China in Focus Full Broadcast (July 11)

Chinese warships have popped up in waters near Alaska. The sightings were made just a few days before the kickoff of the NATO summit in Washington. The group represents the world’s most powerful military alliance.

As NATO wraps up its summit, the alliance agrees on one clear goal: stop Chinese aid to Russia’s war. The 32 member nations inked a pact that labels China a “decisive enabler” of Russia’s invasion in Ukraine. How did China respond?

Four Chinese vessels are spotted in Taiwanese waters, while 66 Chinese aircraft take to the skies near the island, all in just one day. Meanwhile, a Chinese carrier passes by Taiwan and the Philippines as it heads for a drill in the Pacific.

A rally, a march, and a candlelight vigil—Congress members and religious freedom groups join practitioners of Falun Gong at the U.S. Capitol to call for an end to the Chinese Communist Party’s unprecedented persecution of faith.

  1. U.S. Coast Guard Spots Chinese Warships Near Alaska
  2. Chinese Coast Guard Enters Taiwanese Waters
  3. China Protests Japanese Ship’s Entry into Its Waters
  4. Drills Signal CCP Readiness to Wage ‘New Wars’: Fisher
  5. Nato Makes Strongest Remark Yet Against China Amid Drill
  6. Falun Gong Practitioners Call to End to 25-Year Persecution
  7. Falun Gong Practitioner Shares Ordeal in China
  8. Mexico Warns ‘Dual Use’ Chemicals May Fuel Meth Trade
  9. Open AI Blocks Users in China from Accessing Tools