US-China Detente Tested by Drones, Tariffs, and Rare Earths
Proposed trade and investment boards face clarity issues that could escalate disputes.
Quick Look
- The US and China are testing their post-summit detente through proposed trade and investment boards.
- Key issues like tariffs, drone security (DJI), and rare earths could challenge this stability if clarity is lacking.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
Following a summit between Presidents Xi Jinping and Donald Trump, the US and China are establishing trade and investment boards to manage their relationship. This move aims to institutionalize a 'cold peace' characterized by disciplined coexistence under security pressure.
How drones, tariffs and rare earths could test US-China detente
Proposed bilateral trade and investment boards promise stability, but a lack of clarity around key issues could be weaponised
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Hilton Root is a professor of public policy at George Mason University, a former senior adviser at the US Treasury Department, and the author of 10 books on international political economy.
Published: 8:30pm, 10 Jun 2026
The post-summit detente between Washington and Beijing has moved from diplomatic language to institutional design. Less than three weeks after the summit between President Xi Jinping and US President Donald Trump, the US Trade Representative (USTR) asked companies to identify “non-sensitive” Chinese goods that might qualify for tariff relief under a new US-China Board of Trade.
On the same day, the USTR also proposed Section 301 duties on imports from 60 economies, including China, after its forced labour investigation. These parallel moves are the first test of whether the promised trade and investment boards can manage disputes over tariffs, drones, rare earths, licensing and market access.
According to the White House, the two leaders agreed to establish Boards of Trade and Investment as part of their agreement to build a constructive relationship of strategic stability based on fairness and reciprocity. Xi’s account put the emphasis differently, describing stability in terms of cooperation as the mainstay, competition within proper limits, manageable differences and “expectable peace”.
The overlap suggests a shared vocabulary of restraint, but the differences show why institutions are needed. Washington and Beijing will continue to assert security claims. The practical objective of the proposed trade board is to keep a tariff fight, licensing delay, drone rule, rare earth squeeze or investment screening from becoming a verdict on the whole relationship.
That is the logic of a cold peace: disciplined coexistence under persistent security pressure. Commerce continues even as both governments treat some technologies, data flows and strategic inputs as security matters. The credibility of such an arrangement depends on procedures that firms can anticipate before they invest, ship or redesign a supply chain.
The urgency becomes clear in the case of DJI, the Shenzhen-based drone maker that accounts for more than half of the US commercial drone market and sits at the centre of a dispute over how to define security risk in a commercial market. In December, the US Federal Communications Commission placed foreign-made drones and their critical components on its Covered List, which identifies equipment and services deemed to pose an unacceptable risk to US national security.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
The effectiveness of the US-China Board of Trade will be tested by specific disputes over tariffs, drones, and rare earths.
Very likely · Short term
Lack of clarity on 'non-sensitive' goods and security risks could lead to weaponization of trade issues.
Likely · Short term
Open Questions
- How will 'non-sensitive' Chinese goods be defined for tariff relief?
- What specific criteria will be used to assess security risks for commercial drones?
- What is the US strategy regarding rare earth supply chains in relation to China?
- How will the proposed trade and investment boards effectively manage disputes?




