Ian Williams

Ian Williams

Ian Williams is a former foreign correspondent for Channel 4 News and NBC, and author of Vampire State: The Rise and Fall of the Chinese Economy (Birlinn).

How China bought Britain

Somewhere in the bowels of the Foreign Office, civil servants are still working on the governmentโ€™s โ€˜China auditโ€™. The report was commissioned by the new Labour government to โ€˜assess trade-offs in the UK-China relationshipโ€™ and to โ€˜ensure consistency across government, business and academia towards engagement with Chinaโ€™. Little is known about its workings or whoโ€™s

China smells victory in its tariff war with Trump

It was an extraordinary statement, given all the bluster that had gone before it. Tariffs on Chinese goods will โ€˜come down substantiallyโ€™ from their current level of 145 per cent, Donald Trump said on Tuesday, adding that โ€˜We are doing fine with China โ€ฆ Weโ€™re going to live together very happily and ideally work togetherโ€™.

What is Xi Jinping planning?

Shanghai port is the busiest in the world. Activity there is closely monitored by financial analysts distrustful of official statistics and looking for clues as to what is really happening in the worldโ€™s second largest economy. For the past few days they will have been taken for a wild ride. First there was mayhem as

Can China win the trade war against the US?

China hit back on Wednesday with an additional 50 per cent tariff on US imports, matching the extra levy imposed overnight by Donald Trump on Chinese goods. That made the running totals 104 per cent so far from Washington, vs 84 per cent from Beijing, prompting one analyst to compare them to two racing cars driving straight

China wonโ€™t win its โ€˜fight to the endโ€™ against Trump

China has accused Washington of โ€˜blackmailโ€™ and said it will โ€˜fight to the endโ€™ after Donald Trump threatened overnight to impose an additional 50 per cent tariff on Chinese imports. At the same time, President Xi Jinping is seeking to present himself as a responsible champion of the international trading system and defender of globalisation

Why Vladimir Putin is afraid of sea cucumbers

Vladivostok, the โ€˜ruler of the Eastโ€™, is preparing to celebrate the 165th anniversary of its founding. City Day, as they call it in the capital of Russiaโ€™s Far East, will see week-long celebrations, including sailing regattas, street performances and an enormous firework display. The naval base, home to Russiaโ€™s Pacific Fleet, usually gets in on

How China exploits the Westโ€™s climate anxiety

In the fight against climate change, China loves to present itself as the worldโ€™s White Knight. Armed with wind turbines and solar panels, EVs and batteries, it will rescue us from oblivion if only we would let it.  Thereโ€™s no shortage of western politicians, academics and organisations who are happy to go along with the

Trumpโ€™s support for Taiwan has infuriated Beijing

They were only six words on a website, but they helped maintain Beijingโ€™s fiction that Taiwan is part of its territory. Their disappearance has infuriated Chinaโ€™s communist leaders. โ€˜It gravely contravenes international law and the basic norms of international relations,โ€™ raged Guo Jiakun, a spokesman for Chinaโ€™s ministry of foreign affairs, on Monday. The website

Trumpโ€™s tariff war with China is just getting started

Over the weekend, Donald Trump described his sweeping 10 per cent tariffs against Chinese goods as an โ€˜opening salvoโ€™. Within minutes of them taking effect at midnight last night, Beijing retaliated with targeted tariffs of its own against US coal, liquified natural gas (LNG), farm equipment and cars. It also announced export controls on a

Labourโ€™s kowtowing to China will cost Britain

When the security services accessed the mobile phone of Yang Tengbo, the alleged Chinese spy who became a confidant and business partner of the Duke of York, they found a document in which Yang said of the duke, โ€˜He is in a desperate situation and will grab onto anythingโ€™. We can only assume there are

What is the point of Rachel Reevesโ€™s visit to Beijing?

The Chinese communist party claims to know a thing or two about humiliation โ€“ the โ€˜century of humiliationโ€™ at the hands of rapacious foreigners is a founding myth of the CCP, which presents itself as a redemptive power. It will no doubt derive some satisfaction in making Rachel Reeves look foolish, as she heads to

Chinaโ€™s hacking frenzy has reached the US Treasury

When Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves visits Beijing in January on a mission to improve โ€˜economic and financial cooperationโ€™ she could well find her hosts surprisingly well informed about the global financial system and Donald Trumpโ€™s plans for it โ€“ thanks to Chinaโ€™s hyperactive and increasingly aggressive army of hackers. Chinese hackers are becoming

How to avoid another Chinese spy scandal

As the fallout continues from the latest China spy scandal, it is hard not to conclude that Labourโ€™s policy on Beijing โ€“ as far as one can be identified โ€“ adds up to appeasement in the vain hope of some economic crumbs from the Emperorโ€™s table. It will certainly be seen by the Chinese Communist

China is getting ready to take on Trump

By one estimate, Chinese military exercises close to Taiwan this week were the largest since 1996, when Beijing attempted unsuccessfully to disrupt the islandโ€™s first fully democratic presidential election. Up to 100 warships were estimated to have taken part in what Taiwanese officials described as a โ€˜significant security challengeโ€™, while Russian warships were also spotted

Assadโ€™s fall is also a blow to Beijing

Russia and Iran kept Bashar al-Assad in power and are the biggest strategic losers from the toppling of his brutal regime. But also spare a thought for Xi Jinping, who used the dubious โ€˜stabilityโ€™ imposed on Syria by Tehran and Moscow to embrace the butcher of Damascus in a bid to extend Beijingโ€™s influence in

The corruption scandal gripping Xi Jinpingโ€™s army

In an effort to create a cutting edge force, the Chinese Communist party (CCP) has spent billions of dollars expanding and modernising its armed forces at a pace rarely seen in peace time. But on the evidence of the last few days, the most cutting edge features of its top ranks remain corruption and political

The paper mills helping China commit scientific fraud

Few people embody the ideal of scientific excellence as much as Albert Einstein. Each year a Berlin-based foundation bearing his name hands out awards for the sort of research that might have made him proud. This week, the individual prize went to Elisabeth Bik, not a conventional boffin, but a sleuth โ€“ a dogged Dutch