BEIJING/HONG KONG (Reuters) - For years, the U.S. government has urged China to show "restraint" in pushing its claim on Taiwan and to drop military threats to bring the democratically governed island ...
Beyond Beijing’s anger in wake of President Trump’s sharply increased tariffs on Chinese goods, some in China see it as a chance to finally force Beijing to tackle deeply entrenched economic issues, ...
A Chinese commentator affiliated with state media has outlined a number of possible countermeasures Beijing could take if President Donald Trump proceeds with another round of sweeping tariffs on ...
State media, embracing the gaming phrase “kill line,” is asserting China’s political superiority over the United States, deflecting focus on China’s own economic challenges. By Li Yuan Chinese ...
The collapse of Iran's air defenses in the face of Israeli attacks has prompted influential Chinese commentators to say it could have fared better if it had been supplied with Chinese weaponry.
Opinion
bne IntelliNews on MSNOpinion
Why a Chinese invasion of Taiwan looks tempting, but would be ill-advised
By Mark Buckton in Taipei As global attention fixates on the intensifying conflict in the Middle East, global energy prices and Iran’s de facto blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, the strategic calculus ...
Opinion
The Print on MSNOpinion
Chinese analysts say military expansion is necessary—and it’s about deterrence, not hegemony
By portraying growth as somewhat defensive, Chinese commentary downplays how a defence budget of 1.91 trillion yuan may influence global strategic calculations.
Chinese commentators are talking a lot these days about poverty in the United States, claiming China’s superiority by appropriating an evocative phrase from video game culture. The phrase, “kill line, ...
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