US President Donald Trump touted prospects for an "epic" trade deal with China but acknowledged that a settlement of a year-long commercial conflict remained at least a month away.
Speaking at an Oval Office meeting with visiting Chinese Vice Premier Liu He on Thursday, Trump said a trade agreement between the two countries could come "within the next four weeks", followed by an additional two weeks to polish the text, reports The Washington Post.
The President billed the hoped-for deal as "monumental" and "the grand-daddy of them all".
But Trump said it was too soon to set a date for a signing summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping with negotiators still haggling over core questions, such as a proposed enforcement mechanism and the future of each side's import tariffs.
"We have a ways to go," Trump told the media, adding: "We are rounding the turn."
Trump said that any summit would be "here", but he did not specify whether he meant Washington or elsewhere in the US.
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Xi also sounded an upbeat note, conveying to Trump through Liu that he wanted an early conclusion to the negotiations on the text of a bilateral trade deal.
Liu said Xi believes that "strategic leadership" was needed for the "healthy, stable development of China-US ties".
The two sides had reached a "new consensus" on the text of a deal during the latest round of talks in Washington this week, Liu said.
Trump's upbeat remarks came on the second of three days of talks this week between US and Chinese negotiators.
It remains unclear whether the US will cancel some or all of the tariffs Trump had imposed last year on more than $250 billion worth of Chinese imports after concluding that Beijing was forcing American companies to surrender proprietary technology in return for being allowed to do business in the Asian country, The Washington Post said.
The President has spoken of keeping at least some tariffs in place as leverage to encourage the Chinese government to comply with an eventual agreement.
China is pushing for the tariffs to be removed before it will agree to lift its retaliatory tariffs on US farm products and industrial goods including autos.
Also unclear is whether China will agree to the Trump administration's demand for an enforcement mechanism allowing the US to reimpose tariffs if it believes Beijing is not fulfilling its obligations.
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