Taiwan, Chip
· 2d
Taiwan’s President Tries to Ease Fears Over U.S. Chip Investment
Taiwan says chipmaker's move to invest $100 billion in the US wasn't because of US pressure
Taiwan President Lai Ching-te and the CEO of Taiwan's largest chipmaker on Thursday held a joint news conference defending TSMC's decision to invest $100 billion in the U.S., saying that it stemmed from customer demand and not out of pressure from the Trump administration.
The World’s Largest Chip Company is Investing $100 Billion
The meeting comes as the White House said it is set to announce a more than $100 billion investment in the United States by a chipmaker from Taiwan, amid a push by Trump to encourage investments in American manufacturing.
The US President was once seen as a strong supporter of Taiwan. Now he is accusing it of stealing from the US.
A longstanding U.S. policy of strategic ambiguity toward Taiwan has—under Trump—begun to breed anxious uncertainty.
· 1d
Trump 2nd term live updates: Trump cancels $400M in grants to Columbia University
Trump administration cancels $400 million in funding to Columbia University
The Education Department is among several agencies cutting funds to the school for allegedly failing to protect Jewish students from antisemitism on campus.
· 2h
Trump Pulled $400 Million From Columbia. Other Schools Could Be Next.
Taiwan, Ukraine and Trump
· 3d
How Taiwan is reacting to Trump's treatment of Ukraine and Zelenskyy
Is Trump's abrupt turn on Ukraine giving Taiwan jitters as China vows to seize the island?
The U.S. is Taiwan's ace in the hole as it faces China's threats, so does Trump's fickle foreign policy fuel concern, or does Taipei have "a better hand"?
As Washington changes course on Ukraine, Taiwan wonders about its own fate
Thousands of miles away from Ukraine, Taiwan is wondering whether it will be the next casualty of the changing moods in Washington, D.C. — and about what they can do to avoid a similar fate.
a Taiwan chipmaker, a White House official confirmed to the Washington Examiner. Trump will announce the investment, which will occur over the next four years, in the Roosevelt Room on Monday ...
4don MSNOpinion
The events of Feb. 28, 2025, generated a sense of shock and dread that resonated with the reaction to Jan. 6, 2020 — a feeling that something terribly wrong and irreversible had just happened to
TSMC is on a slippery slope. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing , the world's largest chipmaker, on Monday pledged $100 billion in fresh funds to build factories in the United States. It also committed to set up a major research and development centre stateside,
The Wall Street Journal reported that the Trump administration is aiming to cut Chinese dominance of the global maritime industry.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results