Donald Trump is working on tighter curbs on China’s chip industry and is pressing key US allies to escalate their restrictions. Japanese and Dutch officials are under pressure to restrict Tokyo Electron and ASML from maintaining semiconductor gear in China,
President Donald Trump's nominee to head the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy says China is the top U.S. competitor in both areas and warned the future depends on who leads in key sectors.
For many Chinese manufacturers, Trump’s return has added urgency to continuing plans to open factories or find partners in other countries.
President Donald Trump is implementing tariffs on imported goods, citing that tariffs will enhance the United States economy and protect the country from illegal immigration and drug smuggling.
China said this weekend it was prepared to respond to a "discriminatory" United States presidential order restricting Chinese investment in critical American technology and infrastructure. On Saturday,
Representative Jack Bergman (R-MI) says China is a “master” at intellectual property theft. “They will put the money into spying and stealing as opposed to innovating like the United States,” he says.
A survey by the independent Chronicles research project showed expectations were high for Trump to make a difference in the war.
HAL BRANDS is Henry A. Kissinger Distinguished Professor of Global Affairs at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies and a Senior Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. He is the author of The Eurasian Century: Hot Wars, Cold Wars, and the Making of the Modern World.
Die Wirtschaftsbeziehungen zwischen Washington und Peking drohen sich weiter einzutrüben. US-Präsident Donald Trump hat in den vergangenen Tagen einen wichtigen Regierungsausschuss in einem Memorandum auffordert,