China Watch

“China Watch” is a weekly deep dive that pulls back the curtains on one of the world's most enigmatic powers. Join Epoch Times contributor Terri Wu as she deciphers where China is headed next and how its politics, technology, and business affect Americans.

Episodes

  1. 5D AGO

    US-China Breakup: It’s Getting Personal

    The new visa policy for Chinese international students marks another major shift in the U.S.-China decoupling. It’s getting personal. The potential impact is way bigger than tariffs. It’s also personal for host Terri Wu because she came to America as a Chinese student. There’s a lot to unpack: national security concerns, personal concerns, and emotional reactions. The count of Chinese students in the United States began with 52 in 1978. Five years after that, it increased to 100,000. Today it's about 277,000. Allowing Chinese students to study in the U.S. was part of the “People’s War” strategy deployed by Deng Xiaoping. One expert, John Lenczowski, a former senior official in President Ronald Reagan’s National Security Council, said there are 25,000 Chinese intelligence collectors in Silicon Valley alone. Join Terri as she explores the historical—and the emotional—aspects of the complex relationship between the United States and China, and by extension, the people of the two countries. Related report: Targeting Military Installations, IP Theft: A Look at Criminal Cases Involving Chinese Students (Read) Views expressed in this episode are opinions of the host and guests and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times. — Terri Wu is a Washington-based freelance reporter for The Epoch Times covering education and China-related issues. Send tips to terri.wu@epochtimes.com. Enjoyed this podcast? Follow China Watch for a peek behind the red curtain.

    28 min
  2. How Fentanyl Fits in Communist China’s Endgame with America

    APR 1

    How Fentanyl Fits in Communist China’s Endgame with America

    President Donald Trump has imposed an additional 20 percent tariff on all goods made in China, citing a national emergency on the continued trafficking of fentanyl—a deadly opioid that is 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine—into the United States. To this day, China remains the primary source of fentanyl precursors, which are shipped to Mexico, where they’re manufactured into the illicit drug. It is then smuggled into the United States mainly via the southern border. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has called the fentanyl epidemic the United States’ “own problem” and has cast the U.S. tariffs as “blackmail.” However, Yuan Hongbing, a former law professor at Peking University in China who now lives in Australia, said the American opioid epidemic is far from the self-inflicted wound the CCP has suggested it is. The China expert, who has insider access to senior CCP leaders, further stated that fentanyl is at the core of Xi Jinping’s bid to “take revenge” on the West. Read the Original Report: China’s Role in US Fentanyl Crisis Directed by Regime Leadership, Expert Says Clips Played: President Trump Addresses House Republican Issues Conference via C-SPAN Views expressed in this episode are opinions of the host and guests and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.  — Terri Wu is a Washington-based freelance reporter for The Epoch Times covering education and China-related issues. Send tips to terri.wu@epochtimes.com. Enjoyed this podcast? Follow China Watch for a peek behind the red curtain.

    17 min
    4.8
    out of 5
    13 Ratings

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    “China Watch” is a weekly deep dive that pulls back the curtains on one of the world's most enigmatic powers. Join Epoch Times contributor Terri Wu as she deciphers where China is headed next and how its politics, technology, and business affect Americans.

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