 50 times more potent than heroin, from China to the US is a key priority for the Trump administration. In February, Trump slapped a 20 percent trade tariff on all imports from China, citing Beijing’s lack of effort in curbing the flow of the drug into the US.
The US’s German Marshall Fund sent a media briefing note to Al Jazeera that Bonnie Glaser, managing director of GMF’s Indo-Pacific program, referred to the fentanyl trade as “a really contentious issue between the US and China.
“From what I have heard, a criminal money-laundering cooperation supports the fentanyl trade, and this is where China is willing to cooperate, in a way where it will have minimum negative impact on their domestic situation”, she said at a briefing held in Washington, DC, on Tuesday.
The Wall Street Journal reported late on Tuesday that “China is anticipated to commit to more controls on the export of so-called precursor chemicals used to make fentanyl.” The newspaper added that if this agreement is reached, Trump would reduce the tariffs imposed because of fentanyl by as much as 10 percent.
In retaliation for the fentanyl-related tariffs, China imposed a 15% tariff on a range of US farm exports in March, erupting a tit-for-tat tariff war.
In April, Trump raised tariffs on Chinese imports to 145 percent, prompting China to hit back with 125 percent tariffs of its own.
In May, Washington and Beijing agreed to a 90-day truce in August for trade talks, cutting tariffs to 30 percent and 10 percent, respectively. The truce has been extended twice, but despite repeated talks, a trade agreement has not been reached.
China has restricted exports of 12 critical rare-earth metals this year, as well as of the machinery needed to refine these metals, citing security reasons. Beijing added that its restrictions were in response to US restrictions on China’s maritime, logistics, and shipbuilding sectors.
The first seven metals to be restricted were announced in April, while the remaining five were announced on October 10. For the development of AI technology and the defense sector, these metals are crucial.
In October, Trump responded by threatening to impose 100 percent tariffs on China from November 1, citing Beijing’s strict export controls on critical rare earths as the reason for the tariffs.
Trump added that “any and all critical software” would also be subject to export restrictions from the US.
Reyes noted that while the US wants guaranteed access to rare earths and battery materials, it signed a new agreement with Japan and trade clauses with Malaysia this week, which aim to reduce the US dependence on China for these. He claimed that Beijing views this as an attempt to “contain its influence.”
Meanwhile, US Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent told many US media outlets this week that he expected China to defer its restrictions on rare earths and that Trump’s 100 percent tariff threat was “effectively off the table”.
Bessent added that China would consent to boosting its soybean purchases in the US.
Dylan Loh, associate professor in public policy and global affairs at Nanyang Technological University, said he anticipates some positive movement on solving these trade disputes but does not believe the fundamental economic tension between the US and China will be resolved at the meeting.
He told Al Jazeera, “The competition and mistrust extend beyond just economics.” “But the problems can be managed and must be managed well. Political capital and the capacity to think beyond the bounds of zero-sum thinking are required.
In response to national security concerns, Trump signed an executive order in September to transfer TikTok’s US assets to US investors. On Sunday, Bessent told US broadcaster CBS that the US and China had “reached a final deal on TikTok”, which will be finalised at the Trump-Xi meeting.
Reyes asserted that the agreement “cools one dispute but doesn’t put an end to the conflict over chips, AI, and digital control.”
In October, Washington blacklisted hundreds of Chinese tech firms, claiming they posed a risk to national security. In order to encourage China’s advancement, the US has also prohibited businesses like Nvidia from exporting cutting-edge chips, which are crucial to the production of crucial equipment for the development of AI.
Beijing has been irked by Washington’s restrictions and has launched antitrust investigations into Nvidia and Qualcomm, and has also increased its export controls on rare-earth elements.
Trump said he might talk to Xi about Nvidia chips while speaking to reporters on Air Force One’s Wednesday departure from South Korea.
“I think we may be talking about that with President Xi”, Trump said.
According to analysts, Trump is eager to use this meeting with Xi to discuss ways to end Russia’s war in Ukraine.
A protracted conflict in Ukraine “serves no one’s interests,” according to Beijing, a close ally of Moscow. But, in July, according to a report by The South China Morning Post, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told the European Union that it can’t afford to have Russia lose the war in Ukraine since the US would then turn its attention to China.
In an effort to put an end to the war, Trump has threatened to impose sanctions and tariffs on nations that purchase Russian crude oil. It has already imposed an additional 25 percent tariff – bringing the total to 50 percent – on India as a punishment for purchasing Russian oil.
However, China imports about 1.4 million barrels of Russian oil by sea each day, but the US has not yet done so.
According to a Reuters report, however, after the US sanctioned two of Moscow’s largest oil companies, Rosneft and Lukoil, in October, Chinese national oil companies like PetroChina and Sinopec have said they will refrain from importing seaborne Russian oil for the short term.
Trump wants to negotiate a peace agreement with Ukraine. Putin has been unwilling to play ball, and Trump, I think, intends to raise this with Xi Jinping, possibly ask him if he can reach out to Putin and encourage him to come to the negotiating table”, Glaser said.
“We are aware that Xi Jinping has been very, very cautious about entering the dialogue. I think he will be reluctant to pressure Putin to do”, she added.
Beijing will be interested in hearing about the US position on Taiwan, Glaser predicts.
“Xi Jinping will raise concerns about what Beijing views as the pro-independence policies of Taiwan’s President Lai Ching-te, and I think he will want clarification of the US stance and may well press Trump to say that the US opposes Taiwan independence and supports China’s unification”, she said.
Bottom line: Trump won’t likely leave Taiwan because using force could lead to a People’s Republic of China [People’s Republic of China] decision, and he wants to take credit for ending wars rather than starting them, Glaser said.
Trump, however, told journalists on board Air Force One on Wednesday that he was “not sure” he would discuss Taiwan.
The balance of power in the respective negotiating positions of China and the US has shifted in the recent past.
Much to China’s annoyance, former US president Joe Biden slowed US semiconductor exports, which are crucial for AI development. Then, early this year, Trump compounded this with 145 percent tariffs on Chinese goods.
Before the two sides agreed in May to pause the tariffs so that trade talks could continue, China retaliated by imposing a tariff of 125 percent on US goods, escalating the trade war.
But that was not before China placed export restrictions on seven rare-earth metals in April. Trump threatened 100 percent tariffs once more in retaliation after China restricted exports of five additional rare-earth metals in October.
This week, seeking to diversify trade and its supply chains, China strengthened a trade deal with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). However, the US also signed new trade agreements with Cambodia, Malaysia, and Japan. On Wednesday, South Korea announced that it too had reached a trade agreement with the US, and was lowering tariffs on imported US goods.
Between the US and China, according to Loh, it is still unclear who currently has the upper hand.
“While the signing of the FTA]with ASEAN] has certainly enhanced China’s position and influence and is indeed quite significant for ASEAN and China, it does not necessarily have a direct bearing on US-China itself”, Loh said.
Trump’s trip to this region of the world demonstrated how much of US political and economic influence is still there, he continued.
According to Reyes, each side has different kinds of leverage.
According to him, “The United States has established a new network of allies who have figuratively accepted Washington’s script,” referring to the Malaysian trade agreement that requires Kuala Lumpur to abide by US trade restrictions. Malaysia has clarified that this deal would only apply to matters of shared concern.
Reyes claimed that the agreement “gives Trump’s team political and legal momentum ahead of the China meeting.”
“China, though, has the economic stamina. It continues to be the heart of global manufacturing, is the dominant supplier of critical minerals, and has demonstrated that tariffs cannot impair its business model. China used the trade war to build muscles, resistance and resilience – it learned to do everything faster, cheaper and at scale”, he said.
“The US has the “louder” hand, and China has the “stiff hand.” Washington can escalate, but Beijing can outlast”, Reyes added.
The stakes are high with Trump announcing that he anticipates a “great” meeting. However, little is known about any “great” outcomes.
Reyes said he expects a truce in their strained ties with photo opportunities rather than any grand bargain.
Expect “both sides to announce small victories,” he said, “such as a working group on crucial minerals cooperation, a delay in tariffs, a joint statement on trade stability, etc..”

Published On 29 Oct 2025
After a number of balloons carrying contraband cigarettes entered Lithuania’s airspace, it is tightening its border with Belarus for a month.
According to the BNS news agency, Lithuania’s cabinet decided on Wednesday to hold off traffic at the Salcininkai crossing in the southeast until the end of November while severely restricting access to Medininkai, its only other crossing, close to Vilnius.
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Over the balloon incursions, which slowed air traffic at Vilnius airport over the weekend and caused it to shut the two crossings, Interior Minister Vladislav Kondratovic said the measures would “send a clear message to our not-so-friendly neighbour.”
Foreigners with valid Lithuanian permits, including diplomats, Lithuanian citizens, citizens of the European Union, NATO members, and their families, will still be able to enter Lithuania via Medininkai, according to BNS. The exemption also applies to humanitarian visa holders.
The Russian exclave wedged between Poland and Lithuania, Kaliningrad, will not be affected by passenger trains traveling between Belarus and the country. According to Lithuanian officials, Russians who are in possession of a transit document that authorizes travel to Kaliningrad can also pass through Medininkai.
The restrictions could be lifted, according to Prime Minister Inga Ruginiene. She told reporters, “We can’t stop attacking Lithuania with a hybrid attack.”
The decision will primarily affect thousands of Belarusian workers who travel between the two nations on a regular basis, but Ruginiene predicted that Lithuanian businesses that still work with Minsk will also suffer.
Following last week’s balloon incident, Belarus called on its neighbor to look for complicity within its own borders and condemned Lithuania’s initial border closure.
“Lithuanian politicians have chosen to take advantage of the situation and lay the entire blame at Belarus, thereby tarnishing their own inadequacy (or unwillingness)”? The Belarusian Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a statement to find the smugglers’ contractors inside Lithuania.
Belarus’ President Alexander Lukashenko remarked that his country would apologize if its involvement is established, adding, “I guess they need to solve the issue on their end. “
Lithuania, a NATO and EU member on the eastern flank of the Western Alliance, views the balloon’s disruption as a deliberate sabotage by Belarus, which is allies with Russia.
Repeated drone intrusions into NATO’s airspace, which reached an unprecedented level last month, are making it even more alarming. Moscow testing NATO’s response, according to some European officials, was portrayed as a result of the incidents, which raised questions about how well-armed NATO is against Russia.

Published On 29 Oct 2025
Without giving a reason for its expulsion, the medical organization Doctors Without Borders (known by its French acronym, MSF) has claimed it was ordered to leave Libya by November 9.
MSF claimed in a statement on Wednesday that it had been told to leave in a recent letter from the Libyan Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and that it had already been forced to do so in March.
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No justification for our expulsion has been provided, according to Steve Purbrick, the director of MSF’s programs in Libya.
“We think that MSF continues to play a significant role in Libya, particularly in the diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis, in supporting the country’s healthcare system, and in providing access to healthcare for refugees and migrants who are arbitrary detained and subject to severe violence,” he said.
By November 9th, Libya must be declared free. Our activities in the country were initially suspended in March of this year, but our expulsion comes without justification.
We regret deeply and seek a resolution to this issue: …
Purbrick claimed that MSF’s registration with the internationally recognized government was still valid and that the Geneva-based organization still hoped to “find a positive solution” to the situation.
More than 15, 000 medical consultations were conducted by MSF in collaboration with the Libyan health authorities last year.
Following the devastating flash floods that left thousands of people dead in Derna, it provided emergency medical care in 2023.
Libya is divided between the internationally recognized Tripoli government, led by Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah, and a rival east-western government.
Since a 2011 revolt led to the ouster of Colonel Muammar Gaddafi as head of the North African nation, the country has remained divided.
Libya’s Internal Security Agency shut down MSF’s offices in March, and the organization claimed that several of its employees had been subjected to “interrogation.”
Nine other humanitarian organizations operating in the west of the nation were also affected by this wave of repression, according to MSF.
There are no international NGOs providing medical care to refugees and migrants in western Libya, according to the statement.

Published On 29 Oct 2025
Myanmar’s military-run government claims to have reached a truce with its northern neighbor to end months of frequent clashes.
Following several days of China-mediated discussions in Kunming, which is located about 400 kilometers (248 miles) from the Myanmar border, the Ta’ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) announced on Tuesday that it had reached an agreement with Myanmar’s government.
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The TNLA announced on the signing of the agreement that it would leave Mogok, the ruby-mining site in the upper Mandalay region, and Momeik, a neighboring town in the northern part of Shan state, without setting out a date. Beginning on Wednesday, the rebels and government troops will “stop advancing,” the statement added.
The military, which hasn’t yet made any comments on the agreement, agreed to stop air strikes, according to the group.
The Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army and the Arakan Army are also included in the Three Brotherhood Alliance. They have waged decades-long battles for greater autonomy from Myanmar’s central government, and they are loosely associated with the pro-democracy resistance organizations that came after the army removed the elected government from power and seized power in February 2021.
The alliance has seized and ruled significant portions of northeastern and western Myanmar since October 2023. In a single offensive, the TNLA seized 12 towns.
Following a number of China-brokered ceasefires earlier this year, which allowed the army to retake major cities like Lashio and Nawnghkio in April and Kyaukme and Hsipaw in October, their advance slowed.
In Myanmar, where it has significant geopolitical and economic interests, China is the primary player in the civil war.
Beijing has publicly supported the military administration this year as it fights to reestablish its hold on territory ahead of a December election that it hopes will stabilise and help legitimize its rule.
However, large rebel-held areas are expected to be obstructed, and many international observers have criticized them as a way to hide the military’s continued rule.