News

A look at how Beijing is pushing boundaries, and what the U.S. and its allies are doing in response.
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang says China doesn’t need to use the American tech stack or his company’s semiconductor chips to train ...
Even as the U.S. begins to expand its military, it is also revising its military doctrines and warfighting concepts to adapt ...
President Trump has declared that “peace through strength” is a central pillar of his national security strategy, and his ...
San Francisco: A bipartisan pair of U.S. senators sent a letter to Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang on Friday about an upcoming trip ...
It is in no one’s interest to militarise the Arctic but thanks to something of an arms race heating up between the US, Russia ...
Iran's foreign minister visits China after Israel conflict, highlighting efforts to deepen ties amid regional and U.S. tensions.
Ahead of Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s visit to China, US senators from both parties have cautioned him against engaging with companies tied to Beijing’s military or intelligence apparatus, warning that ...
Senior figures in the Trump Administration are asking if Australia is committed to deterring Beijing from invading Taiwan and ...
The world has become less predictable, less rules-based, and more shaped by the impulses of strongmen and short-term ...
Jensen Huang, the CEO of Nvidia, said he’s not concerned about China’s military getting access to his company’s AI chips, even as U.S. restrictions grow tighter and tensions with Beijing keep rising.
The Asian country now possesses the “graphite bomb,” or “blackout bomb,” which cuts off an area’s power supply.