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3JUN

72 hours to Beijing locks the week

3 min read
10:43UTC

Trump leaves for the Trump-Xi summit on Wednesday 13 May and returns Friday 15 May. Two US officials told Axios he will not order military action against Iran before he is back, framing the trip as a 72-hour decision lock.

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Key takeaway

Trump's 13-15 May Beijing trip locks military action and calibrates every signed sanction to Xi's calendar.

Donald Trump departs for Beijing on Wednesday 13 May and returns Friday 15 May for the Trump-Xi summit, the first face-to-face meeting between the two presidents since the war began. Two unnamed US officials told Axios they did not believe Trump would order military action against Iran before his return 1. That places the next paper-or-pivot decision point three days out from a working week that, until Monday, had run six consecutive days without a signed Iran instrument.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi had flown to Beijing on 6 May to meet Wang Yi explicitly to pre-position Iran's case ahead of the summit, putting the 13-15 May window on Tehran's calendar before Trump's life support framing. Treasury's HK-scoped SDN round, signed the same morning Trump went verbal from the Oval Office, fits inside that window by design. Four Hong Kong targets exert pressure on Iran's oil-logistics network without forcing Xi to publicly defend MOFCOM Announcement No. 21 in the week he is hosting the American president. Five mainland targets would have collided.

OFAC is probing whether Beijing extends Blocking Rules cover to the Hong Kong layer or leaves it exposed. If Beijing extends MOFCOM protection to HK-registered firms in the coming days, the framework hardens and the network keeps operating. If it does not, the HK shell layer falls open and the IRGC and NIOC oil-logistics architecture loses a tier. Either outcome resolves a legal ambiguity that has held since Hong Kong's 1997 handover.

The 15 May return is the load-bearing date. Trump's Truth Social pause around Project Freedom in April established that he can switch off the verbal track when he chooses; the choice he makes on the plane home will determine whether the verbal week is a prelude to an order or a substitute for one.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Trump is flying to Beijing on 13 May for a two-day meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping. His officials say he will not order any military strikes on Iran while he is travelling. Before that, Iran's Foreign Minister Araghchi flew to Beijing last week to speak to China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi; essentially lobbying China to take Iran's side, or at least stay neutral, during the Trump-Xi talks. Meanwhile, US Treasury timed its 11 May sanctions round to avoid targeting the Chinese oil refineries that China has officially protected. The thinking is that Washington can squeeze Iran without giving Beijing a reason to publicly fight back during summit week.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The Beijing summit was on the diplomatic calendar before Trump's verbal escalation on 11 May. China's dual-track posture; NFRA halting yuan loans to sanctioned refineries while MOFCOM ordering those firms to defy OFAC; was designed precisely to give Xi a neutral public stance at the summit without surrendering economic access to Iranian crude.

Araghchi's 6 May Beijing visit was Iran's attempt to insert its negotiating floor into the summit agenda before Washington could set the terms. Tehran is treating the summit as an upstream variable in its own negotiations, not merely a bilateral US-China event.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Trump's 13-15 May absence from Washington effectively locks out unilateral military action against Iran for the full summit window, as any strike during a US-China summit would dominate the joint communique.

    Immediate · 0.85
  • Opportunity

    The summit creates a natural post-return decision point on 15 May: if Xi signals willingness to facilitate a uranium deal, Trump can frame any subsequent concession as a diplomatic win rather than a capitulation.

    Short term · 0.6
  • Risk

    If the summit ends without an Iran-linked deliverable, Murkowski's AUMF leverage rises sharply in the week of 18 May as both the legal clock and the congressional return coincide (ID:3210).

    Short term · 0.75
First Reported In

Update #95 · OFAC opens the Hong Kong door

Axios· 12 May 2026
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