#washingtonpost.com. × Secret Pentagon memo on China, homeland has Heritage fingerprints. An secret memo from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth focuses on deterring China’s seizure of Taiwan and shoring up homeland defense. The guidance mimics language of a report from the conservative think t
#Mar.29.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × China wants to lead the world in robots — from dogs to dancers. Beijing is promoting China’s robotics sector as part of its drive to own the technologies of the future. It is fast closing the gap with the United States.
#Mar.29.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × Taiwanese soldiers guarding president’s office were spying for China. Four Taiwanese soldiers have been jailed for passing information to China in a case that analysts say shows the extent of Beijing’s infiltration of Taipei.
#Mar.28.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × China offers ‘safe’ place for investment, Xi tells execs amid trade war. In a rare meeting with heads of 40 multinational companies, Chinese leader Xi Jinping sought to strike a contrast with protectionist President Donald Trump.
#Mar.28.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × For exiled Tibetans, U.S. funding was always about more than just aid. U.S. funding has helped Tibetan refugees from China establish a thriving community in India. The future of that support is now in doubt after Trump’s aid cuts.
#Mar.28.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × This Chinese city grew its birthrate. It won’t be easy to copy.. With a plummeting birth rate and a rapidly aging population, China faces a demographic crisis. The city of Tianmen is an outlier — at least temporarily.
#Mar.26.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × Trump’s global funding cuts leave a void in Africa for rivals to exploit. America’s vanishing presence in Africa has upended critical programs, severed relationships and left a vacuum that Russia and China will look to capitalize on.
#Mar.24.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × China and U.S. need ‘candid communication,’ premier tells Trump ally. Steve Daines, a Republican senator from Montana, and American business leaders are in Beijing amid a worsening trade war that threatens to hurt both economies.
#Mar.23.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × Greenland is hard to defend. As Trump threatens, the Danes are trying.. “One way or the other,” President Donald Trump told Congress, the United States needs to “get” Greenland, strategically located and rich in rare metals.
#Mar.23.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × Taiwan warns of growing Chinese threat, partly to secure Trump’s support. President Lai Ching-te is pushing boundaries, risking an angry response from China at a time when it’s not clear whether the United States will step in to help.
#Mar.21.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × Canada condemns China for execution of four Canadians on drug charges. “Canada should respect the spirit of the rule of law and stop interfering in China’s judiciary sovereignty,” a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman said.
#Mar.20.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × China has a defense against Trump’s trade war. A great wall of pork.. Beijing’s tariffs on U.S. farm goods will have little short-term impact on Chinese consumers — making it ideal for inflicting political pain on Trump, analysts say.
#Mar.18.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × China vows to ‘vigorously boost consumption’ to revive weak economy. China has unveiled a 30-point plan to boost consumer spending — a task that has become ever more urgent since President Donald Trump ignited a trade war.
#Mar.17.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × Businesses are pivoting away from China — but few wind up in India. Red tape, restrictive import policies and unpredictable regulations have prevented global companies from committing to India, executives and officials say.
#Mar.16.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × G-7 overlooks Trump’s brash insults to find agreement on Russia, China. The Group of Seven’s show of unity in Quebec papered over Trump’s dismissiveness of Canada as a sovereign country and threats to impose tariffs on European wine and liquor.
#Mar.14.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × Chinese naval modernization may be aided by foreign firms, report says. The striking growth of China’s shipbuilding industry — commercial and military — poses national security concerns for the United States, analysts say.
#Mar.12.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × Chinese tariffs set to hit U.S. farm products as trade tensions mount. The leaders of Canada and Mexico have held talks with the Trump administration to stave off tariffs, but China has instead embarked on a tit-for-tat approach.
#Mar.10.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × Cambodia says U.S. Navy could visit military port tied to China. A Cambodian official said his government would welcome a request from the United States for its ships to visit Ream Naval Base.
#Mar.06.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × U.S. charges alleged hackers in what it calls China-sponsored campaign. Federal authorities charged 10 alleged Chinese hackers-for-hire and two officials they accused of leading a global cyberespionage scheme.
#Mar.05.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × Never mind Trump’s tariffs. The Chinese Communist Party is defiant.. Chinese leaders are gathering in Beijing for their annual confab and, despite the slowing economy and an escalating trade war, they are projecting confidence.
#Mar.04.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × After Trump threats, Hong Kong firm to sell stake in Panama Canal ports. Trump threatened to take back the canal because of what he called Chinese influence. CK Hutchison, a Hong Kong company, is selling its control in a firm that ran two ports on the canal.
#Mar.04.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × What to know as Trump’s tariffs on Mexico and Canada take effect. President Donald Trump’s 25 percent tariffs on the United States’ largest trading partners heighten fears of an all-out trade war and higher prices for consumers.
#Mar.04.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × Australia, with no auto industry to protect, is awash with Chinese EVs. The United States has effectively banned Chinese electric vehicles over concerns about unfair trading practices and national security. Not so in Australia.
#Mar.04.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × China says it will retaliate after Trump announces tariffs will double. Beijing said it was “strongly dissatisfied” with President Donald Trump’s move to raise tariffs on Chinese goods and said it would “take countermeasures.”
#Mar.04.2025
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