
Analysts say the United States has an advantage in the trade dispute, while China sees surge in business closures and rising unemployment.
At the heart of the Putin–Xi agreement is the ambition for China and Russia to join forces to replace the United States as global leader.
One of the threats to Xi is rival CCP factions—princelings seeking reform and hardline ultra-left Maoists—joining forces to oppose him.
In recent years, Chinese cargo ships have been linked to multiple damaged underwater cables worldwide.
Since Taiwan’s democratization, this is the first time a president has declared communist China a foreign hostile force of the self-ruled island.
An expert called it ‘very irresponsible’ that Beijing hasn’t provided details on the severity and location of the cases.
Beijing is trying to offer Trump a deal in exchange for concessions it wants on Taiwan, a CCP insider tells Yuan Hongbing.
An Australian scholar who has been following the issue closely said the newspaper’s bias reflects its long-standing historical prejudice.
‘The problem is the Chinese government didn’t provide systematic data for the outside world to understand what is the real situation,’ said Sean Lin.
Analysts say the United States has an advantage in the trade dispute, while China sees surge in business closures and rising unemployment.
At the heart of the Putin–Xi agreement is the ambition for China and Russia to join forces to replace the United States as global leader.
One of the threats to Xi is rival CCP factions—princelings seeking reform and hardline ultra-left Maoists—joining forces to oppose him.
In recent years, Chinese cargo ships have been linked to multiple damaged underwater cables worldwide.
Since Taiwan’s democratization, this is the first time a president has declared communist China a foreign hostile force of the self-ruled island.
An expert called it ‘very irresponsible’ that Beijing hasn’t provided details on the severity and location of the cases.
Beijing is trying to offer Trump a deal in exchange for concessions it wants on Taiwan, a CCP insider tells Yuan Hongbing.
An Australian scholar who has been following the issue closely said the newspaper’s bias reflects its long-standing historical prejudice.
‘The problem is the Chinese government didn’t provide systematic data for the outside world to understand what is the real situation,’ said Sean Lin.