Tag
U.S.-China Relations
Welcome to the Xi Jinping Show: Chinese Foreign Policy After the 19th Party Congress
By Ankit Panda
China's foreign policy can be expected to remain assertive as it grows increasingly ambitious under Xi Jinping.
Guo Wengui: A Ticking Time Bomb for US-China Ties in the Trump Era?
By Ankit Panda
How will Guo Wengui's story end?
Will the Next US Pacific Command Head Be an Air Force General?
By Ankit Panda
U.S. Air Force Gen. Terrence O’Shaughnessy appears to be the most likely candidate.
Trump Goes to Asia: Everything You Need to Know
By Ankit Panda and Prashanth Parameswaran
Donald Trump goes to Asia for the first time as president. What can we expect?
A Wide-Ranging Agenda: What Trump's First Asia-Pacific Tour Means
By Ankit Panda
Will the administration unveil a new strategy for the Asia-Pacific during Trump's Asia trip?
Is There Still Room for Sanctions to Succeed in North Korea?
By Qiheng Chen
North Korean marketization may lend hope for sanctions to work, if the U.S. and China can coordinate.
Slow and Steady: US Intellectual Property and the China Challenge
By Robert Farley
There are glimmers of progress on intellectual property with China despite challenges.
Tillerson: US Has Three Direct Channels for Talks With North Korea
By Ankit Panda
The U.S. secretary of state acknowledged three ongoing direct channels between the United States and North Korea.
What Was Steve Bannon Doing Meeting With Wang Qishan?
By Ankit Panda
The former White House chief strategist reportedly traveled to Beijing recently.
Trump Blocks His First Chinese Acquisition of an American Company
By Riley Walters
What's behind the recent national security-driven decision to block a Chinese acquisition of a U.S. firm?
What Trump Left Out of His Afghanistan Strategy: China
By Ankit Panda
Trump's vision of U.S. strategy in Afghanistan came off as myopic, ignoring a role for other regional powers.
How America Can Keep From Losing in the South China Sea
By Tuan N. Pham
Washington is losing ground in the South China Sea, and risks making the situation lasting unless America imposes “real” strategic costs to China.