Eyck Freymann is a Hoover Fellow at Stanford University and Nonresident Research Fellow with the China Maritime Studies Institute at the U.S. Naval War College. Hugo Bromley is an Applied History Research Fellow at the Center for Geopolitics at the University of Cambridge.
On the campaign trail last year, President Donald Trump talked tough about imposing tariffs as high as 60% on Chinese goods and threatened to renew the trade war with China that he launched during his first term.
Top White House advisers this week expressed alarm that China's DeepSeek may have benefited from a method that allegedly piggybacks off the advances of U.S. rivals called "distillation."
President Donald Trump appears emboldened by his first tariff win against Colombia before this weekend’s showdown with some of the United States’s biggest trade partners. Colombian President Gustavo Petro backed down within hours after blocking two repatriation flights of illegal immigrants who had been deported from the U.
DeepSeek’s A.I. models show that China is making rapid gains in the field, despite American efforts to hinder it.
Chinese bloggers, state media and local citizens have welcomed DeepSeek's global success with pride and glee, with some saying the homegrown AI startup's meteoric rise is a sign China is beating back Washington's attempts to contain the country's tech industry,
President Trump’s second presidency comes amid a great power battle between the U.S. and China for dominance over AI and other futuristic dual-use technologies that are reshaping the global security environment.
The sudden rise of Chinese AI app DeepSeek has leaders in Washington and Silicon Valley grappling with how to keep the U.S. ahead in the crucial technology.
China raced ahead building renewable energy last year, installing more wind and solar power than ever before and continuing to leave all other countries in the dust.
The U.S. tried to slow China’s advances, but the startup showed how hard that is.
Sputnik was the name of the first Soviet satellite, which was launched Oct. 4, 1957. It caught the United States by surprise and was considered the first big milestone in space exploration. Outwardly, military experts downplayed its significance, saying “satellites would have no practicable military application in the foreseeable future.”
Opinion: Vocal lobbies in the Washington foreign policy scene are heavily invested in applying U.S. military power to problems that aren't military in nature.