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Did Chinese President Hu Jintao's participation in the Washington nuclear summit help reverse the deterioration of US-China relations? Two scholars express their different views.
I read in an April 12 article in Lianhe Zaobao that Chinese leaders should be more aggressive in defending China's image abroad in order to avoid the fate of the Soviet Union, which was labeled an "evil empire" by the United States.
Chinese leader's efforts at nuclear security and BRIC summits display responsibility and people-first principle
US domestic politics often cloud the yuan exchange rate issue instead of making way for mutual economic benefits
China's long-term development strategy would be undermined if Europe was to mimic the protectionist sentiments that appear to be hardening in the US.
Common strategic interest will bring China close to Latin America as both seek development in a new global order
Gathering of leaders from major emerging economies will lead to closer cooperation and stronger economic recovery
The end of the Cold War failed to reverse the world's nuclear armament process, although enormous changes have occurred since then on the global nuclear landscape.
Latin America is a true, indispensible partner and holds great cooperative potential for China's peaceful development
China is in the forefront of developing "green energy"- nuclear, wind, solar - as a way to cut emissions and to reduce dependence on imported oil. The thunder from China was loud enough to break America's 30-year lull.
Compared with other countries, China has to amend its legal and systemic loopholes to protect its commercial secrets
This week's nuclear security summit promises to address some of the most pressing issues facing the global community. What is at stake for its members? Two experts give us their views.
President Hu Jintao is attending a high-profile global safety summit in Washington DC on April 12, when 47 leaders of countries with nuclear capability will gather to discuss nuclear safety, a crucial issue for international security.
A new government led by David Cameron, the 43-year-old Conservative leader, has already signaled there might be a change in foreign policy. He has said Britain should have a "solid but not slavish" relationship with the US and build stronger ties with emerging economic superpowers such as China.
Yuan's peg to the dollar helps the US currency from freefalling and a gradual appreciation could be a long-term option
The United States' fixation on the "China problem" is now boiling over. From Google to the renminbi, China is being blamed for all that ails the US. Unfortunately, this reflects a potentially lethal combination of political scapegoating and bad economics that could end in tears.
Western countries have tried to meddle with the judicial system of developing countries, including China, whenever they have passed a verdict against Western nationals or companies. They do so because of three reasons.
We need to be clear that China's rise is good for the world economy. And we need to be clear that China does not possess any "weapons of mass economic destruction".
China will move forward in pushing for imports while dissuading exporting nations to cease their discriminatory controls
Today, many in the West believe that understanding China, though not easy, is not problematic. The West is perceived to be a bastion of universal rationality. Yet there are voices that "the West does not understand China". Why?
Since iPad2 went on sale in China on May 6, hundreds of iPad fans and scalpers queued up overnight at almost every Apple store. The craze even led to a violent incident in Sanlitun, Beijing. Do you think iPad2 is worth the hassle?
Beijing - Dressed in a crisp suit, Li Zhirui, sitting on the window seat of a Beijing bus, silently gazes at the European-style villas, luxury cars and illuminated shopping malls as they pass him by.