Cai Penghong, Senior Fellow, SIIS
Jul 30, 2011
The fact that maritime security in the South China Sea was discussed as one of the timely issues demonstrates both China and US are interested in maintaining pe
Ma Ying, Professor, Shanghai Institutes for Int'l Studies
Jul 18, 2011
No single country in the world has sufficient resources to ensure complete safety of the oceans. China-US cooperation will not only achieve win-win results, but also be beneficial to other countries. The potential range of cooperation covers joint maritime search and rescue, and peace keeping over the sea, etc. as well as jointly fighting traditional and non-traditional security threats on the ocean.
Liu Ming, Director, Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences
Jul 15, 2011
As two big players on the Korean Peninsula, China and the United States need to closely monitor North Korea’s nuclear activities and other destabilizing develo
Jul 06, 2011
The rise of cyberspace to strategic significance between China and the United States reflects convergence of two trends--China's emergence as a great power and the Internet's transformation into a critical political, economic, and military resource. As with the high seas and outer space, cyberspace has become a high-profile location for geo-political rivalry over power and ideas, especially between the G2.
Gong Keyu, Deputy Director, Shanghai Institute for Int'l Studies
Jun 08, 2011
North Korea’s leader Kim Jong-Il paid an unofficial visit to China from May 20 to 26 at the invitation of China’s president Hu Jintao. It was the third visit
Zhao Gancheng, Senior Fellow, Shanghai Institutes for Int'l Studies
May 25, 2011
Senator John Kerry, Chairman of the U.S. Senate’s Committee on Foreign Relations, recently completed a visit to Islamabad for talks with Pakistani leaders in t
May 25, 2011
US Navy SEALs launched a secret operation in the Pakistani city of Abbottabad to kill Osama bin Laden which, the US says, is a victory in its war on terrorism.
May 21, 2011
The end of the Cold War more than a decade ago created a world in which the relative stability between the two superpowers has disappeared. During the Cold War,
Wang Jisi, President, Institute of International and Strategic Studies, Peking University
May 18, 2011
Professor Wang Jisi, Dean of the School of International Relations at PKU explains why the SSD is important to building strategic trust between China and US
Dean Cheng, Research Fellow, Heritage Foundation
May 18, 2011
U.S.–China military-to-military relations have a very rocky history over the past two decades. Mutual suspicion, as well as fluctuations in the broader U.S.–C