China

Location
Mentions
1987
Relationships
86
Events
59
Documents
832
Also known as:
Chinatown China (inferred from 'Chinese') South China Sea US-China China (CHN) Southern China Tang China China / Beijing / Mainland China (People's Republic of China) Chengdu, China China (Mainland) China (EM) Red China Nationalist China Communist China South China Sea (SCS) China (Zhongguo/Middle Kingdom) Mainland China Guilin, China People's Republic of China China (中国) China (mentioned in URL) China / People's Republic East China Sea South China Sea (referenced as 南海) China (implied by 'Chinese') South China Greater China China (Potential) China (implied by HSCEI, CMB, ICBC)

Relationship Network

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Event Timeline

Interactive Timeline: Hover over events to see details. Events are arranged chronologically and alternate between top and bottom for better visibility.
86 total relationships
Connected Entity Relationship Type
Strength (mentions)
Documents Actions
location United States
Unknown
10 Very Strong
4
View
organization Congress
Unknown
9 Strong
2
View
location United States
Geopolitical rivals
9 Strong
2
View
location Russia
Technology licensing
7
1
View
person Chinese-language media outlets
Unknown
7
1
View
person President Trump
Political economic adversary
7
1
View
person American federal and state politics
Unknown
7
1
View
person its companies
Unknown
7
1
View
person American scholars and researchers
Unknown
7
1
View
organization Google
Business associate
6
1
View
person Working Group
Unknown
6
1
View
person Donald Trump Administration
Unknown
6
1
View
location the west
Geopolitical cooperation
6
1
View
person Mr. Trump
Adversarial economic
6
1
View
location United States
Adversarial competitive
6
1
View
organization EDF
Unknown
6
1
View
person North Korea/Pakistan/Iran/Russia
Intelligence sharing
6
1
View
person Russia
Intelligence ally
6
1
View
person Russia
Intelligence alliance
6
1
View
person Russia
Strategic emulation
6
1
View
person Russia
Political alliance
6
2
View
location Russia
Alliance treaty
6
1
View
location United States
Espionage target
5
1
View
organization Iran
Diplomatic political
5
1
View
location North America
Geopolitical rivals
5
1
View
Date Event Type Description Location Actions
2016-11-01 N/A Seizure of nine Singapore armored personnel carriers (APCs) by China. En route home (seized by Ch... View
2016-07-01 N/A Arbitral Tribunal verdict on the case brought by the Philippines against China. International Court View
2016-01-01 N/A Period of Chinese pressure on Singapore government to change its position. Singapore View
2016-01-01 N/A Downturn in Singapore's relationship with China. Singapore/China View
2015-12-01 N/A Paris climate agreement (referenced as 'last fall's') Paris View
2015-01-01 N/A China armed land-based and sea-based missiles with multiple warheads. China View
2015-01-01 N/A Reported breaches of U.S. government networks (personnel files). United States View
2014-01-01 N/A Breaches of US government networks and personnel files by China and Russia. Cyber/US View
2014-01-01 N/A Breaches of US personnel files and background checks by China/Russia. US government networks View
2014-01-01 N/A Official elevation of UK-China relations to Golden Era status United Kingdom View
2014-01-01 N/A Reported breaches of U.S. government networks. United States View
2013-01-01 N/A China emerged as the world's number one trading power. Global View
2012-01-01 N/A Clash over the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands causing bilateral relations to freeze. Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands View
2011-10-04 N/A First draft resolution to intervene in Syria proposed and subsequently vetoed. UN View
2011-01-01 N/A U.N. vote on Libyan military action United Nations View
2008-01-01 N/A Beijing Olympics Beijing View
2008-01-01 N/A Financial Crisis United States View
2007-01-01 N/A China became Iran's largest trading partner Iran View
2004-01-01 N/A Deputy Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong paid an unofficial visit to Taiwan, resulting in Chinese pr... Taiwan/Singapore View
2001-01-01 N/A China accepted into the World Trade Organization Global View
2001-01-01 N/A China welcomed into the World Trade Organization. Global View
1997-01-01 N/A Transfer of sovereignty of Hong Kong from Great Britain to China. Hong Kong View
1996-01-01 N/A Start of active intelligence sharing treaty between Russia and China. N/A View
1996-01-01 N/A Active intelligence sharing treaty established between Russia and China. N/A View
1993-01-01 N/A China became a net oil importer China View

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019256.jpg

This document appears to be page 22 of a report titled 'Breaking Down Democracy,' specifically Chapter 3, discussing the suppression of civil society in authoritarian regimes. It analyzes the decline of NGO freedoms in countries like Russia and China, discusses the phenomenon of 'color revolutions,' and includes quotes from Chinese state media and Vladimir Putin criticizing Western influence in these movements. The page bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, indicating it was part of a document production to the U.S. House of Representatives.

Report / academic publication (chapter 3)
2025-11-19

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This page from a Freedom House report details the censorship strategies employed by the Chinese government to suppress dissent domestically and the differing global propaganda approaches of China and Russia. It highlights China's efforts to control the narrative on sensitive topics like the Panama Papers and Xi Jinping's power, while contrasting Russia's aggressive, contentious media style (RT) with China's economic-focused strategy to shape global perceptions.

Report page
2025-11-19

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This document is page 14 of a report titled 'BREAKING DOWN DEMOCRACY,' likely published by Freedom House around 2017. It analyzes democratic elections and the ousting of authoritarian leaders in Nigeria, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, and Argentina between 2014 and 2016. The document bears the Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019248,' indicating it was part of a document production to the House Oversight Committee, though the text itself is a geopolitical analysis unrelated to Epstein's specific activities.

Report/publication page (likely from freedom house)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019244.jpg

This document is a page from a report titled 'BREAKING DOWN DEMOCRACY,' specifically Chapter 1, 'Validating Autocracy through the Ballot.' It analyzes how modern authoritarian regimes use elections to maintain legitimacy compared to traditional dictatorships, citing examples from the Soviet bloc and Latin America. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, suggesting it was part of a document production for a congressional investigation, though the text itself contains no direct references to Jeffrey Epstein or his associates.

Report/book chapter (political science)
2025-11-19

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This document is page 9 of a Freedom House report (likely published in or after 2016) discussing the history of democratization, civil society, and the internet following the Cold War. It analyzes political changes in Eastern Europe, China, Serbia, and Ukraine, citing various articles and reports in the footnotes. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, indicating it was part of a document production for a US House Oversight Committee investigation.

Report / academic publication (freedom house)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019242.jpg

This document appears to be page 8 of a report titled 'Breaking Down Democracy,' stamped with a House Oversight Bates number. It analyzes the strategies of modern authoritarian regimes (specifically China, Russia, and Turkey) including historical revisionism, redefining democratic terms, and removing term limits. It also discusses international collaboration among these regimes to subvert human rights standards and protect mutual interests, contrasting this with the democratic optimism of the late 20th century.

Report / academic paper (page 8)
2025-11-19

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This document appears to be page 7 of a Freedom House report discussing the rise and tactics of modern authoritarianism, specifically focusing on internet censorship ('The Great Firewall'), the suppression of civil society, and concepts like 'Majoritarianism' and 'Sovereignty.' While the content is a geopolitical analysis referencing leaders like Putin, Erdoğan, and Orbán, the document bears the Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019241,' indicating it was part of a document production for a US House Oversight Committee investigation (likely related to the Epstein probe, given the prompt context, though Epstein is not mentioned in the text of this specific page).

Report/publication page (house oversight discovery material)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019238.jpg

This document analyzes the strategies of modern authoritarian regimes, particularly China and Russia, noting their use of surveillance, propaganda, and economic coercion to maintain power and exploit open societies. It highlights the resilience of these regimes despite economic fragility and argues that they actively seek to weaken global democracy rather than just survive.

Report page / policy analysis
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019237.jpg

This page is from a Freedom House report discussing the global decline of democratic indicators between 2007 and 2016. It details the rise of authoritarian internationalism, the removal of term limits to create 'leaders-for-life', and specific geopolitical actions by Russia, China, Hungary, and Syria. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, indicating it was part of a production for a congressional investigation, though the text itself does not contain specific references to Jeffrey Epstein or his associates.

Report / publication page (freedom house)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019236.jpg

This document appears to be page 2 of a report titled 'Breaking Down Democracy,' produced as part of a House Oversight investigation (Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019236). It analyzes the decline of freedom in influential countries between 2007 and 2016, highlighting significant drops in Turkey and Bahrain. The text discusses strategies used by modern authoritarians, including the rewriting of history (specifically in Russia regarding Stalin), the hiring of Western lobbyists ('K Street representatives') by autocracies like China and Kazakhstan, and the emulation of authoritarian tactics by populist politicians in democracies.

Report / policy paper (house oversight committee production)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019214.jpg

A Washington Post article dated December 28 (likely 2016) reporting on President-elect Donald Trump's meetings with industry leaders. The article specifically details a meeting at Mar-a-Lago with major healthcare executives including the CEOs of Mayo Clinic, Johns Hopkins, Partners HealthCare, and Cleveland Clinic to discuss the Affordable Care Act. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' stamp.

News article (the washington post) / government record
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019203.jpg

A December 2016 email from Lisa New to Jeffrey Epstein providing an end-of-year update on the organizations 'Poetry in America' and 'Verse Video Education.' The email details the organization's new 501c3 status, various academic and media partnerships (specifically with Harvard and WGBH), and thanks Epstein for his role as a 'longstanding adviser and supporter' and for his 'thought partnership.'

Email
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018721.jpg

The document is a photograph containing three magazine covers (two from TIME, one from The Atlantic) from 2016 featuring Donald Trump. Each cover appears to be signed by Donald Trump in black marker and includes authentication stickers (PSA/DNA). The document bears a Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018721', indicating it is part of a production for the House Oversight Committee.

Exhibit / photograph of magazine covers
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031963.jpg

This document is page 23 of a geopolitical analysis written by Dominique Moisi. It discusses the necessity for the United States to pivot its strategic focus from the Middle East to Asia, referencing Henry Kissinger's book 'On China' and the concept of a 'Pacific Community.' The text argues that while the US cannot ignore the Middle East (citing Arab revolutions and Iran), the future lies in Asia, and the US must improve its domestic economic health to accept a changing global status.

Article / report excerpt (likely an attachment or briefing)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031962.jpg

This document page discusses the strategic need for the United States to shift its foreign policy focus inward towards domestic "restoration," citing economic stability and infrastructure as key priorities over military deployment. It references Richard Haass's concept of restoration and draws parallels to the post-Vietnam era under President Jimmy Carter, arguing that current economic conditions necessitate a reassessment of American engagement abroad.

Government oversight document / policy analysis
2025-11-19

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This document is a page from a House Oversight briefing paper (page 18) summarizing President Obama's foreign policy actions around late 2011. It covers tensions with China regarding Taiwan arms sales, changes to foreign aid policy, sanctions against Iran following the 2009 Green Movement, and new trade agreements with Colombia, Panama, South Korea, and trans-Pacific partners. The document does not explicitly mention Jeffrey Epstein but appears to be part of a larger collection of government documents.

Briefing paper / political report
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031957.jpg

This document appears to be page 17 of a House Oversight briefing or report summarizing President Obama's policy stances and recent diplomatic activities around late 2011. It covers three main topics: Immigration (border enforcement and reform), Israel/Palestine (peace process frustrations, pre-1967 borders, and a candid hot-mic comment to Sarkozy about Netanyahu), and China (currency policy criticism at the APEC summit). The document bears a House Oversight Bates stamp.

Briefing paper / policy summary
2025-11-19

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This document, dated November 16, 2011, outlines Barack Obama's foreign policy credentials and overview as part of a larger report. It details major initiatives such as the Afghanistan surge, the New START treaty, and the killing of Osama bin Laden, while analyzing how his foreign policy record might serve as a centerpiece for his reelection strategy amidst economic challenges.

Article / briefing document
2025-11-19

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This document appears to be page 11 of a policy memo or report regarding the Syrian Civil War. It discusses the geopolitical maneuvering of the Syrian National Council (SNC) as they establish contact with Russia, China, and Iran to prepare for a post-Assad government. The author argues that it is in America's best national interest to lead international support for the Syrian revolution to remove a regime that sponsors terrorism.

Policy memo / report page (house oversight committee document)
2025-11-19

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This page appears to be part of a geopolitical briefing or article regarding the Syrian Civil War. It analyzes the demographics of the uprising (majority vs. Ba'ath minority), discusses the potential for regional destabilization in Iraq and Lebanon, and critiques the Russian and Chinese vetoes at the UN Security Council. The document bears a House Oversight Bates stamp.

Political analysis / briefing paper (house oversight record)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031926.jpg

This document appears to be a page from a House Oversight Committee production (likely related to the Epstein investigation given the prompt context, though the text is purely geopolitical). It contains an analysis of the Syrian conflict, arguing that Bashar al-Assad's regime is more stable than Gaddafi's was and warning against Western military intervention based on potentially unreliable opposition reports. It highlights the sectarian risks, the potential for Syria to become a proxy battleground like Lebanon, and the economic ties Syria holds with Europe and Turkey.

Geopolitical analysis / article excerpt (part of house oversight production)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031904.jpg

This document is page 29 of an interview transcript between an interviewer named Shaffer and political scientist Francis Fukuyama. They discuss Fukuyama's book 'The End of History' in the context of the rise of China, the Arab Spring, and 9/11. Fukuyama defends his thesis that liberal democracy remains the default form of government despite recent geopolitical challenges, though he acknowledges the concept of 'political decay.' The document bears a House Oversight Bates stamp.

Interview transcript
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031903.jpg

This document appears to be page 28 of a transcript from a House Oversight collection. It features a dialogue between Fukuyama and Shaffer discussing political science, specifically the history of the Chinese state, its authoritarian nature, and the economic anomaly of China's growth despite a lack of Western-style rule of law.

Transcript / interview segment
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031902.jpg

This document page (marked HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031902) appears to be a transcript of an intellectual discussion or interview. An unnamed speaker provides a historical analysis of how the Catholic Church's ban on cousin marriage in the 8th century inadvertently fostered individualism and private property rights in Europe by breaking down extended kinship structures. A participant named Shaffer challenges or clarifies a point regarding China's meritocratic bureaucracy existing without Christianity.

Transcript / congressional record
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031901.jpg

This document appears to be page 26 of a transcript from the House Oversight Committee (marked HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031901). It contains an intellectual discussion between an interviewer named Shaffer and the author Fukuyama (likely Francis Fukuyama). They discuss Fukuyama's book chapter regarding how the Catholic Church historically altered family structures and inheritance rules in Europe to facilitate the move from tribal kinship systems to modern states.

Interview transcript / congressional record
2025-11-19
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