Natalie Johnson for Washington Free Beacon reports China announced Monday that it will close off part of the South China Sea for military drills this week, just days after an international arbitration court ruled that Beijing's disputed claims to
China has completed production of the world's largest amphibious aircraft after seven years of work, which it plans to use to perform marine rescue missions and fight forest fires, the Xinhua news agency reported.
The failed Turkish coup. The Nice attack. The RNC and DNC. There is no shortage of headline-grabbing news stories to keep you occupied during this summer of rage.
But beginning with the Deng Xiaoping era, the red regime and the capitalist economic system joined hands. Not only did the CCP allow the development of capitalism, the Communist Party elite itself turned into China's richest and most powerful cap
Chinese "little blue men" maritime militia in South China Sea. A member of the Malaysian Navy at a communication exchange with a Chinese Coast Guard ship in the South China Sea, near Kuantan, Malaysia, on March 15, 2014. (Rahman Roslan/Getty Images
A source close to Volkswagen's senior management revealed to Automotive News Europe that the first lithium-ion battery factory to supply the coming massive EV roll-out at the company could actually be built in China.
Despite all the other things in the news (U.S. race riots, Brexit, Donald versus Hillary versus Gary, new Prime Minister of England), China has also managed to squeeze its way onto the headlines. What have our friends in the Orient been up to lately?
Territorial disputes are a delicate thing… and potentially deadly as well. That's why the U.S. is backing up its positions with an ever-increasing presence of warships in the South China Sea.
In August 2014, Chinese industrial production was estimated to have slowed sharply from +9.0% that July to just 6.9%. Consensus at the time expected only a minor variation, an insignificant change to +8.8%.
China aims to launch a series of offshore nuclear power platforms to promote development in the South China Sea, state media said again on Friday, days after an international court ruled Beijing had no historic claims to most of the waters.
By monopolizing the mining of rare-earth metals, China could dictate the future of high-tech … This year, global consumption is expected to be about 155,000 tons, far more than the 45,000 tons used 25 years ago. Demand will only grow -- likely at
China is one of the dirtiest nations on earth, yet the UN is consistently enamored with its Technocratic and totalitarian leadership. Christiana Figueres, former UN climate chief, praised China in 2015 for its great accomplishments in fighting global
ULAANBAATAR, July 15 (Reuters) - Chinese Premier Li Keqiang told Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Friday that his country should stop interfering and hyping up the South China Sea issue, as the dispute took centre stage at a key regional summit
China has criticised the UN court's rejection of its claim in the South China Sea with Chinese newspapers warning of a military escalation in response to the verdict.
Tensions between Taiwan and Mainland China rose another notch on July 1 when the Republic of China Navy accidentally launched a missile in the Taiwan Strait toward Mainland China.
A Hague-based international tribunal dealt Beijing a serious blow on Tuesday morning by ruling that China's territorial claims throughout the South China Sea largely have no legal basis.
In 1996 President Bill Clinton, at a fundraising dinner in New York City said this: "There are no more nuclear missiles pointed at any children in the United States. I'm proud of that."
The European Union's trade chief described populist movements in the United States and elsewhere as "a recipe for isolation and failure" on Monday even as she sought to allay fears about Britain's exit from the EU during a trip to China.
"China hopes disputes can be resolved by talks," wrote the Global Times, "but it must be prepared for any military confrontation. This is common sense in international relations."
Earlier this week China announced a "no sail zone" in a 39,000 square mile (an area roughly larger than the state of Maine) stretch of international waters in the South China Sea near the Hainan Island.
With the installation of a final triangular panel on July 3, 2016, construction has been completed on the gargantuan Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical radio Telescope (FAST) in Dawodang, Kedu Town, Guizhou Province, China.
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