News

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told the European Union’s top diplomat that Beijing can’t accept Russia losing its war ...
The U.S. on July 25 urged China to stop enabling Russia's war in Ukraine during a UN Security Council meeting, prompting a ...
The U.S. Navy should look into new ways of using unmanned boats, such as arming them to sink ships, naval warfare experts say ...
The arrest of two Chinese nationals in Ukraine on espionage charges this month has punctuated a shift in Kyiv’s tone toward ...
Kelly didn't clarify which cruise missile technology he was referring to when he accused China of supplying information to ...
Ukraine has exported about 140,000 metric tons of barley to China so far in July and is likely to ship 350,000 to 400,000 ...
"China, surprisingly, is not a concern" for Ukraine's public at present, Bohdan Yaremenko, a former diplomat and now a member of the Ukrainian parliament's foreign affairs committee, told Newsweek.
Ukraine wouldn't be expected to explicitly describe China in the standout terms of the age—competitor, challenger, or threat—but it would need to clarify its China policy going forward if it ...
DA WEI is Director of the Center for International Security and Strategy and a Professor in the Department of International ...
As Ukraine scrambles to keep international support with Russia’s invasion grinding into a third year, its leader has made clear one country he would like to see join his push for peace: China.
Beijing also warned that it will firmly safeguard Chinese interests.
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine inspired a nationalist outpouring in China, but it also presents a cautionary tale for Beijing when it comes to contesting the Western—American-led—liberal order.