Trump's China visit likely won't yield breakthrough, aims to maintain stability

BEIJING/WASHINGTON, March 9 (Reuters) - A summit between U.S. President Donald Trump and China's Xi Jinping this month is unlikely to create room for even a limited reset of business and investment ties, five people briefed on preparations said.

Reuters

American business leaders at this stage have not secured the CEO delegation some had sought. On the other side, there is no ‌indication Beijing is on track for the investment protections it has sought on behalf of Chinese companies.

Washington and Beijing are looking to maintain the stability that has characterised relations between the ‌world's two largest economies since late last year after a bruising period marked by Trump's tariffs and China's chokehold on rare earths exports.

But some U.S. companies had also held out hope Trump's visit could go further than a green light for the deals on ​Chinese purchases of soybeans and Boeing aircraft, already under consideration.

'EVER-SHRINKING STATE VISIT'

Overshadowing the summit - the first Trump-Xi meeting since they agreed on the trade truce in October - has been Chinese frustration with the Trump administration's last-minute planning for an event that normally takes months of painstaking preparations, three people with knowledge of the arrangements told Reuters.

Uncertainties, besides clearance for Chinese investment, include the thorny issue of Trump's tariffs and whether he will be joined by the kind of high-profile business delegation that the leaders of Canada, Britain and Germany recently brought to China on their state visits.

"This feels like an ever-shrinking state visit. The ambition for what this trip will accomplish seems to be ‌getting smaller by the day," said Ryan Hass, director of the John ⁠L. Thornton China Center at the Brookings Institution.

The White House, Treasury Department, Office of the U.S. Trade Representative and China's commerce and foreign ministries did not respond to requests for comment on prospects for the summit.

Trump is to visit China from March 31 to April 2, a U.S. official told Reuters last month. China has not ⁠confirmed the trip, but its top diplomat said on Sunday the agenda for the exchange was "on the table".

"What is required is for both sides to make thorough preparations to create a conducive environment to manage existing differences," Foreign Minister Wang Yi told a press conference on the sidelines of an annual parliament meeting in Beijing.

Washington only began working-level interagency planning meetings for the trip recently, leaving little time for a state visit that Beijing expects to be highly choreographed, ​two ​sources said.

U.S. officials view the visit as one of four potential Trump-Xi summits this year. A meeting in Paris this ​week between Bessent and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng will focus on possible ‌deliverables for the Beijing meeting, a person with knowledge of the evolving preparations said.

Trump's ambassador to Beijing, David Perdue, is pushing for a CEO delegation, and U.S. officials in China have made tentative outreach to companies, two sources said.

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But USTR, which has been driving Washington's summit agenda with Treasury, has been reluctant to bring CEOs, three sources said, to keep the focus on "managed trade".

TARIFFS LOOM, BUT SUMMIT NOT 'A FIGHT ABOUT TRADE'

The Trump team could still scramble a last-minute CEO delegation, three sources said. The China Development Forum, to which dozens of top American executives flock annually, will take place a week before the summit.

To secure Chinese investment in the U.S., Beijing wants security guarantees, two sources said, after the forced divestiture of TikTok in the U.S.

Trump invited Chinese automakers to build factories in the U.S. in January, but a U.S. official said the president has not pushed ‌for an all-out effort to secure investment commitments from China, as he did with Japan, South Korea and Taiwan.

Some Republican ​lawmakers have warned Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent that Washington should not lower guardrails against Chinese investment.

Tariffs remain a potential flashpoint.

The U.S. ​Supreme Court last month invalidated a 10% fentanyl-related tariff Trump had imposed on China and others ​under an emergency statute. The Trump administration has told Beijing it expects to reimpose that levy under a different law, a U.S. official said.

But the purpose of the ‌summit is "not to fight about trade," Trade Representative Jamieson Greer told ABC News last ​month.

"It's to maintain stability, make sure that the Chinese ​are holding up their end of our deal and buying American agricultural products and Boeings and other things, and making sure they are sending us the rare earths that we need," Greer said.

A potential win from the summit could be an agreement for China to purchase some 500 narrow-body jets from Boeing. Trump last year threatened export controls on Boeing parts, a pain point for China.

Beijing is seeking U.S. concessions ​for the purchase, including multi-year parts guarantees, said two sources briefed on ‌the negotiations. The deliveries would likely not be completed until the 2030s because of Boeing's production pace and order backlog.

White House officials could still opt to push the Boeing deal back ​to minimise the need to make concessions to Beijing and reserve some deals to announce for a future summit on U.S. soil, one person with knowledge of the discussions ​said.

(Reporting by Laurie Chen in Beijing and Michael Martina in Washington; Editing by Kevin Krolicki and William Mallard)

Trump's China visit likely won't yield breakthrough, aims to maintain stability

BEIJING/WASHINGTON, March 9 (Reuters) - A summit between U.S. President Donald Trump and China's Xi Jinping this mont...
Major airports grapple with hourslong security wait times and TSA staffing shortages amid partial government shutdown

Travel at major U.S. airports turned into a nightmare Sunday, with up to three-hour long security wait times and a shortage of TSA workers at the start of spring break travel amid the partial government shutdown.

NBC Universal An elevated view of throngs of people in an airport terminal. (Brett Coomer / Houston Chronicle via AP)

Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman Lauren Bis said travelers are facing missed flights and massive delays. She blamed the chaos on congressional Democrats' refusal to fund DHS, which has led to the partial shutdown.

"These political stunts force patriotic TSA officers, who protect our skies from serious threats, to work without pay," she said. "These frontline heroes received only partial paychecks earlier this month and now face their first full missed paycheck, leading to financial hardship, absences, and crippling staffing shortages."

DHS fundingexpired on Feb. 13, with lawmakers locking horns over Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection policies after federal agents killed two Americans in Minneapolis. Democrats are seeking reforms to rein in those agencies, but Republicans have argued that changes were already made in response to the killings.

The impasse triggered the partial shutdown impacting DHS, which affects the Transportation Security Administration, the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Coast Guard.

TSA workers, like many other DHS employees, must work without pay until funding is resolved.

Sunday's delays come as this week marks the start of the bustling spring break travel period.

William P. Hobby Airport in Houston was experiencing a wait time of 2 hours and 45 minutes just before noon Sunday, according to federal officials.

The Airportwarned on Xthat TSA wait times may exceed three hours. "Due to the federal government shutdown, passengers should arrive 4-5 hours before their flight to allow extra time for TSA screening," the airport said.

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One Southwest Airlines travelershared a photo showing packed linesat the airport. She said she was in an hour-and-a-half line to check her baggage and her flight was due to leave in 2.5 hours.

"TSA isn't working so security is basically shut down!! They say the security line is at least four hours long right now," she wrote.

Transportation Security Administration agents. (Valerie Plesch / Bloomberg via Getty Images file)

Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport and Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport had wait times of an hour, while George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston had a wait time of 51 minutes and Charlotte Douglas International Airport a delay of 47 minutes, officials said.

Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport also warned ofa shortage of TSA workers at security checkpointscausing "longer-than-average lines." Travelers were asked to arrive at least three hours before departure.

Airlines for America, a trade association whose members include American, Delta, United and Southwest, on Sunday decried what it characterized as the use of transportation security workers for "political leverage" and the subsequent delays and strain on the aviation system.

"We are in spring break travel season and expecting record numbers of people to take to the skies," A4A President and CEO Chris Sununu said in a statement. "Airlines have done their part to prepare; now Congress and the administration must act with urgency to reach a deal that reopens DHS and ends this shutdown."

The White House and Senate Democrats have traded offers back and forth in past weeks but have thus far failed to reach a funding breakthrough.

Republicans sought to usethe Iran war to pressure Democratsto relent on their demands, but Democrats have refused.

It's been an embattled year for TSA workers, who already went weeks without pay during the43-day shutdownthatended in November.

Major airports grapple with hourslong security wait times and TSA staffing shortages amid partial government shutdown

Travel at major U.S. airports turned into a nightmare Sunday, with up to three-hour long security wait times and a shorta...
Israeli strike kills six Palestinians in Gaza, medics say

By Nidal al-Mughrabi

Reuters Palestinians carry a casualty at the site hit by an Israeli strike, according to health officials, in Gaza City, March 8, 2026. REUTERS/Dawoud Abu Alkas Palestinians gather to inspect the damage at the site hit by an Israeli strike, according to health officials, in Gaza City, March 8, 2026. REUTERS/Dawoud Abu Alkas

Aftermath of an Israeli strike in Gaza City

CAIRO, March 8 (Reuters) - An Israeli air strike and tank shelling killed six Palestinians, including two girls, in Gaza City on Sunday in two separate attacks, the deadliest ‌incidents in Gaza since Israel and the U.S. launched their war against Iran a week ‌ago, health officials said.

Mohamed Abu Selmia, the head of the Al Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, said the three men were ​near Al-Azhar University in western Gaza City, and included a paramedic Mohammad Hamduna, and two others named as Mohammad Abu Shedeq and Ahmed Lafi.

The strike hit near crowded tent camps where Gazans were sheltering, and wounded several other people, the medics added.

Such attacks have declined since the start of the U.S.-Israeli campaign against Iran, although Israeli ‌forces have killed several Palestinians over ⁠the past week.

The Israeli military issued a statement on Sunday about the strike saying they had killed two Hamas members who had been preparing to attack Israeli ⁠soldiers, without providing evidence.

No militant group has claimed any of the men as members.

The Israeli military declined to comment in response to Reuters' request for evidence connecting the men to a potential attack.

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A little after midnight in the ​central Gaza ​Strip, Israeli tank shelling killed at least three people, ​including two girls, and wounded 10 other ‌people, some of them children, according to health officials at Al-Awda Hospital in Nuseirat camp.

Medics said the tank shells hit a tent encampment, housing displaced families in the western Nuseirat area. Two years of war turned most of the enclave into a wasteland, and internally displaced most of the territory's over two million population.

There was no immediate Israeli comment on the reported tank shelling incident.

Israel and Hamas agreed to a U.S.-brokered Gaza ‌ceasefire deal that kicked off last October, but violence has ​continued on a near-daily basis. Both sides have blamed the ​other for the violation of the truce ​agreement.

The Gaza health ministry said at least 640 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli ‌fire since October. Israel says four soldiers have ​been killed by militants ​in Gaza over the same period.

Gaza has been devastated by more than two years of an Israeli onslaught that killed over 72,000 Palestinians, according to local health authorities, and left much of ​the enclave in ruins.

The war was ‌sparked by Hamas' October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, where the militants killed 1,200 people ​and took over 250 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.

(Reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi and Pesha Magid; ​Editing by Helen Popper, Alexandra Hudson and Stephen Coates)

Israeli strike kills six Palestinians in Gaza, medics say

By Nidal al-Mughrabi Aftermath of an Israeli strike in Gaza City CAIRO, March 8 (Reuters) - An Israeli air s...
Sixers star Tyrese Maxey out for at least 2 games with sprained finger sustained in loss to Hawks

Philadelphia 76ers All-Star Tyrese Maxey has a sprained right pinkie and will miss at least two games.

Yahoo Sports

The76ers announced Maxey's diagnosis on Sunday,a day after he sustained the injury in a loss to the Atlanta Hawks.

The injury will require further testing, and the 76ers didn't rule out an extended absence for their star guard.

"Tyrese Maxey suffered a sprain of the right fifth finger," the 76ers' statement reads. "He will undergo additional testing and consultation in the coming days to determine a treatment plan. He is out for the next two games and further updates will be provided after the back-to-back."

The 76ers are scheduled to play the Cleveland Cavaliers on Monday and the Memphis Grizzlies on Tuesday. From there, they'll face the Eastern Conference-leading Detroit Pistons Thursday night.

The 76ers were already playing without Joel Embiid, VJ Edgecombe and Paul George on Saturday night in Atlanta. Then, with less than a minute left in a125-116 lossto the Hawks, Maxey suffered the injury that head coach Nick Nursereportedlysaid called for X-rays.

With less than 30 seconds to go, Maxey went for a steal and collided in the paint with teammate Adem Bona, a 6-foot-10, 235-pound big man.

Immediately, Maxey grabbed his right hand in pain.

The two-time All-Star guard walked off the floor with 16.2 ticks remaining, tucking his hand under his jersey as he headed toward the locker room.

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The Athletic's Tony Jonesreported Saturday night that Maxey will receive additional testing on Sunday.

"Nothing conclusive tonight,"Jones wrote on X.

Maxey came into the game leading the team and ranking fourth in the NBA with a career-high 28.9 points per game.

He scored 31 points on 12-of-22 shooting in Atlanta for a short-handed Sixers squad. With the loss, Philadelphia dropped to 34-29. The Sixers are now eighth in the Eastern Conference and just 1.5 games ahead of the ninth-place Hawks, who improved to 33-31 with Saturday's pivotal victory.

[Enter Yahoo Fantasy Bracket Mayhem now for your shot at $50K]

Atlanta got 35 points, 10 rebounds and 7 assists from All-Star forward Jalen Johnson. Nickeil Alexander-Walker chipped in 24 points and went 4 of 9 from deep.

Embiid missed his 30th game this season, including his fourth straight. His latest issueis an oblique strain. The Sixers are 21-12 in the games Embiid has played in this season. They are 13-17 without him.

They were also missing Edgecombe, as the rookie guard was sidelined by a lumbar contusion he sustained when he fell hard on his lower backafter being fouled from behind on a 3-point attempt in a lopsided defeat to the San Antonio Spurs on Tuesday.

George still has nine games remainingon the 25-game suspension he received from the league on Jan. 31 for violating the league's anti-drug program.

Sixers star Tyrese Maxey out for at least 2 games with sprained finger sustained in loss to Hawks

Philadelphia 76ers All-Star Tyrese Maxey has a sprained right pinkie and will miss at least two games. ...
Port Vale, Southampton stun Premier League opponents in the FA Cup to book places in quarterfinals

Third-tier Port Vale pulled off a massive FA Cup upset by beating Premier League Sunderland to advance to the quarterfinals of the historic competition.

Associated Press Port Vale's Ben Waine celebrates after scoring his side's first goal of the game during the FA Cup fifth round soccer match between Sunderland and Port Vale, in Stoke on Trent, England, Sunday March 8, 2026. (Nick Potts/PA via AP) Port Vale's Ben Waine celebrates with teammates after scoring his side's first goal of the game, during the FA Cup fifth round soccer match between Sunderland and Port Vale, in Stoke on Trent, England, Sunday March 8, 2026. (Nick Potts/PA via AP) Port Vale's Ben Waine scores his side's first goal of the game, during the FA Cup fifth round soccer match between Sunderland and Port Vale, in Stoke on Trent, England, Sunday March 8, 2026. (Nick Potts/PA via AP) Southampton's Ross Stewart, left, celebrates scoring during the English FA Cup fifth round soccer match between Fulham and Southampton in London, Sunday March 8, 2026. (John Walton/PA via AP) Fulham's Rodrigo Muniz attempts an overhead kick during the English FA Cup fifth round soccer match between Fulham and Southampton in London, Sunday March 8, 2026. (John Walton/PA via AP)

Britain FA Cup Soccer

Ben Waine's first-half header sealed a 1-0 win at Vale Park on Sunday to book his team's place alongside Liverpool, Manchester City and Arsenal in the last eight.

Port Vale is bottom of League One and 57 places below Sunderland. But it frustrated its top-flight opponent, which had no response to Waine's looping header from inside the box in the 28th minute.

Earlier, Southampton produced another upset to knock out Fulham.

Ross Stewart's 91st-minute penalty sealed a 1-0 win for the Championship side at Craven Cottage and booked its place in the quarterfinals.

The game was heading to extra time when Joachim Andersen brought down Finn Azaz in the box late on. Stewart stepped up and blasted past Fulham goalkeeper Benjamin Lecomte.

Fulham coach Marco Silva paid the price for making nine changes to his starting lineup and leaving out star players like Raul Jimenez, Antonee Robinson and Alex Iwobi.

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Victory continues Southampton's impressive surge under coach Tonda Eckert, who has transformed the club's fortunes since taking charge in November.

The team, which was relegated from the Premier League last season, was battling for survival in the Championship when former coach Will Still was fired. Under Eckert it has risen up the standings and is competing for a place in the playoffs.

"Overall, in the 90 minutes it's deserved that we go to the next round," he told the BBC. "(We) just need to use this game as fuel for the games coming up."

James Robson is athttps://x.com/jamesalanrobson

AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Port Vale, Southampton stun Premier League opponents in the FA Cup to book places in quarterfinals

Third-tier Port Vale pulled off a massive FA Cup upset by beating Premier League Sunderland to advance to the quarterfina...

 

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