ARTICLES THAT ILLUMINATE THE LACK OF PERSONAL FREEDOM AND POLITICAL LIBERTY UNDER THE CHINESE COMMUNIST PARTY.
Lithuania sees threats from two big powers: Russia and China
via The Economist on March 5, 2022
China and synthetic drugs: Geopolitics trumps counternarcotics cooperation
by Vanda Felbab-Brown
via Brookings on March 7, 2022
China Opposes Sanctions and Has a Reputation for Busting Them
by James T. Areddy
via Wall Street Journal on March 6, 2022
‘It came too late’: Chinese students who fled Ukraine criticise embassy response
by Vincent Ni
via The Guardian on March 8, 2022
‘No Wavering’: After Turning to Putin, Xi Faces Hard Wartime Choices for China
by Chris Buckley and Steven Lee Myers
via New York Times on March 7, 2022
The Anti-Dollar Axis
by Zongyuan Zoe Liu and Mihaela Papa
via Foreign Affairs on March 7, 2022
China touts ‘rock solid’ ties with Russia as it offers to mediate Ukraine conflict
by Christian Shepherd
via Washington Post on March 7, 2022
Seeking Truth and Justice, Chinese See Themselves in a Chained Woman
by Li Yuan
via New York Times on March 1, 2022
Foreign embassies in China puzzle over a diplomat’s detention
via The Economist on March 5, 2022
In fast-changing Europe, rage against Russia fuels suspicion of China
by Finbarr Bermingham
via South China Morning Post on March 3, 2022
From Fear to Behavior Modification: Beijing Entrenches Corruption Fight
by Ruihan Huang and Joshua Henderson
via MarcoPolo on March 8, 2022
Union matchmakers a turn-off, say Chinese web users as birth rate debate heats up
by Brenda Goh and Albee Zhang
via Reuters on March 9, 2022
The Media Environment and Domestic Public Opinion in China Toward Russia’s War on Ukraine
via Insikt Group on March 8, 2022
China's online pro-Putin fest drowns out anti-war sentiment
by Marrian Zhou
via Nikkei Asia on March 10, 2022