Senior Chinese diplomat Lu Kang on Meng Wanzhou and Sino-Canadian relations: "This is an issue that could bring about more opportunity costs for the Canadian Government and for our bilateral relationship in general." @nvanderklippe h/t @felixliuworld bit.ly/2F4aNrl
@nvanderklippe@felixliuworld Q: If they are not hostages, then why were they arrested so quickly together on the same day after Meng Wanzhou?
Chinese diplomat Lu Kang: Actually for today’s world, that happens…You can’t just link everything together. @nvanderklippebit.ly/2F4aNrl
@nvanderklippe@felixliuworld Q: Is this the goal of China’s foreign policy to make other countries fear China?
Lu Kang: That is never our policy. And that is not the whole picture for Chinese diplomacy…Don’t just focus on a couple of countries…It just happens…there are some issues. bit.ly/2F4aNrl
@nvanderklippe@felixliuworld Lu Kang: China, in our diplomacy, still stick to sincere dialogue through bilateral channels. But there are always cases when the counterpart is not in the mood for dialogue but resorting to microphone diplomacy, as it happened between China and Canada. bit.ly/2F4aNrl
@nvanderklippe@felixliuworld Q: If China is holding two Canadian people hostage…why would Canadian athletes come to China for the Olympics?
Lu Kang: Canada is very strong in Winter Olympics…Concerning…the call for boycott of the Winter Olympics, actually I don’t hear very much. bit.ly/2F4aNrl
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China’s Xi Places His Top General Under Investigation as Military Purges Heat Up—Gen. Zhang Youxia is most senior member of military hierarchy to face dismissal since fallout of 1989 Tiananmen protests
@ByChunHan @Lingling_Wei wsj.com/world/china/ch… wsj.com/world/china/ch…
@ByChunHan @Lingling_Wei Chinese leader Xi Jinping has placed his most senior general under investigation, extending a relentless crackdown on military corruption and disloyalty that has swept through the top ranks of one of the world’s most powerful armed forces. wsj.com/world/china/ch…
@ByChunHan @Lingling_Wei Gen. Zhang Youxia, the senior of two vice chairmen on the Communist Party’s top military decision-making body and China’s No. 1 general, is being probed for allegedly committing severe violations of party discipline and state laws. wsj.com/world/china/ch…
NYT: “China quietly mobilized thousands of fishing boats twice in recent weeks to form massive floating barriers of at least 200 miles long, showing a new level of coordination…to impose control in contested seas.”
@ChuBailiang @amy_changchien nytimes.com/interactive/20…
@ChuBailiang @amy_changchien Last week, about 1,400 Chinese vessels abruptly dropped their usual fishing activities or sailed out of their home ports and congregated in the East China Sea. By Jan. 11, they had assembled into a rectangle stretching more than 200 miles. nytimes.com/interactive/20…
@ChuBailiang @amy_changchien The Jan. 11 maneuver followed a similar operation last month, when about 2,000 Chinese fishing boats assembled in two long, parallel formations on Christmas Day. Each stretched 290 miles long, about the distance from New York City to Buffalo. nytimes.com/interactive/20…
NYT: The Pentagon and A.I. Giants Have a Weakness. Both Need China’s Batteries, Badly.—As warfare is reinvented in Ukraine, and Silicon Valley races to maintain its A.I. lead, China’s battery dominance is raising alarms far beyond the auto industry. nytimes.com/2025/12/23/cli…
Chinese battery dominance has long been a problem for auto manufacturing, but now is increasingly being viewed as a national security threat. Currently, U.S. military forces rely on Chinese supply chains for some 6,000 individual battery components. nytimes.com/2025/12/23/cli…
Fatih Birol, the I.E.A.’s executive director, likened the world’s reliance on China to Europe’s dependence on Russian gas. “Reliance for a strategic commodity or a technology on one single country, one single trade route,” he said, “is always risky.” nytimes.com/2025/12/23/cli…
China’s Sprint for Tech Dominance Can’t Hide an Economy Full of Holes—Self-sufficiency push has made China a tougher competitor to the U.S., but it comes with enormous waste
@BrianSpegele @TByGraceZhu wsj.com/world/china/ch… wsj.com/world/china/ch…
@BrianSpegele @TByGraceZhu BEIJING—In cities and small towns across China, two seemingly contradictory facts are simultaneously true: China is closing the gap with the U.S. for global technological dominance, and yet big parts of its economy are a mess. wsj.com/world/china/ch…
@BrianSpegele @TByGraceZhu The emergence of AI startup DeepSeek earlier this year showed China can challenge the U.S. in leading-edge technologies. But Beijing’s gains come at a steep cost, with the state’s role in directing investments wasting colossal amounts of money. wsj.com/world/china/ch…
The Chinese Billionaires Having Dozens of U.S.-Born Babies Via Surrogate—Videogame executive Xu Bo, said to have more than 100 children, and other elites build mega-families, testing citizenship laws
@BenFoldy @Lingling_Wei wsj.com/us-news/chines… wsj.com/us-news/chines…
@BenFoldy @Lingling_Wei Inside a closed Los Angeles courtroom, something wasn’t right. Clerks working for family court Judge Amy Pellman were reviewing routine surrogacy petitions when they spotted an unusual pattern: the same name, again and again. wsj.com/us-news/chines…
@BenFoldy @Lingling_Wei A Chinese billionaire was seeking parental rights to at least four unborn children, and the court’s additional research showed that he had already fathered or was in the process of fathering at least eight more—all through surrogates. wsj.com/us-news/chines…
Biden administration official Melanie Hart: “I exited my time in government feeling like transatlantic cooperation on China was the big missing piece. We did our absolute best in every way to pull Europe along and find ways to collaborate on China.” thewirechina.com/2025/10/26/mel…
Hart: “I was deeply disappointed in Europe’s ability to follow through on actual solutions…Europe insists on bringing a butter knife to a gunfight again and again, and it was frustrating to not be able to move beyond that.” thewirechina.com/2025/10/26/mel…
Hart: “One thing that I have…been hearing from…European counterparts is, ‘Look, a couple of years ago, we were still benefiting economically from our relationship with China. We weren’t feeling the pain yet that you were talking about. That’s changed.’” thewirechina.com/2025/10/26/mel…