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China’s Xi urges Vietnam to oppose ‘bullying’ as Trump mulls more tariffs

Annabelle Liang

Business reporter

Getty Images Chinese President Xi Jinping waves during a meeting with Vietnam's communist party general secretary To Lam at the Office of the Party Central Committee in Hanoi on 14 April 2025.Getty Images

China’s President Xi Jinping has called on Vietnam to oppose “unilateral bullying” to upkeep a global system of free trade – though he stopped short of naming the US.

It comes as Xi is on a so called “charm offensive” trip across South East Asia, which will also see him visit Malaysia and Cambodia.

Though the trip was long-planned, it has taken on heightened significance in the wake of a mounting trade war between the US and China. Vietnam was facing US tariffs of up to 46% before the Trump administration issued a 90-day pause last week.

US President Donald Trump called Xi’s meeting with Vietnamese leaders a ploy to figure out how to “screw the United States of America”.

According to state media outlet Xinhua, Xi told Vietnam’s Communist Party Secretary-General To Lam to “jointly oppose unilateral bullying”.

“We must strengthen strategic resolve… and uphold the stability of the global free trade system as well as industrial and supply chains,” he said.

Stephen Olson, a former US trade negotiator, said Xi’s comments were “a very shrewd tactical move”.

“While Trump seems determined to blow up the trade system, Xi is positioning China as the defender of rules-based trade, while painting the US as a reckless rogue nation,” he added.

Speaking to reporters in the Oval office on Monday, Trump said he does not “blame” China or Vietnam but alleged that they were focused on how to harm the US.

“That’s a lovely meeting. Meeting like, trying to figure out, how do we screw the United States of America?” said Trump.

The world’s two largest economies are locked in an escalating trade battle, with the Trump administration putting tariffs of 145% on most Chinese imports earlier this month. Beijing later responded with its own 125% tariffs on American products coming into China.

On Saturday, a US customs notice revealed smartphones, computers and some other electronic devices would be excluded from the 125% tariff on goods entering the country from China.

But Trump later chimed in on social media saying there was no exemption for these products and called such reports about this notice false. Instead, he said that “they are just moving to a different tariff ‘bucket'”.

A ‘golden opportunity’ for Xi

Xi arrived in Hanoi on Monday, where he was was welcomed by well wishes waving Chinese and Vietnamese flags.

He then met top Vietnamese officials including the country’s Secretary-General and Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh.

Earlier on Tuesday, Xi visited the Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum to take part in a wreath laying ceremony at the resting place of the former Vietnamese founder and Communist leader.

Despite Xi’s visit, Vietnam will be careful to “manage the perception that it is colluding with China against the United States, as the US is too important a partner to put aside,” said Susannah Patton, Director of the Southeast Asia Program at the Lowy Institute think-tank.

“In many ways, China is an economic competitor as well as an economic partner for South East Asian economies,” she added.

Xi has now left Vietnam and will arrive in Malaysia later on Tuesday. He is expected to meet the country’s King, as well as its Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim.

It comes as Malaysian mobile data service company U Mobile said it will roll out the country’s second 5G network by using infrastructure technology from China’s Huawei and ZTE.

Ms Patton expects Xi to continue portraying the US as “a partner which is unreliable [and] protectionist”.

Meanwhile, he is likely to “portray China in stark contrast as a partner that is there”, she added.

“Now is really a golden opportunity for China to score that narrative win. I think this is how Xi’s visit to Vietnam, Cambodia and Malaysia will be seen.”

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