China Vows to Safeguard Economic Interests in Venezuela Amid U.S. Intervention
10 Articles
10 Articles
The US kidnaps a dictator, the indignation in China is great, and the leadership there will use it to exalt itself with more power – with Trump's own arguments.
The US wants to send in oil companies to gain control of Venezuelan oil, but China is afraid of getting in the way because they usually get most of the oil.
How is the US's attack to be classified under international law and what does it mean for other global conflicts, such as those between Taiwan and China?
The U.S. military aggression is marked by various international interests, especially oil, but also by China's ancestry in the regionThe big U.S. oil companies, faced with a million-dollar business in Venezuela sponsored by Trump The collateral damage of American military intervention against Nicolás Maduro not only undermine the principle of non-international interference, but involve China, Russia and Europe – among other latitudes – in a fulg…
China Vows to Safeguard Economic Interests in Venezuela Amid U.S. Intervention
China Vows to Safeguard Economic Interests in Venezuela Amid U.S. Intervention - Beijing demands the release of the Venezuelan leader but draws a hard line on its investments, stating that ‘practical cooperation’ between the two nations is protected by law and must continue
U.S. capture of Maduro raises geopolitical stakes for global oil trade, Chinese influence in the Western Hemisphere, and Canada's own strategic economic interests
Prime Minister Mark Carney's cautious tone is a clear indication of the fraught path ahead as he seeks to lessen economic dependence on the United States, increase trade ties with Asia, and avoid further confrontation with an unpredictable and combative Donald Trump.
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