When Washington tests the Fed, it tests the dollar
In the face of US President Trump’s attacks on the Federal Reserve and its chair, Jerome Powell, major central bankers around the world showed their solidarity. This is out of their own interest to see the dollar-centric system preserved and a warning not to engage in self-sabotage. Academic Hao Nan explains.
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SenseTime Act 2: From China’s AI dragon to regional innovator
With artificial intelligence being the latest buzzword, it is becoming increasingly difficult to stand out among the crowd of companies in the sector. One of the pioneer companies in AI is SenseTime, which has expanded into Singapore and Southeast Asia. Lianhe Zaobao journalist Li Yaning speaks to Jeff Shi, president of SenseTime’s Asia Pacific business, to get his take on where the company is going.
[Big read] The first shot Taiwan hopes never to fire
Under mounting military pressure, Taiwan may be pushed to fire a warning shot it hopes never to take — an act that could give Beijing its pretext for war and test America’s commitment. Lianhe Zaobao journalist Miao Zong-Han finds out more.
[Big read] The world recarved under the Donroe Doctrine
US President Donald Trump’s revival of hemispheric dominance and the dramatic Venezuela intervention signal a rupture in global norms, as global powers weigh their next moves and NATO faces uncertainty. Lianhe Zaobao journalist Zhou Yifei reports.
Frozen for blue skies: Villagers endure winter without coal
China’s mandate to shift from coal to natural gas heating in Hebei has led to a dilemma where many rural villagers are unable to afford heating through the cold winter season. Lianhe Zaobao correspondent Yush Chau finds out what the authorities could do to mitigate the people’s hardships.
From Caracas to Cambodia: How far will Washington go?
The capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro has sent shockwaves throughout the world, not least in terms of global rules and what is accepted behaviour. So what can Southeast Asia learn from the US’s recent actions in Venezuela? ISEAS researchers Hoang Thi Ha and Aries A Arugay ponder the question.
Takaichi’s gamble: Can an early election secure Japan’s future?
Despite the risks, Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi has decided to hold a snap general election. Academic Zhang Yun observes that external factors are a major consideration for Takaichi’s risk-taking, in particular Japan’s relations with China.
The Greenland myth: Why invasion talk misleads
The current conversation about “occupying Greenland” is an imprecise framing of the issue. The more consequential contest is about alliance governance, early warning and sensing, long-horizon Arctic connectivity, and the rules that shape future resource development, says US academic Hong Nong.
Caution and calculus: How India sees China in 2026
As India heads into 2026, it balances diplomacy and vigilance with China. Past strategic moves have fostered a trust deficit, making Delhi cautious even as both nations seek engagement and regional influence, says Indian academic Rishi Gupta.
Will China’s US$1.2 trillion trade surplus overwhelm global trade?
China’s exports are booming like never before. With a US$1.2 trillion surplus, the world wonders: can global trade absorb it, or is a reckoning on the horizon? Lianhe Zaobao senior correspondent Chen Jing contemplates what China could do next.
The global polytunity
When everything seems to crumble all at once, it could be an opportunity for renewal, rather than collapse, says Professor Yuen Yuen Ang.
[Big read] The rise and fall of China’s independent bookstores
Built by idealists and sustained by belief, independent bookstores became places to gather and breathe in China. As the tide turns, their owners face the hardest question: how long to keep the lights on. Lianhe Zaobao journalist Zhang Guanghui speaks to academics and those in the industry to find out more.
Don’t turn to China in every crisis
From Iran to Venezuela, everyone expects China to act. But Beijing moves with a single aim: safeguard its own long-term plans, stepping in overseas only when stakes hit home, says academic Hao Nan.
How resource nationalism is redrawing the global mineral playbook
In global politics, resource-rich countries are seeking to convert mineral wealth into security guarantees, diplomatic leverage and strategic influence — a symptom of a resurgent wave of resource nationalism.
No children, no regrets? Inside China’s first generation of childless ageing
As China’s first DINKs (“Dual Income, No Kids”) grow old, their lives are thrust into the spotlight. From a retired state-owned enterprise worker who says money and health are enough, to others who refuse to speak, their stories reveal pride, pain and unease beneath the debate, reports Lianhe Zaobao correspondent Liu Liu.
Japanese expert: China won’t replicate US Maduro raid
Japanese professor Shin Kawashima notes that the US raid in Venezuela is no precedent for Taiwan, and Beijing is unlikely to replicate such military actions despite regional tensions.
When doctors earn 3,000 RMB: China’s healthcare pay squeeze
After years of training, some Chinese doctors now earn as little as 3,000 RMB a month. Pay cuts, rising pressure, and bleak prospects are forcing many to rethink a once-secure profession. Lianhe Zaobao correspondent Li Kang finds out more.
China has too many incinerators. Southeast Asia has the trash
China built a vast waste-to-energy industry — then ran short of trash. As incinerators sit idle at home, Chinese firms are heading to Southeast Asia, pitching modern plants as a fix for looming landfill crises. Lianhe Zaobao correspondent Lim Zhan Ting reports.
If China moves on Taiwan, Asia moves with it
US planners are preparing for a multi-theatre fight that would stretch China’s forces across land, sea and alliances — turning a Taiwan war into a regional one. Italian commentator Emanuele Scimia explains.