As the dust cleared around the capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro in a surprise military strike earlier this month, US officials left little question that they had another target too: China.
As Washington unsettles its partners, Beijing is reaping diplomatic gains, without backing down on human rights, trade or security.
Trump was not the only factor behind the agreements, but his shaking up of the global order is worrying friends and foes and driving them closer.
Leaders from Canada, the United Kingdom, Finland and other countries have recently visited China, while more are planning to go.
The broader pattern of American policy makes the danger to Tehran unmistakable. The Trump administration has demonstrated a ...
As China continues to expand its nuclear capabilities, and Russia and the U.S. walk away from arms control, the future is terrifying: a new nuclear arms race, with more players, and less ...
The historian Adam Tooze discusses Davos, China and the fading of an old world order. This is an edited transcript of “The ...
The era of nuclear arms control officially ends next week. On Feb. 5, New START, the last such treaty between the United ...
Leaders from Ireland, Canada, Finland - and now the United Kingdom - have visited China within a month as the US rattles the world order. Structural factors limit the scope for deeper cooperation, say ...
In the search for stability, some Western nations are turning to a country that many in Washington consider an existential threat. If geopolitics depends, at least in part, on cordiality among ...
Neither Prime Minister Keir Starmer nor President Xi Jinping publicly mentioned President Trump, but Trump's challenge to the ...
Newly released video footage from Minneapolis has added new context to the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti, complicating ...