Pelosi’s Taiwan Visit: A Step Too Far
Is Washington willing to risk a military conflict with China rather than accept the reality that the days of American hegemony are coming to an end?
Is Washington willing to risk a military conflict with China rather than accept the reality that the days of American hegemony are coming to an end?
When universities work together, the likelihood for scientific breakthroughs in moving humanity forward will increase and the risk of misunderstandings will reduce.
Once a champion of globalization and free markets, Washington now instead aims to reverse globalization because it deems it no longer to be in its interest.
Both parties involved in the military conflict and the countries imposing economic sanctions should take actions out of humanitarian concerns to keep the global supply chains unblocked for agricultural products and the materials needed in agricultural production.
Putting aside political factors, business is business and Boeing needs to gear up and improve its safety culture as soon as possible; otherwise nothing will get off the ground.
Washington is going against the worldwide common aspiration by trying to use the Middle East as a stage for geopolitical games among major powers.
It’s ridiculous to blame China for Sri Lanka’s woes when 90 percent of its debt owes to the U.S. and European financial institutions.
The next British prime minister will either be a quitter or a stayer.
The numerous mechanisms created by the U.S. are being used to isolate and exclude others. This demonstrates how much debt crises are a product of a world increasingly divided and at odds with itself, threatening the foundations of globalization and post-cold-war prosperity.
The real purpose of this series of congressional hearings led by the Democratic Party is not to correct the systemic problems in the American democratic system. The hearings only seem to further intensify the partisan divide.
A stable EUR and a prosperous Eurozone are in line with the Chinese economic development. China’s policy during the Eurozone debt crisis is edifying, and its principles remain the same.
The G20 today shoulders important responsibilities in leading global anti-pandemic efforts, improving global economic governance and promoting the steady recovery of the world economy.