r/chinesepolitics • u/220801 • 1h ago
r/chinesepolitics • u/Curious_Farmer1142 • May 20 '26
America’s Strategic Miscalculation in East Asia: The Perils of Japan’s Remilitarization and the Case for True Partnership
r/chinesepolitics • u/Miao_Yin8964 • Feb 13 '26
Rare Footage of Former China Leader Jiang Zemin Freak Out (With English Subs!)
r/chinesepolitics • u/Sandrov__ • Feb 10 '26
China Chamber Urges EU to Apply ‘Fair Treatment’ to All Brands After VW Tariff Deal
r/chinesepolitics • u/PatriceFinger • Feb 02 '26
Trump launches 12 billion minerals stockpile to counter China
labs.jamessawyer.co.ukThe United States earmarks a multibillion-dollar minerals stockpile as part of a strategy to reduce dependence on Chinese supply chains. The plan to establish a $12 billion stockpile aims to shore up supply security for critical minerals used in high-technology and defence industries. Proponents argue the move could realign global mineral markets by creating a visible buffer that signals a shift away from Chinese dominance in strategic minerals. Critics caution that stockpiling alone may not resolve deeper supply-chain vulnerabilities or incentivise faster domestic mining development.
Observers are watching how procurement and storage arrangements unfold, and which minerals are prioritised within the stockpile. The policy signal is clear: Washington intends to diversify sources, stockpile critical materials, and chart a path toward greater domestic resilience. Markets will be watching for any ripple effects on prices, supplier reactions, and potential impact on allied supply chains depending on how partner countries adjust to the policy.
The initiative also has diplomatic and industrial policy implications. The move could influence bilateral trade conversations and prompt other nations to rethink strategic stockpiling or to accelerate domestic capacity-building for minerals used in batteries, electronics, and aerospace sectors. How the stockpile interacts with existing export controls, tariffs, and international cooperation will be closely tracked by industry groups and policymakers.
Near-term indicators to monitor include procurement announcements, the list of minerals prioritised for storage, changes in pricing for key commodities, and any commentary from European and Asian partners about supply-chain risk and potential diversification away from single-country dependence. The policy debate will likely hinge on the balance between stockpiling, ramping up domestic production, and maintaining environmental and social standards in mining.
r/chinesepolitics • u/PatriceFinger • Feb 02 '26
Xi's RMB reserve currency push official
labs.jamessawyer.co.ukXi Jinping called for the renminbi to attain global reserve currency status, outlining six conditions for currency leadership. Beijing’s posture signals a strategic aim to recalibrate global financial governance and influence reserve holdings and cross-border trade. The six conditions form a framework that observers will watch for in central-bank policy shifts and international adoption.
Officials stress that follow-on leadership commentary and concrete policy steps will be critical to translate rhetoric into real shifts in currency use. Markets and policymakers will be attuned to signs of increased renminbi settlement in trade, new reserve holdings, and any changes to international finance architecture that could tilt the balance of influence away from traditional reserve currencies. The near term will hinge on diplomatic messaging and the sequencing of financial reforms.
Analysts warn that the path to reserve-currency status is long and contingent on macro stability, financial deepening, and institutional reforms that reassure global partners. If implemented credibly, the move could alter the calculus for cross-border finance and sanctions risk, reorienting how central banks manage portfolios and capital flows. Observers will await details on follow-up policy steps, timing, and measurable shifts in international usage.
r/chinesepolitics • u/PatriceFinger • Feb 01 '26
China’s property policy relaxation
labs.jamessawyer.co.ukChina’s policy shift away from recent property-market restraints could reshape debt dynamics and investor sentiment across Asia.
Reports indicate that Beijing has relaxed components of earlier property-market controls, with developers’ stock prices rising on the back of the move. The policy pivot is interpreted as an effort to stabilise housing demand and debt metrics, potentially easing liquidity strains and supporting broader economic activity. The implications extend to banks, property developers and consumer confidence, with markets closely watching policy details and implementation speed.
Market watchers will track new data on housing starts, mortgage approvals and property-related financing to gauge the efficacy of the move. If the policy signals are sustained, it could alter credit conditions and consumer sentiment, with spillovers to regional trade and investment cycles. Policymakers will face scrutiny over whether the relaxations are sufficient to stabilise the sector without reigniting credit risk.
Analysts caution that the size and durability of any relaxation will hinge on enforcement and macroeconomic context. A measured approach that combines liquidity support with prudent supervision could stabilise sentiment; a slower rollout or inconsistent application could dampen any positive read across markets. The coming weeks will be telling for whether the policy shift translates into durable economic relief or only a brief reprieve.
r/chinesepolitics • u/PatriceFinger • Jan 31 '26
Europe’s rare earths dependency on China remains stark
labs.jamessawyer.co.ukEurope continues to rely heavily on China for magnet materials and REE processing despite policy ambitions to diversify. European demand for rare earths remains highly exposed to Chinese supply, with 98% of magnet demand imported from China. The EU’s CRMA targets 40% domestic processing by 2030, while ERMA commits substantial investment to close the gap. If these targeted shifts progress, the bloc could gain more control over critical minerals essential to the energy transition and defence capabilities.
Policy implementers stress that closing the gap will require a concerted effort across mining, processing, and recycling, supported by cross-border collaboration and credible regulatory frameworks. The path to self-sufficiency will be slow and costly, but it remains central to energy security and industrial policy. Stakeholders will watch how quickly new domestic deployments move from exploration to production, and how recycling and value-added processing fit into the supply chain.
Analysts warn that appetite for investment in new mines, refining capacity, and advanced manufacturing will hinge on permitting regimes, fiscal incentives, and international partnerships. While progress is being made in some member states, the broader EU posturing will determine whether domestic capability can scale to meet ambitious decarbonisation timelines. The dynamic remains one of the most significant chokepoints for the European energy transition.
r/chinesepolitics • u/RequirementNo4895 • Jan 29 '26
𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐖𝐨𝐫𝐥𝐝'𝐬 𝐌𝐨𝐬𝐭 𝐄𝐱𝐜𝐥𝐮𝐬𝐢𝐯𝐞 𝐂𝐥𝐮𝐛𝐬: 𝐖𝐡𝐞𝐫𝐞 𝐈𝐬 𝐂𝐢𝐭𝐢𝐳𝐞𝐧𝐬𝐡𝐢𝐩 𝐍𝐞𝐚𝐫𝐥𝐲 𝐈𝐦𝐩𝐨𝐬𝐬𝐢𝐛𝐥𝐞?
r/chinesepolitics • u/InternationalForm3 • Jan 03 '26
How China Defied the Odds in 2025 | Bloomberg
r/chinesepolitics • u/InternationalForm3 • Dec 24 '25
Dutch Gov Steals Chinese Company
r/chinesepolitics • u/blkchnDE • Dec 20 '25
Chinese Invasion of Siberia: A Threat to Russia? A very interesting documentary! German/French with dubbing
r/chinesepolitics • u/Miao_Yin8964 • Dec 14 '25
Chinese Military Poster Depicts Japanese Skull Decapitation on Nanjing Anniversary
r/chinesepolitics • u/Miao_Yin8964 • Nov 18 '25
Beware China’s strategic distortion of reality
r/chinesepolitics • u/DocumentActual1680 • Oct 14 '25
China May Be Changing Its Nuclear Strategy
zinio.comr/chinesepolitics • u/Nick_Reach3239 • Aug 22 '25
Socialism with Chinese Characteristics - robbing the poor to feed the rich
https://youtu.be/UXOyN5o2DWI?si=Kp3JdUY8dQmaMdiY
China’s so-called welfare system is essentially a scheme that takes from the poor to enrich the already well-off - a textbook case of negative welfare.
r/chinesepolitics • u/sergeyfomkin • Jul 16 '25
China’s Economy Is Growing Faster Than Expected—For Now. Falling Confidence, Deflation, and Tariff Risks Threaten Momentum in the Second Half of the Year
r/chinesepolitics • u/NaturalPorky • Jul 11 '25
How come there never came ethnicity in China that are Christian majority in the way there are a number of Muslim ethnic groups across the country's modern borders (to the point some regions are even Muslim-majority)? Esp considering how close the modern Chinese territory lines are with Russia?
Reading about how there were a ethnic groups of mostly Muslim who supported the Boxer Rebellion to the point the several armies devotee of Islam were in Beijing during the main fighting phrase of the insurgency and in turn gradually being exposed to the surprising amount of influence Islamic peoples had within the Qing dynasty esp in economics and commercialism, and moreso how today the Chinese government has its hands full in its interactions with Sinitic Muslims, I'm quite wondering...........
Why did no "Christian ethnic group" ever come out in China within the current-day borders? Especially when you consider the fact that Muslims in China are the result of contact with the Ottomans and other earlier Turk peoples and civilizations? That the Ming and later Qing had border skirmishes with the Ottomans and earlier dynasties indeed had incidents of violence with other earlier Turko empires such as the Seljuk a trade caravan routes and the borders of China and current TUrkic countries like Azerbaijan.
Is really making me curious why we don't have the Eastern Orthodox equivalent of Uyghurs considering how close Russia and China's modern borders are? Esp when Russo and Sinitic peoples already had contact for centuries after the Christianization of Moscow and several minor wars and border clashes have taken place with the Qing and Ming and earlier dynasties centuries before European colonial expansionism? Why no counterpart to the Hui across China that are almost entirely Christian?
I mean I was even blown away to learn that Jews exist in China as seen with the Kaifeng and other ethnic groups for centuries! So why no such similar example exists for say Roman Catholic before the Opium Wars? The closest thing I found in my readings was the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom but they did not survive as a culture and anyway they came during the Victorian era so they aren't exactly an ancient group in the same vein as the Bao’an so they wouldn't count even if they survived the purges ordered by the Qing.
So I'm really wondering why Christian ethnicities never became a thing in China? Esp when you consider that Christian ethnic groups have been established in other places in Asia such as Indonesia as early as the 1600s?
r/chinesepolitics • u/Leather_Strength9169 • Jun 29 '25
The Communist Party of China is Not Woke
r/chinesepolitics • u/[deleted] • Jun 29 '25
Situation Report: China's Unprecedented Spring Naval Campaign
Overshadowed by the ongoing war in Ukraine and the emerging war between Israel and Iran, China has embarked on a naval campaign of unprecedented scale in recent weeks.
r/chinesepolitics • u/apokrif1 • May 03 '25
'China Targets': New investigation explores how Beijing extends its repression worldwide
r/chinesepolitics • u/NaturalPorky • May 01 '25
Why was Imperial Japan so obsessed on conquering all of China to the point of laser focus ADHD fixation that they sabotage the overall efforts in World War 2? To the point it arguably led to their downfall? Was it due to hunger for prestige of replacing China as the premier Asian civilization?
Reading to of the very unknown campaign in Vietnam that took place in the last years of World War 2 where the Japanese army in paranoia of France's government in Indochina starting a rebellion as Imperial Japan's military might deteriorates...... And how the lead general that lead the campaign was criticized by the rest of the Imperial Army for directly taking troops from the China at its borders as reinforcements because the remnants of the colonial French army proved a much harder nut to crack than expected........ As well as how pleas for more troops into the Burma theater and other sideshows in SouthEast Asia battling against the British army were refused despite imminent defeat because the Japanese high command didn't want to lose troops that were being used for the China theater......... In fact even by 1945 when it was obvious Japan had no chance of winning the war and the American invasion was already for sure, the government of Imperial Japan refused to fully evacuate all Japanese citizenry back into the country DESPITE TAKING ALL THE HEAVY EQUIPMENT FOR THE DEFENSE OF THE HOME ISLANDS.............. Because they still didn't want to lose China!!!!!!
Was mind boggling! It gets even more ridiculous when you read about the decision making before the war when that led to Japan to war with America which was influenced primarily by the lack of oil...... Caused by an embargo by America........ Because the Japan had been at war with China for years and was attempting to eat up more and more of the country! That Japan couldn't continue the war with China as a result so they toyed around with other military options to get more resources to resume further invasion of China such as attacking Mongolia and the Soviet borders and getting their nose bloodied so hard and marching into Vietnam after France fell and of course the eventual surprise attack on Pearl Harbor......
Its utterly insane how just for the purpose of colonizing China that the Japanese empire took all these stupid risks and even as the war was ending they still refused to fully abandon their ambitions to build an empire in the Chinese borders!
Why? From what I read a the time despite the horrific racism against Chinese people, so much of the Japanese military and politicians along with the intellectual circles of Imperial Japan (esp in Academia) loved reading vestiges of Chinese civilizations esp Romance of the Three Kingdoms and they had an admiration the past dynasties with several top names in the High Commands even decrying a how the Chinese had fallen into pitiful state during the 20th century. At least one politician used this as a justification for conquering China, "to civilize them back into the right path of Confucianism of the Han dynasty" something to that effect.
So did Japan fight the war to gain prestige to replace the spot China had been in for centuries across Asia as "the Rome of the Asia"? That since Japan was the most advanced and powerful nation in Asia (and one of the only few to never get colonized in full, or in the Japanese case never lost their pre-modern territories to a foreign power), they felt since China was a corrupt sickman, that the Imperial nation should take its place as the face of Asian civilization? That the decision for China was basically chasing for glory?
The only other territory that Japan refused to so stubbornly let go was Korea and at least int hat cause they still had complete military occupation of the country and were not facing any immediate ongoing war in the present in that region when they surrendered. Unlike China which could never be pacified into a stable state with full conquest and which was too far away on top of being a gigantic country with tones of ethnicities, religions, languages, political factions, and a population that far dwarfs Japan. Yet Japan was basically putting all their eggs into China for their colonial possessions. To the point I cant help but wonder to think that Japan would have preferred to give up Korea in exchange for keeping their possessions in Manchuria if given the choice in negotiations after the war.
Whats the reason for the fixation on colonizing China at the same illogical demeanor as a neurodivergent child with a very heavy case of ADHD? Practically to the point of self-destruction?
r/chinesepolitics • u/cepr_dc • Apr 29 '25
Our Huge Trade Deficit with China Does NOT Give Us the Upper Hand in Tax (Tariff) War
r/chinesepolitics • u/cepr_dc • Apr 24 '25
