China's reforms will not stop, and the opening up will not come to a halt. China is aiming for new and bigger miracles to make the world marvel at.
It is simply ridiculous for Pence to claim that the Korean War was caused by what he called China’s pursuit of “authoritarian expansionism” and that the U.S. was fighting on the so-called “frontier of freedom.”
The official visit by Shinzo Abe to China this week, the first by a Japanese prime minister in seven years, has captured the public imagination – and in some unexpected ways.
It goes without saying that American investors have been friendly to China because it has been profitable. But what about the American government?
President Xi Jinping's tour of Guangdong once again shows that, despite the uncertainties it faces in the world, China's adherence to the reform and opening up policy is as strong now as it ever was.
Michael Kantor, who served as US trade representative during the Clinton administration in the 1990s, said in an exclusive interview with Xinhua that the economies of the US and China are highly interdependent.
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo warned Latin American leaders last week in Mexico about the risks of seeking Chinese investment. But he failed to give specific examples.
Mr. Pence's words gave the impression that the US had chosen not to join the ranks of the colonial powers in their aggressions against China, but instead had acted to protect China's sovereignty. The facts of history suggest otherwise.
Any sovereign country that chooses to establish diplomatic ties with China in accordance with UN Resolution 2758 should be free to do so without threats or intimidation from the United States.
The use of Section 301 investigations is a transparent attempt to tap the brakes on China's legitimate industrial and technological development, and has nothing to do with trade.
The concept of the "US value chain" is not in any economic sense to bring benefits to the US economy to a national extent. It is against the cornerstone of international trade order-comparative advantage and production specialization.
President Donald Trump's announcement that the U.S. will withdraw from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty is destroying a cornerstone of world peace.
The Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge brings China a big step closer to realizing its plan to transform the Greater Bay Area into a global science and technology innovation center.
China, with its capabilities and experience in the field of infrastructure, can become an asset rather than a liability for US economic revival, writes William Jones, the Washington bureau chief for the Executive Intelligence Review.
By relying too much on US protection, Taiwan is setting itself up as the White House's China policy tool.
The threat of confrontation between the world's two largest economic powers may or may not be real, but the words certainly are.
China and the United States are locked in an ongoing "trade dispute." Both countries have progressively slapped additional punitive tariffs on goods being imported from the other.
Since the start of the trade tensions with China, US President Donald Trump has tried to float the theory that his tariffs against China, have been hugely beneficial for the United States. But a closer look at the facts tells a different story.
Despite Western media's hype that the figure is the lowest since the first quarter of 2009, the pace is in line with market expectations and higher than the government's annual growth target of around 6.5 percent.
In the face of the White House's "America First" approach to diplomacy, governments across Europe and Asia are realizing the benefits of working together to respond to the challenges posed by the behavior of the United States.