President Donald Trump arrived in Malaysia for a nearly weeklong tour of Asia that will include meetings with key leaders, with a main goal of securing a trade deal with China’s President Xi Jinping — in hopes of ending a monthslong trade war.
Trump arrived in Kuala Lumpur shortly after 10 a.m. local time on Sunday. While he was on his way, Trump posted on his social media platform that he would meet with the prime minister of Thailand upon arrival and sign a peace agreement between Thailand and Cambodia, noting the recent death of Thailand’s Queen Mother Sirikit.
Mark Schiefelbein/AP – PHOTO: Donald Trump,Anwar Ibrahim
Trump is expected to sit down with several other Asian leaders at the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and has a bilateral meeting with Malaysia’s prime minister, Anwar bin Ibrahim, while in Kuala Lumpur, during the initial stage of his trip.
Mark Schiefelbein/AP – PHOTO: Donald Trump,Anwar Ibrahim
Hasnoor Hussain/Reuters – PHOTO: U.S. President arrives in Kuala Lumpur for the 47th ASEAN Summit
Securing trade deal with China
Trump is expected to sit down with his Chinese counterpart in South Korea on Thursday, the final day of his overseas trip.
U.S.-China relations experienced some detente this summer as tariffs were lowered while trade talks continued, but tensions flared recently when China announced tightened export controls on rare earth minerals weeks before the leaders were set to meet.
AFP/POOL/AFP via Getty Images – PHOTO: President Donald Trump on September 18, 2025 and Chinese President Xi Jinping September 1, 2025.
US-China rare Earth minerals fight explained
The Trump administration sees those expanded restrictions, which apply to countries around the world, as having a major impact on global manufacturing. Trump’s top economic advisers have called the export controls “economic coercion” and “extortion.”
Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images – PHOTO: President Donald Trump speaks during a roundtable on criminal cartels in the State Dining Room of the White House, Oct. 23, 2025, in Washington.
He responded by threatening an additional 100% tariff on Chinese imports, set to take effect Nov. 1, if his talks with Xi fail.
Even so, he has appeared optimistic, saying he expects “to be able to make it a good deal” with Xi when the two sit down together. He’s said they’re also expected to confer about China’s purchase of American soybeans and even nuclear matters.
Trump to meet with China’s Xi next Thursday, will hold a bilateral meeting
Other world leaders
Following his stop in Malaysia, Trump will then travel to Japan where he’s expected to sit down with Japan’s new prime minister, Sanae Takaichi. A political conservative, Takaichi is the country’s first female leader. While the U.S. and Japan have already secured a trade deal, the two will highlight that aspect of the U.S.-Japan relationship.
Eugene Hoshiko/AP, Pool – PHOTO: Japan’s new Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi speaks during a press conference at the prime minister’s office in Tokyo, Oct. 21, 2025.
On Wednesday, Trump is also expected to visit South Korea for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Summit. While there, Trump will hold a bilateral meeting with the president of the Republic of Korea, deliver keynote remarks at the APEC CEO luncheon and participate in APEC working dinner.
The visit comes after major tensions between South Korea and the U.S. after more than 400 South Korean workers were arrested, detained and deported at a Hyundai plant in Georgia as part of Trump’s immigration crackdown.
It came after Hyundai poured billions into the factory to align with Trump’s vision of manufacturing in America in order to avoid the brunt of Trump’s tariff policies.
The episode caused uncertainty about the ability of companies to get workers into the U.S. to build and operate manufacturing plants without similar incidents. Trump’s visit could be a chance to soothe unease among those companies as he continues to court investment in the U.S.
Trump says he’s terminating trade talks with Canada over TV ad about tariffs
Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney also is expected to attend APEC and the other Asia meetings, and one of Trump’s top economic advisers said Friday Trump and Carney will speak while there about their latest tariff dispute.
Just before leaving for Asia, Trump abruptly ended trade talks with Canada, saying he was angry about a TV ad put out by the province of Ontario featuring Ronald Reagan in 1987 criticizing tariffs. Trump claimed it was an attempt to “illegally influence” the U.S. Supreme Court, which is set to hear arguments next month over whether he has the power to unilaterally impose tariffs.
His visit also comes just days after he slapped more sanctions on Russian oil companies and continues to call on allies to pull back on purchases of Russian crude.
On Thursday, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said those sanctions are already having an impact on, with China and India “scaling back” their contracts.
Though Trump is no stranger to APEC and ASEAN summits, having attended many during his first term, this visit will be his first major with Asian leaders during his second stay in office — as they try to navigate his often unpredictable changes in trade and foreign policy.
