One hundred and twenty-five years ago, in August 1900, eight foreign military powers raised their flags over occupied Beijing, marking one of the lowest points in modern Chinese history. Few in the imperial Forbidden City could have predicted that in 2026, the same capital would welcome the sitting president of the United States as an honored state guest, followed just days later by the leader of Russia — a stark reversal of power dynamics that reads like a carefully crafted historical drama.
The 1900 invasion was led by a loose Eight-Nation Alliance of Austria-Hungary, Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia, and the United States. Roughly 52,000 alliance troops marched into the capital, looting and damaging the Forbidden City and the Old Summer Palace, destroying irreplaceable ancient literary collections including the *Yongle Dadian* and *Siku Quanshu*, and forcing the Qing Dynasty to sign the punitive Boxer Protocol one year later. This unequal treaty imposed crippling indemnities on China, granted extraterritorial rights to foreign powers, and allowed permanent foreign troop garrisons on Chinese soil, stripping China of core sovereign control.
By May 2026, the geopolitical table had turned entirely. On the same Beijing soil, the same eight nations’ modern successor states watched from the sidelines as China, not foreign diplomatic missions, set the agenda for high-stakes great power diplomacy. The 2026 Trump-Xi summit stood as the complete opposite of the 1901 humiliation: it was the visiting U.S. president who offered effusive praise to Chinese leader Xi Jinping, calling him “my friend” and “tall, very tall,” while the Chinese delegation offered measured diplomatic language and made no concrete concessions on key sticking points including Taiwan, trade, fentanyl control, and artificial intelligence. In 1901, the Qing court was forced into exile in Xi’an and coerced into signing away national interests; in 2026, Air Force One departed Beijing before the U.S. president even publicly addressed the Taiwan issue.
This contrast is not a simple moral judgment, but a structural observation of shifting global power. Where Beijing once was a conquered prize for foreign armies, it now operates as a central convening power for global diplomacy, and the long-standing pattern of great powers forcing their agendas on China has been quietly inverted.
The 1900 Eight-Nation Alliance was never bound by a formal treaty or official declaration of war; it was only held together by a temporary convergence of anti-China interests. In 2026, the language of strategic friendship now sits firmly on Beijing’s side of the negotiating table. Xi has long referred to Russian President Vladimir Putin as a friend, having built a “no limits” strategic partnership with Moscow since 2022, marked by joint official statements, high-profile informal summits, and deepening bilateral coordination. Putin’s visit to Beijing immediately following Trump’s summit, which he explicitly framed as an opportunity to “share opinions on the contacts that the Chinese had with the Americans,” confirms that triangular great power diplomacy now runs through Beijing, not around it.
Yet today’s asymmetric relationships mirror the 1901 asymmetries in reverse. Russia relies on China for more than one-third of its imports and one-quarter of its total exports, while Russia accounts for only 4% of China’s total trade volume — a smaller share than Vietnam. The position of the supplicant has shifted, even as the geographic stage of Beijing remains the same.
It would be easy to frame this historical arc as a story of unbroken linear ascent for China, but the underlying data tells a more nuanced story. Arguments that China has reached its economic and demographic peak draw on hard evidence: a national fertility rate of just 1.0 in 2025, a fourth consecutive year of population decline, a growing share of young Chinese people reporting no desire to have children, and 2021 marking the highest point of China’s nominal GDP convergence with the United States. The Belt and Road Initiative has faced stalled progress in multiple partner countries, unforgiving demographic headwinds persist, and China’s global cultural soft power remains modest by standard international metrics.
The 2026 back-to-back summits in Beijing therefore capture not a permanent new global order, but a specific, possibly peak moment where China’s industrial scale, deliberate diplomatic patience, and the relative disorganization of its global competitors have converged. The Eight-Nation Alliance arrived at a historic low point for China; today’s summits are taking place at, or very near, a historic high. Both moments are snapshots of a particular time, not permanent destinies.
Three key conclusions emerge from this historical comparison. First, national sovereignty is now the default starting point for all global negotiations, rather than a prize to be won. The 1901 Boxer Protocol made Chinese sovereignty conditional on foreign approval; the 2026 Beijing summits take full Chinese sovereignty as an unchallenged given. Any future regional order in Asia will be negotiated between sovereign equal states, or it will not emerge at all — regardless of which great power is ascendant in any given decade.
Second, personality-driven diplomacy has clear limits for all parties. Trump’s bet on personal charm yielded only vague non-binding commitments around Boeing aircraft purchases and soybean exports, which Beijing declined to confirm in any detail. This lesson is not limited to U.S. partisan politics, but is a procedural reality: centralized governance systems reward structured preparation, not off-the-cuff improvisation, regardless of whether a visiting leader comes from Washington, Moscow, or Tokyo.
Third, the window for China’s current strategic advantage is narrower than triumphalist narratives suggest. If current demographic and economic growth trends hold, the broad strategic latitude China enjoys in 2026 may not still exist by 2046. This reality calls for strategic patience from all major capitals: for Beijing, the best long-term strategy is to exercise restraint while it holds advantageous cards, and for Washington, the most effective response is consistent institutional competence rather than performative political spectacle.
History reminds us that the 1900 Eight-Nation Alliance dissolved within just a year of its victory, as it never had a binding formal framework to hold it together. Coalitions assembled for a single moment rarely outlast that moment. The same caution applies to every strategic partnership, whether it is the Sino-Russian alignment, transpacific relations, or any other cooperation that looks unbreakable in the glow of a state banquet. The most reliable lesson of history, from 1901 to 2026, is that a single photo of leaders on a palace steps never tells the full story.









