China and Russia are deepening energy ties, with natural gas exports exceeding contractual agreements. At the same time, in face of economic pressures, Russia is selling stakes in uranium deposits
Russian President Vladimir Putin has instructed the government and Sberbank, a major state-owned bank, to enhance cooperation with China in the area of AI technology, according to a report by Reuters.
This article explores the major geopolitical and economic challenges facing China in 2025, including the return of Trump as US president, the ongoing war in Ukraine, and the future of Taiwan.
Donald Trump's US presidency will reverberate around the globe, the Ukraine war might just end, and little respite is on the way for Gazans, our correspondents predict.
Flights to Georgia and Hungary seem to avoid Russia’s Dagestan region after jet carrying 67 allegedly shot down by Russian air defence.
Keith Kellogg, a retired lieutenant general and national security adviser to former President Donald Trump, presented a plan he co-authored with the former CIA analyst Fred Fleitz that proposed halting the delivery of U.
Xi Jinping’s headwinds for 2025, Ukraine and Taiwan’s linked future, China’s business expansion in Central Asia, EU’s tightrope 2.0, and much more.
China is increasingly supporting Russia militarily, which poses a serious problem for Ukraine. This was stated by East Asia expert and Master's degree holder in foreign policy, Nataliya Plaksienko-Butyrska, during a TV broadcast, as reported by Ukrinform.
Under Vladimir Putin's orders, Russia and China will work together on AI development, and this could further power Moscow's war.
Pundits and experts from Argentina, Russia, Ukraine, Sudan, and China give a sense of what mattered from a local perspective, and what to expect for 2025.
Reuters reported that Vladimir Putin has ordered the Russian government and its main bank, Sberbank, to deepen cooperation with China in AI technology. On Wednesday, January 1, a directive on this matter was published on the Kremlin's website.