Sign in Welcome! Log into your account your username your password Forgot your password? Get help Create an account Create an account Welcome! Register for an account your email your username A password will be e-mailed to you. Password recovery Recover your password your email A password will be e-mailed to you. Why Germany Can Confidently Balance US and China Relations 165 December 1, 2020 FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsApp Published in Global Times (China) on 1 December 2020 by Zheng Chunrong (link to originallink to original) Translated from by . Edited by . Back To Origin This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link . Tags:Angela MerkelChinaCold WarGermanyinternational relationsPoliticsXi Jinping Hot this week Block titleFeaturedAll time popularMore Mexico: Tightening the Rope January 16, 2026. Published in La Crónica de Hoy[T]here is an unhinged man driving a monster truck on the highway. 0 Hong Kong: What Can China and the World Expect from the Trump Administration in 2026? January 22, 2026. Published in The Oriental DailyU.S. foreign policy remains highly transactional. 0 Japan: 1 Year into Trump Administration: Don’t Lose Your Allies’ Trust January 22, 2026. Published in Sankei ShimbunThe autumn midterm elections are approaching, and Trump-style policy administration could ramp up. 0 Saudi Arabia: Trump: The Best Is Yet to Come January 18, 2026. Published in Asharq Al-AwsatTrump would also do well to remember Shakespeare line “love cools, friends fall off, brothers divide!” 0 South Africa: Venezuela’s US-Sponsored Crisis a Test for Global Sovereignty January 16, 2026. Published in Cape TimesWhat we are witnessing is not merely a foreign policy crisis. It is a stress test of sovereignty itself, staged as spectacle. 0 Topics Saudi Arabia: US Has Long History of Strategic Land Purchases January 22, 2026. Published in Arab NewsIt is ... no longer a sovereign play like two centuries ago, but more like a corporate acquisition. 0 Saudi Arabia: Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’ Strips Netanyahu of Control January 22, 2026. Published in Arab News[W]hat Netanyahu has come to realize is that Trump has effectively stripped him of any cards he once held relating to Gaza. 0 Israel: West’s Responsibility, Donald Trump’s Credibility January 22, 2026. Published in Israel HayomDonald Trump has grandiose and sometimes extravagant plans to resolve conflicts across continents, but in reality he always struggles to implement them. 0 Japan: 1 Year into Trump Administration: Don’t Lose Your Allies’ Trust January 22, 2026. Published in Sankei ShimbunThe autumn midterm elections are approaching, and Trump-style policy administration could ramp up. 0 Ireland: Irish Examiner View: No Force, All Farce from Trump in Davos January 22, 2026. Published in Irish Examiner 0 Ireland: The Irish Times View on Trump at Davos: the US President Climbs Down January 22, 2026. Published in Irish Times 0 Australia: In Davos, European Leaders Met Donald Trump with Strength and He Backed Down January 22, 2026. Published in ABC News Australia 0 Canada: By Suddenly Declaring a Deal on Greenland, Trump Demolished His Case for Owning It January 22, 2026. Published in CBC 0 Related Articles Hong Kong: What Can China and the World Expect from the Trump Administration in 2026? January 22, 2026. Published in The Oriental DailyU.S. foreign policy remains highly transactional. Taiwan: If National Interest Comes 1st, What about Taiwan? January 22, 2026. Published in Taiwan TimesBeneath all the differing opinions, however, was one unchanging truth for each country: national interest comes first. Australia: Donald Trump’s 2nd Presidency Is about ‘Might Makes Right’ and Reshaping the World Order Be It in Venezuela or Greenland January 21, 2026. Published in ABC News Australia Australia: Donald Trump’s America First Policies Are Pushing Countries into China’s Embrace January 21, 2026. Published in ABC News Australia Poland: Greenland, Venezuela: Donald Trump Caught at a Crossroad* January 19, 2026. Published in Rzeczpospolita[P]ower politics ... is the principle of the right to use force wherever the interests of the U.S. require it. Previous articlePolitical Vacuum in the US: It Is Time for a Smooth Transition of PowerNext articleDonald Trump’s Last Push in West Asia LEAVE A REPLY Cancel replyLog in to leave a comment