Chinese Vice President Han Zheng is in Washington for Donald Trump’s inauguration. On Sunday, Han met with the incoming Vice President of the U.S., JD
Chinese officials and ordinary people are hopeful but on edge as Donald Trump returns to the White House, eager to avoid a repeat of the bruising trade war that drove a wedge between the economic superpowers during his first term.
Vice President Han Zheng, China’s representative at Donald Trump’s inauguration on Monday, is a trusted adviser to President Xi Jinping, a long-time survivor of Chinese politics who rose from toiling on a collective farm and in factories to becoming one of the most powerful people in the country.
Chinese Vice President Han Zheng met separately with US Vice President-elect JD Vance and tech billionaire Elon Musk in Washington on Sunday.
Guests include Chinese vice president, leaders of Italy, Argentina, Ecuador and heads of European far-right parties
China says it has brokered a ceasefire between Myanmar’s military government and a major ethnic rebel group in the country’s northeast
If lawmakers continue to prioritize politically expedient anti-China bans, then they will fail to convince the public they are acting in its best interests.
Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR), one of the biggest China hawks in the GOP, disputed Donald Trump's goal of allowing the platform to remain online and extend the deadline for the sale.
Biden's final foreign policy featured harsh rhetoric on China, as Washington embraces tough-on-China policies.
In the week before President Donald Trump’s inauguration into the White House for his second term as president of the United States, China seemed to cozy up to U.S. allies.
Jake Sullivan, the national security adviser, said in an interview that “we’ve just stuck with our theory, which is managed competition.” Trump and Xi Jinping might have other plans.