In Washington, a consensus is emerging that the time has come to choose security over economics — to “de-risk” the economic relationship with China
China
Former Taiwan President Ma to Make Second Trip to China
Former Taiwan president Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) will make his second trip to China next month, leading a group of students on an 11-day journey to visit
A Diplomat’s Visits to Oklahoma Highlight Contacts Between Chinese Officials and Community Leaders Accused of Crimes
by Sebastian Rotella and Kirsten Berg, ProPublica, and Garrett Yalch and Clifton Adcock, The Frontier This story was originally published by
TikTok Tightrope: Why the U.S. Should Ban All Social Media Apps From Non-Democracies
U.S. President Joe Biden became one of his country’s 170 million TikTok users in February and, then, in March, promised to sign legislation into law
Southeast Asia Stymied in South China Sea Dispute
Philippine President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr.’s outreach to Vietnam for maritime cooperation comes against a backdrop of China’s assertiveness in the
Beijing Anger-ometer, March 2024: Car Wars and Coast Guard Clashes as Biden Boosts Allies
Planes, trains and automobiles: Transport is at the forefront of China President Xi Jinping’s mind as he doubles down on “new industrialization” and
Taiwan Warns of ‘Enormous’ Chinese Bases Near Its South China Sea Holding
Taiwan’s foreign minister said on Wednesday that China has built “enormous” military bases on three islands surrounding Taiwan’s main holding in the
Asia Ground Zero in the Revolution of Electric Vehicle Markets
The AI and green technology revolutions have generated economic disruptions, with the potential to reshape economies, with a new set of winners and
Will the AUKUS Deal Survive in the Event of a Trump Presidency? All Signs Point to Yes
John Blaxland, Australian National University A year ago, the AUKUS agreement was formally announced between Australian and U.K. Prime Ministers
China & Human Rights, Mid-March 2024: Aiding Russia and Targeting Tibet as an Authoritarian Bloc Rises
In the land where young people are simply giving up on work, charity and society as the only form of protest still available to them, police have been
China Loses Strategic Waters in the South China Sea
From 2012 to 2021, Beijing steadily advanced its claim to “historic rights” in most of the waters, seabed and airspace of the South China Sea, using
Ghosts of Gwangju: China’s Information War Strikes at the Heart of South Korea’s Democracy as Elections Approach
Entering the May 18th Memorial Center in Gwangju’s quiet 5.18 Memorial Park under the gray sky of a late winter afternoon is political freedom in a