The remote Pacific airfield used to launch the atomic bombings of Japan during World War II is being revived with a different ...
The documentary, which has consumed eight years and 80 million yuan ($11.2 million), chronicles his investigations into a ...
China now acquires weapons systems at a pace five to six times as fast as the United States. Admiral John Aquilino, the former commander of the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, has described this military ...
Retired US Navy Adm. James Stavridis, a former supreme allied commander of NATO, tells Fareed about his latest novel, ...
Like the late Senator Dole, the Greatest Generation had a unique memory of World War II-era alliance between the U.S. and China. Franklin Roosevelt sought to boost China’s global stature ...
On October 24, 1944, during World War II, the USS Tang sank off the coast of China. The submarine was destroyed by its own ...
The United States also wants to see improved ties between its allies South Korea and Japan, and China’s World War II celebrations are expected to continue Beijing’s year-long emphasis on Japan ...
Your browser does not support the <audio> element. LAST MONTH, as tensions escalated between Iran and Israel, China helped organise a Chinese film festival in the ...
Amid state-media silence and Chinese Foreign Ministry insistence that two fatal anti-Japanese attacks in Shenzhen and Suzhou were “isolated incidents” that could happen in any country, Chinese ...
To counter China, the U.S. is racing to upgrade remote airstrips in the Pacific Ocean. WSJ’s Niharika Mandhana traveled to Tinian Island, where the U.S. is reviving a vast World War II-era airfield.
Reflecting on the difference between Chinese and overseas players, Bin Ukishima, the head coach of China's under-15 football team, figured it out "more an issue of thinking ability than technique." ...
The cause of the explosion was an American bomb that had been buried beneath the land surface, probably dating to a wartime ...