Trump just wrapped a state visit to Beijing, and he left without a signed AI deal but with a lot to say about one. He told reporters on Air Force One that he and Chinese officials "talked about possibly working together for guardrails" on artificial intelligence.
He called them "standard guardrails that we talk about all the time," and that phrasing did most of the work.
What Was Actually Discussed
Trump confirmed the H200 chip issue came up at the summit. Those are Nvidia's most advanced chips cleared for China under a new export license rule.
Roughly 10 Chinese tech firms have been approved to buy up to 75,000 H200s each, including Alibaba, Tencent, ByteDance, JD.com, and Lenovo. None of them have actually placed an order yet.
Beijing hasn't said yes to buying them either. Trump's read was that China "chose not to" and "wants to try and develop their own" chips instead.
US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer told Bloomberg the call on H200 shipments is a "sovereign decision" for China. That's diplomatic shorthand for "we cleared the runway, and they haven't moved."
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What Did Not Happen
There's no signed AI governance framework. There's also no new joint working group and no published timeline for follow-up talks.
A Chinese foreign ministry spokesman said only that China supports developing AI in "an open, inclusive, beneficial and good-for-all direction." That's the diplomatic version of "we're listening."
US officials had floated the idea of AI safety guardrails ahead of the trip. None of that turned into signed text.
For all the talk about working together, neither side committed to anything on paper. The summit produced principles, not policy.
Worth Noting
The summit's biggest tell may be who didn't fly to Beijing with Trump. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, the man who builds the chips at the center of this entire debate, was left off the White House delegation while Tim Cook and Elon Musk both made the trip.
That read as a clear signal chips weren't going to be the breakthrough story. They weren't.
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