There’s a lot of legitimate concerns with China’s rise and its use of advanced technology. But if Washington moves too fast and too far to cut off the technological relationship with China, it could damage U.S. interests as well.
NPR's A Martinez speaks with Jon Bateman, senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, about the Biden administration's plan to curb tech exports to China.

David Rennie from the Economist joins Aaron to talk about what the West misses on China and its leader, Xi Jinping.
Even with prices having declined in the past two years, and the sharp fall in property-related activity, China needs a further substantial contraction in the role of real estate in its economic activity.

Join Carnegie’s President Tino Cuéllar and Dr. Eric Schmidt, co-founder of Schmidt Futures and former CEO and Chairman of Google, for a conversation about how the technologies of tomorrow intersect with the geopolitics of today.
To start off the new year, Tom Collina sits down with Ankit Panda, Stanton Senior Fellow in the Nuclear Policy Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
Measures to respond to the challenges China presents are more likely to be effective in coordination than in isolation.

His aspirations for Brasilia’s relationship with Beijing, if similar to those of his previous presidency, would not be well suited for the China of 2023.
Kim Jong-un's foot is fully on the accelerator. If his father's policy was military first, then for Kim at this point, it seems to be nuclear weapons first. He is all in on nuclear development.

Can China and India disengage from contested territories along the border?