By Susan Heavey and Doina Chiacu
WASHINGTON, Oct 13 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump remains on track to meet Chinese leader Xi Jinping in South Korea in late October as the two sides try to de-escalate tensions over trade disputes, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Monday.
The latest rupture followed China's announcement on Thursday that it would dramatically expand its rare earths export controls. That drew a sharp countermeasure from Trump on Friday that sent markets and relations between the world's two largest economies into a spiral.
Bessent said there were substantial communications between the two sides over the weekend and more meetings were expected.
"We have substantially de-escalated," Bessent said in an interview with Fox Business Network.
"President Trump said that the tariffs would not go into effect until November 1. He will be meeting with Party Chair Xi in Korea. I believe that meeting will still be on."
Trump and Xi had planned to meet during the summit of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum hosted by South Korea in late October.
The dollar edged up on Monday as investors hoped the U.S. would temper its latest escalation of the trade war with China after Friday's selloff.
Bessent said there would be U.S.-China staff-level meetings this week in Washington on the sidelines of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund annual gatherings.
"The 100% tariff does not have to happen," Bessent said. "The relationship, despite this announcement last week, is good. Lines of communication have reopened, so we'll see where it goes."
U.S. PUSHBACK AGGRESSIVE
Still, Bessent called the China move provocative and said the U.S. pushed back aggressively.
The United States has been in contact with allies and expects support from the Europeans, India and democracies in Asia, he said.
"China is a command and control economy. They are neither going to command nor control us," Bessent said.
China blamed the United States for the rising trade tensions on Sunday and called Trump's latest threatened tariffs of 100% on Chinese goods hypocritical. It defended its curbs on exports of rare earth elements and equipment. China dominates the market for such elements, which are essential to tech manufacturing.
Under China's new regulations, foreign companies producing some of the rare earths and related magnets on the list will now also need a Chinese export licence if the final product contains or is made with Chinese equipment or material. This applies even if the transaction includes no Chinese companies.
The United States would reject licensing requirements from China, Bessent said in the interview on "Mornings with Maria."
Trump's unexpected broadside on Friday shook global financial markets, sending the benchmark S&P 500 Index .SPX sliding by more than 2%, its biggest one-day drop since April, when a steady barrage of tariff announcements by Trump stoked market volatility.