The U.S. Must Embrace Cooperation over Confrontation
The U.S. must learn to maturely accept and work with a rising China rather than attempting to viciously suppress it and undo decades of progress in the Asia-Pacific region.
The U.S. must learn to maturely accept and work with a rising China rather than attempting to viciously suppress it and undo decades of progress in the Asia-Pacific region.
Yoon’s overarching agenda has been to push ROK closer to Japan in foreign policy. He has shown he will not shift his trajectory, whatever the public thinks, but the public might deal his party a blow in the 2024 elections.
The problems that led to Americans’ deteriorating health are manifold. And not all of them can be solved by government action.
China’s three-fold proposal to deliver a fundamental solution to end over half a century of Palestinian suffering speaks to the aspirations of millions.
It goes without saying that there is no country more prolific at ‘economic coercion’ than the United States.
Win-win BRI cooperation makes a pivotal contribution to China and Cambodia’s shared vision of sprawling transportation networks in the heart of Southeast Asia.
The only way for Asia to succeed is to promote multilateralism, non-alignment, economic integration, and peaceful development, and not the expansion of ideological military blocs controlled by the U.S.
Beijing has kept all its promises and is well-positioned to meet its climate commitments and transition to a greener economy while meeting its development goals.
The further development of China’s homegrown airliners makes it possible for the country to become one of the suppliers of civil aircraft and related products and services to the world.
It is a year later, and yet politicians in the U.S. and Texas have done nothing to ease the suffering of the victims or decrease the likelihood of another attack like this happening again.
In 2023, it is Xi’an again that brings China and Central Asia closer.
The statutory debt ceiling and the threat of default have become political bargaining chips in the debate over fiscal policy.