Hangzhou Asian Games Showcase Inclusiveness, Solidarity
The Asian Games are more than just a sporting event; they serve as a bridge to promote solidarity and friendship.
The Asian Games are more than just a sporting event; they serve as a bridge to promote solidarity and friendship.
As the two parties strengthen strategic synergies to facilitate more pragmatic cooperation, more mutual benefits are expected to arise that will ultimately be conducive to regional economic development.
The BRI has paved the way for a new global cooperation platform promoting openness, inclusiveness, and sustainable development.
The brand-new comprehensive strategic cooperative partnership has done justice to wide-ranging diplomatic and economic growth points while positioning relations as a catalyst for Sino-African unity in the new era.
The bipartisan consensus on China is not an internal unity under the praised democratic system, but merely a strategy for each party to secure greater political interests in their respective constituencies.
It is not about ‘choosing sides’ through ideological struggles or bloc confrontation. It is about maximizing national benefits to unleash economic transportation so that Bangladesh can rise from once being an impoverished country to a modern industrial nation – a path that reflects China’s story, too.
Unless we do something quickly, we face dealing with more and more dangerous and expensive natural disasters in the future.
The United States has been seeking to maintain its dominant position in the Indo-Pacific region and the world, and indulged in intensifying strategic competition against China.
A deepening China-ASEAN partnership not only puts win-win cooperation at the core of the regional cooperation agenda but presents a valuable roadmap for peaceful coexistence that benefits a community with a shared future.
Amidst the rising tensions of a potential new Cold War and the revival of McCarthyism today, Americans should pause to contemplate the real consequences of confrontations masked as competition for themselves and their communities.
It is nonetheless clear that Canberra’s best interests lie in a mature, practical, and mutually beneficial relationship with China.
In fact, setting a debt ceiling is just a stopgap measure, or even a smokescreen, to show voters that the government has not been idle. But is it necessary to have an upper limit that can be constantly broken?