History doesn't stop. History advances unstoppably through funerals and generational replacement and new charters of international law and energetic, AI and military development. Just days after US President Trump and Xi-Jinping met to debate the fate of the world, Russian President Vladimir Putin is in China.
The prominent Jewish businesspeople who visited Beijing as part of Donald Trump's high-profile U.S. executive trade delegation, included Larry Fink (CEO of BlackRock), David Solomon (CEO of Goldman Sachs), and Stephen Schwarzman (CEO of Blackstone). These leaders joined Trump's diplomatic mission alongside other major tech and industrial CEOs like Elon Musk to manage ongoing trade relations, market access, and artificial intelligence policy with Chinese President Xi Jinping
The prominent Jewish businesspeople who now are visiting Beijing as part of Vladimir Putin's high-profile Russian executive trade delegation, included Herman Gref (CEO of Sberbank, Russia's largest state-owned bank), Leon Mikhelson (CEO of the gas company Novatek), Oleg Deripaska (Aluminum tycoon and founder of Basic Element), and Roman Abramovich (owner of the multinational steel manufacturing and mining company Evraz, and the world's largest producer of refined nickel and palladium Nornickel, and private investment firm Millhouse). They represent part of the core elite of Russia's state-owned and private economy.
Beijing is now a central hub for ongoing global diplomacy. For highly qualified Israeli analysts, Xi Jinping is today "the most powerful man in the world", as he is at the helm of a country with the largest economy and largest population in the world.
AI accelerates consciousness at an unprecedented speed. The world's richest men today are aligned in favor of real freedom and meritocracy, which impose the ruin of moral liberty. BlackRock acknowledges that the "woke experiment failed". The future depends on pragmatic capitalism grounded in human nature. There is no space or time for more inventions.
Elon Musk is the most notable example of a lonely man who is destroying decades of dictatorial plans. He bought the digital public square to liberate it, he sends spacecraft into space, he builds AIs, he makes cars, he connects brains. One man alone. While entire ministries in failed countries produce "reports" and persecute those who can produce life, culture, and science, especially Jews, he produces.
On their visits to China, the North American and Russian delegations included the richest men in those nations, who didn't just go for a stroll to Asia. The visit heavily focused on securing multi-billion dollar bilateral trade agreements. Trump is satisfied with the results he obtained. Now, Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping plan to sign a major joint declaration and negotiate deep economic, energy, and high-tech deals to solidify their "no limits" partnership.
The idea of an understanding that could "benefit all three nations" stems from Donald Trump’s distinct preference for personal, direct bargaining with powerful foreign counterparts. Clear areas of trilateral crossover now emerged from Trump's meetings with Xi Jinping and last year in Alaska with the President of the Russian Federation.
The concept of enemies sharing the spoils of war among themselves makes sense again. The reality shows to be a mix of high-stakes, direct leader-to-leader diplomacy and competing geopolitical friction. Apparently, there is no known formal, overarching three-way plan that benefits everyone equally. The probability of it existing in practice is high. A true "win-win-win" trilateral harmony remains likely.
Deeply conflicting national interests are natural and, ultimately, the losers in any case will always be the third parties. In a surprise announcement following his talks with Xi, Trump stated he proposed a trilateral agreement between the US, Russia, and China to cap nuclear arsenals. Trump claimed he received a "very positive response" from Beijing, noting it as "the beginning" of a larger conversation. This is the most direct area where a mutual understanding is being actively floated.
Today, asked whether it was time to forget the so-called “spirit of Anchorage” in relations between Russia and Trump's America and start talking instead about a possible “spirit of Beijing,” Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov replied: “Well, perhaps a spirit of Beijing does exist.”