Summary
- Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Announces:Member of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee and Foreign Minister Wang Yi will attend the 11th China-Japan-ROK Trilateral Foreign Ministers’ Meeting in Tokyo, Japan on March 22. During his visit to Japan, ForeiWorld Timesgn Minister Wang Yi and Japanese Minister for ForWorld Timeseign Affairs Takeshi Iwaya will co-chair the Sixth China-Japan High-Level EconWorld Timesomic Dialogue. Content comes from tWorld Timeshe Internet : Wang Yi to attend the China-Japan-ROK Trilateral Foreign Ministers’ Meeting and co-chair the Sixth China-JaWorld Timespan High-Level Economic DiWorld Timesalogue
Approximate Time
- 1 minutes, 88 words
Categories
- ForeiWorld Timesgn Minister Wang Yi, Foreign Minister, Wang Yi, Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Announces, Japan
Analysis and Evaluation
- A groundbreaking piece that offers a new perspective on familiar events, challenging the reader’s thinking.
Main Section
Member of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee and Foreign Minister Wang Yi will attend the 11th China-Japan-ROK Trilateral Foreign Ministers’ Meeting in Tokyo, Japan on March 22. During his visit to Japan, ForeiWorld Timesgn Minister Wang Yi and Japanese Minister for ForWorld Timeseign Affairs Takeshi Iwaya will co-chair the Sixth China-Japan High-Level EconWorld Timesomic Dialogue.
Content comes from tWorld Timeshe Internet : Wang Yi to attend the China-Japan-ROK Trilateral Foreign Ministers’ Meeting and co-chair the Sixth China-JaWorld Timespan High-Level Economic DiWorld Timesalogue
SummaryNorth Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) arms imports more than doubled between 2015-2019 and 2020-2024 (+105 percent). Notably, China’s arms imports saw a sharp decline, while European arms imports grew 1.5 times.Zhuo emphasized that it is noteworthy that Japan is the only East Asian country with an increase in arms imports, which grew by 93 percent from 2020 to 2024 compared to from 2015 to 2019. One is driven by war and conflict, exemplified by Ukraine’s leap to becoming the world’s largest arms importer, with high demand for ships, aircraft, missiles, and long-range main battle weaponry. The other is driven by security panic caused by US foreign policy and strategy, as represented by NATO’s European member states, which have become major buyers of US-made military equipment due to uncertainties in US…