Matt Ferchen, Nonresident Scholar, Carnegie-Tsinghua Center for Global Policy
Oct 04, 2017
Just as President Donald Trump threatens to gut the State Department and Agency for International Development (USAID) budgets for development and foreign aid, China has been stepping up its own international development promotion efforts.
Liu Jieyi, Permanent Representative of China to the United Nations
Oct 03, 2017
“Chinese ideas” such as building a global community of shared future and the “Belt & Road” initiative represent the global trends and aims for win-win outcomes. They are making tractions.
Chen Yonglong, Director of Center of American Studies, China Foundation for International Studies
Oct 03, 2017
China and the U.S. can create a kind of relationship that has never been seen before.
Chen Weihua, Deputy Editor, China Daily USA
Sep 29, 2017
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson holds a press briefing during the UN General Assembly in New York, US, Sept 20, 2017. [Photo/Agencies]US Secretary of State Rex
Zheng Yu, Professor, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
Sep 28, 2017
Just as changing circumstances have altered Russia’s relationship with the US, they have also altered its relationship with China.
Yu Sui, Professor, China Center for Contemporary World Studies
Sep 28, 2017
After a friendly start, relations between the Trump administration and Russia soon soured. Will this relationship remain strained?
Chen Jimin, Guest Researcher, Center for Peace and Development Studies, China Association for International Friendly Contact
Sep 28, 2017
In his recent speech at the UN, President Donald Trump hinted at the future direction of US strategy. Here are the key takeaways.
Sourabh Gupta, Senior Fellow, Institute for China-America Studies
Sep 25, 2017
Going forward, as Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa set forth a broad and compelling vision for the next ten years, that vision must be informed by the principles, purposes, associations and ambitions that guided them through their first decade of collaboration and partnership.
Doug Bandow, Senior Fellow, Cato Institute
Sep 19, 2017
In any normal sense America has little to fear from the PRC. Even if Beijing desired to threaten the American homeland, conquer U.S. territories, or interdict American commerce, it has little ability to do so. What China seeks is to end Washington’s dominance along the former’s coast, an objective more defensive than offensive.
Carla Freeman, Director of the Foreign Policy Institute of Johns Hopkins SAIS
Sep 18, 2017
Since the election of Donald Trump to the U.S. presidency, pressuring China to curb North Korea’s nuclear program has become the pivot on which present U.S. policy toward China rests. Beyond this issue, however, U.S.-China relations need to be moved from crisis management to managed mode. On the U.S. side, the appointment of a point person at the White House with the authority to coordinate China policy across agencies is a critical step. However, it seems likely that President Trump will not alter his basic leadership style, and also probable that Beijing will be less tolerant of that style after the 19th Party Congress and his visit.