Eye on China | Anushka Saxena
Taiwan's Kuomintang (KMT) party caucus recently challenged Premier Cho Jung-tai over the operationalization of a labor migration agreement with India, signed in February 2024. This opposition, while partly political theater, highlights significant Taiwanese societal anxieties regarding immigration, particularly concerning the influx of Indian workers into "3K" jobs (dirty, dangerous, demanding). Public sentiment, evidenced by a petition with over 40,000 signatures, expresses concerns about social security, which the KMT leverages by citing Indian crime data to raise security issues. Despite Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) legislator Rosalia Wu's efforts to counter stereotypical arguments, Taiwan's limited immigration experience makes immediate acceptance difficult. For Delhi, the labor MoU alone is insufficient; a large-scale public diplomacy campaign targeting both Taiwanese citizens and policymakers is crucial to ensure Indian workers feel accommodated. While the KMT's opposition appears policy-specific rather than a broader hostility towards India, its "dialogue-over-deterrence" stance with China could indirectly reduce cooperation with India, impacting investments and labor mobility. India's ties with Taiwan have seen significant momentum under the DPP's New Southbound Policy, attracting major Taiwanese companies like Foxconn and PSMC. Delhi must monitor KMT's performance in Taiwan's upcoming 2026 mid-term elections, as a stronger KMT could present a more apathetic actor for India in 2028, potentially hindering institutional interlinkages built with the current DPP administration.
Iran has rapidly restarted drone production during a six-week ceasefire, indicating its military industrial base is reconstituting much faster than US intelligence initially estimated, challenging claims about the long-term degradation from US-Israeli strikes. This swift rebuilding, including missile sites, launchers, and key weapons production capacity, means Iran remains a significant regional threat, particularly if President Donald Trump resumes bombing campaigns.
The U.S. Pentagon reportedly plans to scale back its troop presence on the European Continent.
United States military aid to Egypt requires immediate and thorough congressional scrutiny to determine the precise returns on these significant financial investments. The core policy question centers on what U.S.
military dollars are effectively purchasing in Egypt, highlighting a critical need for transparency and accountability within the bilateral defense relationship.
Ukraine has significantly enhanced its air defense capabilities against Russia's sustained aerial assaults, intercepting 94% of long-range drones and 73% of missiles in a recent 48-hour period, a marked improvement from 55% in May 2025. This layered system integrates Western-supplied Patriot missiles with innovative home-grown solutions, including mobile fire teams and cheap, mass-produced interceptor drones.
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Governments worldwide are failing to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, causing the 2015 Paris agreement's goal of limiting global temperature rise to become increasingly unattainable.
Norway's offshore shipping emissions targets, which are stricter than FuelEU Maritime, are poised to render much of the current fleet non-compliant by 2029. The escalation of conflict across the Middle East
The recent Trump-Xi summit in Beijing, the first since 2017, publicly addressed trade, Taiwan, and the Iran conflict, but largely omitted critical U.S.-China technology competition dynamics.