Military: “Being made to disappear” is the Xi-era pattern
Anti-corruption drive or disloyalty: Under Xi Jinping, the Politburo has shrunk to its smallest size in roughly three decades. Now even the “Cosmos Club” is being hit.
By Andreas Landwehr
Anti-corruption drive or disloyalty: Under Xi Jinping, the Politburo has shrunk to its smallest size in roughly three decades. Now even the “Cosmos Club” is being hit.
By Andreas Landwehr
To boost China’s domestic consumption, stronger redistribution is needed, says Klaus Mühlhahn of Freie Universität Berlin. But Xi Jinping suspects that transfers foster a welfare mentality.
By Leonardo Pape
China’s military is believed to have disguised drone flights using aircraft signals – testing deception capabilities for a potential military operation against Taiwan.
By Ning Wang
The US remains the strongest military power in the world, global defense spending continues to rise and outlawed anti-personnel mines could be used again in NATO.
By Nana Brink
China and Belarus are intensifying their arms cooperation; Moscow is the beneficiary. This makes Chancellor Merz's trip to China even more complicated.
By Viktor Funk and Marcel Grzanna
Admiral Pierre Vandier sees NATO facing major technological challenges. The civilian sector sets the pace of innovation, while military structures can only adapt slowly, Vandier says.
By Lisa-Martina Klein
The Pentagon is adding more Chinese companies to its blacklist. They are alleged to support China’s military and defense industry.
By Ning Wang
An ex-military man from the USA in Germany unsuccessfully offered secret data to China. The Koblenz Higher Regional Court sentenced the man to a prison term for secret service agent activities.
By Leonardo Pape
The waves of purges in China’s military are shaking the foundations of internal power distribution. With Zhang Youxia gone, the Central Military Commission loses a rationalizing center – raising strategic uncertainty internationally as well.
By Henning Glaser and Morten Strantzen
A military conflict over Taiwan could rapidly escalate into a multi-front war. Japan, South Korea and US forces stationed in the region would be at risk, while North Korea and Russia could also become involved.
By Andreas Landwehr