NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

USA Conversation

The Conversation USA

The Conversation USA

China's ties to Cuba and growing presence in Latin America raise security concerns in Washington, even as leaders try to ease tensions

  • Written by Leland Lazarus, Associate Director of National Security, Florida International University
imageU.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen arrives at Beijing Capital International Airport in Beijing, China, on July 6, 2023. Pedro Pardo/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

There is a push by leaders in Washington and Beijing to get U.S.-China relations back on track. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with President Xi Jinping in China in June 2023 to...

Read more: China's ties to Cuba and growing presence in Latin America raise security concerns in Washington,...

More Articles ...

  1. Science activism is surging – which marks a culture shift among scientists
  2. Aging is complicated – a biologist explains why no two people or cells age the same way, and what this means for anti-aging interventions
  3. Police treatment in black and white – report on Minneapolis policing is the latest reminder of systemic racial disparities
  4. _E. coli_ is one of the most widely studied organisms – and that may be a problem for both science and medicine
  5. Christians in Pakistan risk greater persecution from blasphemy laws, while living in poverty
  6. Astro-tourism – chasing eclipses, meteor showers and elusive dark skies from Earth
  7. Human exposure to wildfires has more than doubled in two decades – who is at risk might surprise you
  8. The Global South is on the rise – but what exactly is the Global South?
  9. Why are some Beanie Babies worth more than others? Prices for collectibles are about supply and demand
  10. A business can decline service based on its beliefs, Supreme Court rules – but what will this look like in practice?
  11. Now that President Biden's student loan cancellation program has been canceled, here's what's next
  12. Cambodia PM Hun Sen will shut down opposition on election day – even if he can no longer threaten voters on Facebook
  13. A subtle symphony of ripples in spacetime – astronomers use dead stars to measure gravitational waves produced by ancient black holes
  14. 'We the People' includes all Americans – but July 4 is a reminder that democracy remains a work in progress
  15. Military academies can still consider race in admissions, but the rest of the nation's colleges and universities cannot, court rules
  16. What Beijing's muted response to Wagner mutiny tells us about China-Russia relations – and what it doesn't
  17. Locally transmitted malaria in the US could be a harbinger of rising disease risk in a warming climate – 5 questions answered
  18. From Stonewall to Pride, the fight for equal rights has been rooted in resistance led by Black transwomen
  19. Inside the grogue wars of Cabo Verde
  20. By 'helping' wild animals, you could end their freedom or even their lives – here's why you should keep your distance
  21. Visual misinformation is widespread on Facebook – and often undercounted by researchers
  22. Is it legal to sell human remains?
  23. 3 myths about immigration in America
  24. A 2003 Supreme Court decision upholding affirmative action planted the seeds of its overturning, as justices then and now thought racism an easily solved problem
  25. IceCube neutrino detector in Antarctica spots first high-energy neutrinos emitted in our own Milky Way galaxy
  26. Researchers can learn a lot with your genetic information, even when you skip survey questions – yesterday's mode of informed consent doesn't quite fit today's biobank studies
  27. Yes, debates do help voters decide – and candidates are increasingly reluctant to participate
  28. Bridge collapses, road repairs, evacuations: How transportation agencies plan for large-scale traffic disruptions
  29. Meltwater is hydro-fracking Greenland’s ice sheet through millions of hairline cracks – destabilizing its internal structure
  30. Think being a NASCAR driver isn't as physically demanding as other sports? Think again
  31. US agencies buy vast quantities of personal information on the open market – a legal scholar explains why and what it means for privacy in the age of AI
  32. Ringworm fungal infections are common in the US and are becoming increasingly resistant to treatment – 6 questions answered
  33. English dialects make themselves heard in genes
  34. Americans in former Confederate states more likely to say violent protest against government is justified, 160 years after Gettysburg
  35. What is the difference between nationalism and patriotism?
  36. Putin's Ukraine war keeps yielding dividends -- but not for him
  37. A trauma-focused therapy is helping Ukrainian children besieged by war – a clinical psychologist explains how it could bring resilience to kids around the world
  38. Lab-grown meat techniques aren't new – cell cultures are common tools in science, but bringing them up to scale to meet society's demand for meat will require further development
  39. States are weakening their child labor restrictions nearly 8 decades after the US government took kids out of the workforce
  40. Do you crush microbes when you step on them?
  41. Taking students to the range to learn about gun culture firsthand
  42. BMI alone will no longer be treated as the go-to measure for weight management – an obesity medicine physician explains the seismic shift taking place
  43. Asian folktales offer moral lessons that help reduce racial prejudice in children
  44. Ja Morant shows how a 'good guy with a gun' can never be Black
  45. Supreme Court rules the US is not required to ensure access to water for the Navajo Nation
  46. Titan submersible disaster underscores dangers of deep-sea exploration – an engineer explains why most ocean science is conducted with crewless submarines
  47. Fear trumps anger when it comes to data breaches – angry customers vent, but fearful customers don't come back
  48. How pardoning extremists undermines the rule of law
  49. How will AI affect workers? Tech waves of the past show how unpredictable the path can be
  50. Ocean heat is off the charts – here's what that means for humans and ecosystems around the world