Xi Jinping is furious after Donald Trump’s new Liberation Day tariffs on China, escalating tensions between the two global powers. China has slammed these tariffs as “unilateral bullying” and vowed strong countermeasures.
In its first months, U.S. President Donald Trump's administration has moved to deter China from threatening its neighbors, signalling that the U.S. will ramp up its military presence in the Indo-Pacific and offer more support to Taiwan.
The trade war that President Donald Trump has escalated in his second term is a challenge for all Asian economies.
China has vowed to hit back after President Donald Trump announced major new tariffs on its exports to the United States as part of his radical overhaul of a century of American global trade policy.
The Chinese leader will visit Vietnam, Malaysia, and Cambodia at a time of great uncertainty about the course of U.S. policy toward the region.
President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping appear to be inching closer to a meeting, with Sen. Steve Daines, a strong Trump supporter, suggesting during a visit to Beijing that he was laying the groundwork for such an encounter. Daines (R-Montana ...
Wednesday's tariff announcement will be telling for how the president addresses the world's second-largest economy.
When a BlackRock infrastructure fund agreed to buy the Panama Canal ports that had drawn the ire of President Donald Donald Trump for what he called Chinese control of the waterway, it looked like the end of that episode.