WASHINGTON -- China has fortified its air bases in recent years with enough concrete to pave a four-lane highway from Washington to Chicago, a U.S. think tank reports, giving Beijing an advantage compared with enemy airfields in a potential conflict over Taiwan.
Before Congress adjourned for Christmas, congressional leadership had set ambitious goals to counter the Chinese Communist Party. Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) and Chairman John Moolenaar (R-MI) identified three China policy priorities to address: closing trade loopholes that provided a highway for Uyghur slave labor-produced goods to America,
Washington's addition of CATL to a list of firms it says work with China's military could put Tesla founder Elon Musk in a tight spot, challenging how he balances his role in the Trump administration with his ties to China.
Tension between national-security hawks and the biggest American technology companies over China policy has burst out into the open. The trigger: a Biden administration plan to limit the global sale of advanced artificial-intelligence chips.
Some Western media outlets recently reported that Chinese State-backed hackers hacked into Philippine government departments and stole sensitive data as part of a yearslong operation. This is a total lie fabricated just to goad the near-hibernating Marcos government to carry on its fool's errand.
Victory in the U.S.-China trade war will go to the side that is best at persuading other countries that its version of globalization is the most attractive. The post Trump Has Lost the Plot on the U.S.
Despite the fact that the talks failed to yield any result for various reasons, the Six-Party Talks that China initiated to promote the denuclearization of the peninsula — which were held from 2003 to 2008 — speak volumes about the country's earnestness and sincerity in pushing for de-escalation of tensions on the peninsula.
China has slammed a decision by the U.S. Treasury to sanction a Beijing-based cybersecurity company for its alleged role in multiple hacking incidents targeting critical U.S. infrastructure
U.S. President-elect Donald Trump said on Monday that he and Chinese leader Xi Jinping have been speaking through representatives and he believes the two leaders will get along.
The U.S. Defense Department has added dozens of Chinese companies, including games and technology company Tencent, artificial intelligence firm SenseTime and the world's biggest battery maker CATL, to a list of companies it says have ties to China's military.
China's leaders are bracing for potential shocks to the economy from higher tariffs once U.S. President-elect Donald Trump takes office.