As they head to the Swiss Alps for this year’s World Economic Forum, EU leaders are anxious over Trump’s trade saber-rattling and their China-reliant economies.
The Taliban chases Chinese cash, U.S. energy sanctions on Russia trickle down, China in the Arctic crosshairs, and much more.
Wang Hongtao, deputy head of the Beijing Municipal Bureau of Culture and Tourism, delivered a speech and introduced Beijing's latest entry tourism policies and cultural tourism resources, warmly welcoming Greek friends to visit Beijing.
The move comes as the head of the European Central Bank suggested that Americans disaffected with the Trump administration should come to Europe.
Trump, who will be inaugurated next week, has threatened the EU with tariffs and his team has criticized the bloc for being weak on China. The manner in which the EU handles the dispute will present an early test of how the world approaches trade under the new administration in Washington and the resilience of the transatlantic relationship.
Key figures of the PSOE such as Borrell and Zapatero serve as a bridge in the strategy to see Beijing more as an opportunity than as a threat. With the unpredictable global geopolitical scenario that arises now after the return of Donald Trump to the White House,
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy warned Europe it could be sidelined by the US, Russia and China, a day after Mr Trump returned to the White House and called on the Kremlin to “make a deal” to end a war that was “destroying Russia”.
With both the United States and the European Union changing their leadership in 2024 the Wilson Center’s Global Europe Program and The Friedrich Naumann Foundation are pleased to present findings from a new joint report analyzing the priorities of the new European Commission and highlighting key issues that will shape the future of US-EU cooperation.
The very things that makes the president-elect’s return so scary for many Europeans are what make him attractive to the rest of the world.
When the probe was launched, China accused Europe of giving "protectionist signals" and risking "damage" to its image. The EU's probes have mainly focused on Beijing's clean tech subsidies, as Brussels tackles addressing what it deems to be an overreliance ...
Wang Hongtao, deputy head of the Beijing Municipal Bureau of Culture and Tourism, delivered a speech and introduced Beijing's latest entry tourism policies and cultural tourism resources ...
Beijing has also shown its interest in Turkey's electric vehicle and energy projects. Turkey is focusing to position itself as a hub for European trade.