Trump Opens New Front In China Trade War
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President Donald Trump called China's rare earth export controls a 'bad moment' as both countries navigate tensions over critical defense materials, and potential tariff increases.
In 2022, China for the first time in 20 years didn't have a woman among the 24 members of its Politburo or the seven members of the Standing Committee of the Politburo.
The next plenary session of the CCP will tease out China’s plans and positions through 2030, many of which will have repercussions around the world.
Arkansas Republican introduces legislation to require precautionary measure for researchers partnering with Chinese military-linked institutions.
China called President Donald Trump's latest tariffs on Chinese goods hypocritical and defended its curbs on exports of rare earth elements and equipment, but stopped short of imposing new levies on U.S. products.
The Trump administration appears to be trying to calm markets — and investors seem to be responding — after Friday’s sharp stock sell-off and a tense weekend between Washington, D.C., and Beijing.
China is once again rolling out the big cannon of curbs on metals and minerals vital to the global energy transition, as well as key components in weapons and electronics.
No 10 claimed the Crown Prosecution Service blocked it from publishing evidence vital to the case, something the prosecutors’ office denies.
China’s sweeping new restrictions on rare earth exports mark its first major effort to police the global flow of critical minerals it dominates, using the same playbook that allows the US to wield power far beyond its shores.
Suspected Chinese government-backed hackers have breached computer systems of US law firm Williams & Connolly, which has represented some of America’s most powerful politicians, as part of a larger spying campaign against multiple law firms,
Wang Huning, chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), meets with Sri Lankan Prime Minister Harini Amarasuriya, who is here for the Global Leaders' Meeting on Women, in Beijing, capital of China, Oct. 13, 2025. (Xinhua/Yan Yan)
The U.S. dollar recovered from a selloff in early trade on Monday as investors hoped Washington may temper its latest escalation of the trade war with Beijing, while political developments in France and Japan undermined the euro and the yen.