Panda fan culture once flourished in China. But Beijing is tightening control of discussion of a national symbol.
Donald Trump’s second term in office is getting off to a good start for China.
Move over President Trump -- the newest stars in Washington are two giant pandas who made their public debut on Friday in front of hundreds of adoring fans. The first pandas were sent to Washington as a gift in 1972,
By David Brunnstrom, Simon Lewis and Alasdair Pal WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States, Australia, India and Japan recommitted to working together on Tuesday, after the first meeting of the China-focused "Quad" grouping's top diplomats since President Donald Trump returned to the White House.
China is responding to Trump's energy-centric executive actions with a global diplomatic blitz. China courts the Middle East without push back from Washington.
Donald Trump has extended the deadline on the TikTok ban by 75 days but is now pushing for 50 percent U.S. ownership—an unlikely scenario.
America will never come out on top of a tech war with China if it can’t protect even basic civilian infrastructure or government devices from such hacks.
Whether it is over TikTok, fentanyl or trade, Beijing might welcome a compromise to buy time to address its ailing economy and bolster its position globally.
Vice-President Han Zheng shakes hands with United States Vice-President-elect JD Vance during their meeting in Washington, DC, on Sunday. LIU WEIBING/XINHUA Beijing reiterated its commitment to ...
Trump term mean for Taiwan, especially with a Republican-controlled Congress? After Trump was elected in 2016, he initially tried to use Taiwan to gain leverage over Beijing. After taking a congratulatory call from then-Taiwan president Tsai Ing-wen,
Rubio's appointment as secretary of state has been seen as sign that Trump plans to maintain a hard line on China.
China's relations are starting to improve with Japan, India and other countries that former U.S. President Joe Biden courted, just as Donald Trump brings his more unilateralist approach back to the Wh