BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — Argentina's President Javier Milei set off Wednesday for his 14th trip to the United States to take part in the inaugural session of U.S. President Donald Trump's Board of Peace initiative. He is also expected to attend Trump's regional summit in Miami on March 7 with Latin American leaders aligned with the White House's political agenda.
The visits come as Trump seeks to bolster alliances to counter Chinese influence in Latin America, and as Milei — whose country counts China as its top trading partner — walks a careful diplomatic line, reshaping Argentine foreign policy to mirror Washington's while pursuing closer economic ties with Beijing.
Milei may have referred to Beijing's Communist government as an ''assassin" on the campaign trail, but two years into his presidency, experts say it's increasingly clear he can't walk away from China.
''Argentina relies on China's insatiable demand for South America's energy, food and minerals, and the United States will never replace that market,'' said Benjamin Gedan, director of the Latin American program at the Wilson Center.
China was Argentina's biggest trading partner last December, the most recent month with available data, overtaking neighboring Brazil three months earlier, according to the country's official statistics agency, with Argentine exports to China surging by 125% year-on-year and imports by 26%.
''It's the great irony of Milei's administration,'' said Mariano Turzi, a professor of international relations at Austral University outside Buenos Aires.
''Milei rhetorically seeks to distance himself from China. But it was under Milei's anti-communist libertarian government that China gained greater ground in the Argentine market.''
A spokesperson for Milei did not respond to a request for comment.