August 13, 2025

ICAS Bulletin (online ISSN 2836-3418, print ISSN 2836-340X) is published every other week throughout the year at 1919 M St NW, Suite 310, Washington, DC 20036.
The online version of ICAS Bulletin can be found at chinaus-icas.org/bulletins/.

- What's Going On? -

U.S.- China Trade Truce Extends as Both Sides Seek to Reach Final Deal

U.S. President Donald Trump signs an executive order in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on July 31, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

– On August 11, President Trump extended the tariff pause on Chinese goods for another 90 days on the deadline of the previous pause, which is an expected result from the China-U.S. trade talk in Stockholm. 

– Hours before singing the executive order, Trump demands China to quadruple its soybean purchase from the U.S. to close the trade gap between the two countries as the trade truce deadline approaches. 

– On the other hand, on August 11, it was reported that China seeks the U.S. to relax its export restrictions on high-bandwidth memory chips as part of a potential trade deal.

– Trump remains optimistic about reaching a final trade deal with China, and is willing to visit China before the end of this year only if the deal is struck. 

– Despite trade tensions, China’s export in July has increased more than 7% compared to July last year, exceeding market expectations, and imports increased by 4%, contradicting a fall in forecasts. 

– Chinese exports to Southeast Asia and the EU grew by 16.6% and 9.2% respectively, with slight decreases in imports from the two regions.

– On the contrary to the overall growth in China’s international trade, both China’s exports to and imports from the U.S. fell, with exports decreasing for the fourth consecutive month on a year-on-year basis. 

– Similarly in the U.S., CPI rose 0.2% in July and 2.7% year-on-year with modest tariff impacts, which is below market expectations.

White House Goes from Pillar to Post Over the High-Tech Industry

Jensen Huang, co-founder and CEO of Nvidia Corp., speaks during a news conference in Taipei on May 21, 2025.(Photo by I-HWA CHENG/AFP via Getty Images)

– On August 11, Nvidia and AMD agreed to U.S. president Trump’s demand to pay 15% of their revenue from chip sales to China. Trump had initially demanded 20% from Nvidia but was dropped to 15% after Jensung Huang’s meeting with Trump on August 6. 

– When comparing the H20 to the latest AI chip Blackwell, Trump calls the H20 chip old and obsolete, and he “wouldn’t make a deal” with China on Blackwell without any downgrade. 

– As Nvidia gets U.S. license for export, on August 10, Chinese authorities state that the H20 chip poses security and environmental concerns, and advise firms to reduce the use of less advanced semiconductors. 

– Nvidia rejects the statement over security concerns on the H20 chip in a similar fashion to the previous accusations over “backdoors”. 

– Intel’s CEO Lip-Bu Tan met with Trump on August 11 after Trump demanded the CEO to resign on August 7 due to his ties with China in the past. 

– Trump’s attitude quickly reversed after the emergency meeting, saying Tan’s “success and rise is an amazing story”.

– Earlier on August 6, Senate Intelligence Committee chair Tom Cotton wrote an open letter to Intel’s board chair over concerns about potential national security risks, given Intel’s role in the Secure Enclave defense program. 

– Tan immediately rejected Trump’s accusations by saying that he has always operated within the highest legal and ethical standards, and that Intel is engaging with the administration to provide facts while sharing the president’s commitment to U.S. national and economic security.

Trump and Putin Set to Meet for Peace Talk, without Ukraine Participation

This combination of pictures created on February 21, 2020 shows US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin delivering speeches. (Photo by JIM WATSON,EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP via Getty Images)

– U.S. President Donald Trump is set to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska on August 15, aiming to quickly judge whether a deal can be reached, but without committing to a cease-fire, security guarantees, or continued U.S. military support for Ukraine. Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy is not invited. 

– Reported on August 11, Trump confirmed “land swapping” will be part of the talks with Putin, also expressing frustration at Zelensky’s requirement for constitutional approval of any such deal. 

– Chinese president Xi Jinping reiterates his stance that the Russia-Ukraine conflict should be resolved through peace talks and diplomacy, expressing support for the U.S.-Russia peace talk if it advances a political settlement in a phone call with Putin on August 8.

– Kremlin officials and Russian commentators praised the site selection in Alaska as positive and symbolic, and frame it as an opportunity to strengthen bilateral relations and potentially start a “shared chapter” in the U.S.-Russia history.

– Days before a Trump-Putin meeting, Russian forces have breached Ukraine’s defensive line in Donetsk, threatening key cities and supply routes, as Kyiv rushes reinforcements to the region.

– Earlier on August 5, Zelensky accused Moscow of recruiting foreign mercenaries from China, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and African countries, and vowed that Ukraine would respond. Zelensky has made similar accusations before, which China denied.

Trump Targets Russian Oil Supply to China and India

An oil tankers train passes near the Guwahati Refinery operated by Indian Oil Corporation, in Guwahati. (Photo by BIJU BORO/AFP via Getty Images)

– On August 6, President Trump threatened more punitive tariffs on Russian oil buyers that are similar to the one on India, implying the same could be on China. 

– Indian parliament still hopes to continue trade talks with the U.S. as of August 11, even after President Trump announced the 25% tariff on buying Russian oil, now totaling 50%. 

– On the contrary, there has been an anti-American sentiment among the Indian public, where business executives and Indian Prime Minister Modi’s supporters call for boycotting American brands and buying local. 

– At a gathering in Bengaluru on August 10, Modi urged greater self-reliance, saying that while Indian technology companies make products for the world, it is now time to prioritize India’s needs, without naming any company. 

– As tariffs strain the U.S.-India relationship, India is deepening diplomatic and economic engagement with China and Russia. 

– Prime Minister Modi will visit China for the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation summit that begins on August 31. Meanwhile as of August 6, Indian National Security Adviser Ajit Doval is on a scheduled visit to Russia to discuss oil purchases.

– China defends its energy and trade ties with Moscow as just and legitimate on August 7, pledging to continue them based on national interests while deepening broader economic and security cooperation with Russia.

– China’s crude oil imports from Saudi Arabia will decline in September to about 1.43 million barrels per day, down from a more than two-year high in August, as major Chinese refiners cut purchases following Saudi Aramco’s second consecutive price hike for Asian buyers.

Japan Softens on Sino-Japan Relationship

A large themed flower bed in the shape of a torch is set up along the Chang'an Avenue for the upcoming grand gathering to mark the 80th anniversary of the victory in the Chinese People's War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression and the World Anti-Fascist War concluded on August 12, 2025 in Beijing, China. (Photo by VCG/VCG via Getty Images)

– China completed its first round of rehearsal on the weekend of August 9 for the September 3 military parade celebrating the 80th anniversary of victory over Japan in World War II.

– China has invited descendants of the American Flying Tigers to attend the September 2–3 ceremonies marking the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II, using the historic U.S.-China wartime cooperation as a goodwill gesture amid strained bilateral relations.

– Japan also held its ceremonies commemorating the 80th anniversary of U.S. atomic bombing in Hiroshima and Nagasaki on August 9.

– Head of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in Japan Lee Yi-yang became the first Taiwan official to attend such an event, where he also shook hands with US ambassador to Tokyo George Glass as the two sides reiterated peace in Asia-Pacific.

– Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba has decided not to issue a personal statement on August 15, marking the 80th anniversary of Japan’s surrender in World War II and consider releasing a paper on the topic on September 2 if political conditions allow. 

– Diplomatic sources said on August 10 that Chinese vessels fired at least two warning shots at a Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force destroyer last year when it inadvertently entered Chinese territorial waters near Zhejiang province despite repeated warnings from the Chinese side.

– China insisted that it handles unauthorized entry of foreign military vessels according to its laws, while Japan denied the media report. The Captain of the Japanese destroyer was dismissed for negligence soon after the incident.

- What Are We Reading? -

- What's Happening Around Town? -

- What ICAS Is Up To -

ICAS Expert Voices Initiative

Captain Anurag Bisen on The Arctic: India

August 6, 2025

India, while a non-Arctic state, has expanded its engagement as a stakeholder in the region since releasing its first Arctic Policy in 2022. This EVI explores India’s strategic, scientific, and economic interests in the Arctic, including its work on climate research, emerging shipping routes, and energy cooperation. The discussion examines India’s deepening collaboration with Russia on Arctic projects, its engagement with the United States and other Arctic states, and its positioning relative to other Asian Observer states such as China.

MAP Commentary

Shadow Fleets in the Arctic: Uncharted Waters for Governance and Sanctions

By Nong Hong
August 7, 2025

The Arctic is no longer a remote frontier shielded from the geopolitics of oil and sanctions. As Arctic Today recently reported, more than 30 oil tankers linked to Russia’s so-called “shadow fleet” have transited Norwegian waters in 2024 alone, carrying sanctioned crude from Murmansk and other Arctic ports. This activity—designed to circumvent Western sanctions—reveals the fragility of sanctions regimes and the limitations of international ocean governance in addressing coordinated evasion tactics.

BCCC Commentary

OBBB Leaves Iowa Alone, Yet U.S. Climate Policy Still Needs a Better Path

By Zhangchen Wang
August 6, 2025

The passage of the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” (OBBB) marks a sweeping Republican effort to dismantle much of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), America’s most ambitious climate and industrial policy to date. In doing so, the GOP has once again set climate change policies into a partisan battlefield, framing it as another front in a culture war between progressives and conservatives. However, a complete rolling back of the IRA will discourage emission reduction progress and fail to address climate risks to the United States. More importantly, this backward approach ignores the tangible benefits many IRA policies have already delivered—infrastructure, jobs, investment, and lower energy costs—and risks inflicting lasting harm on the very rural communities that Republicans are devoted to championing. 

BCCC Commentary

From Ethics to Law: The ICJ’s Advisory Opinion on Climate Obligations of States

By Nong Hong
August 5, 2025

On July 23, 2025, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) issued a landmark advisory opinion, adopted unanimously, on the international legal obligations of states concerning climate change. This long-anticipated decision, requested by the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in 2023, and led by a coalition of Pacific island nations spearheaded by Vanuatu, marks a pivotal moment in the legal framing of climate responsibility. For the first time, the ICJ has clarified how existing international law, spanning environmental treaties, customary norms, and human rights obligations, applies to the climate crisis. The opinion brings legal precision to what has long been seen as a domain of political negotiation and moral appeal.

ICAS In the News

On Saturday, August 9, 2025, Research Associate Yilun Zhang was quoted by South China Morning Post on a rare visit by Taiwan officials to Japan for the Hiroshima peace memorial event.

 

  • Taipei was “testing the waters to gain greater international visibility without formally breaching red lines”.
  • Taipei might also “urgently need to reinforce ties with America’s closest ally in Asia to maintain the appearance of strong US backing”.

 

On Monday, August 4, 2025, Senior Fellow Sourabh Gupta was interviewed by CGTN’s The Heat on Trumps firing of BLS Commissioner Erika McEntarfer and Tariffs.

 

  • “My view is they will bend but they will not buckle. The US institutions will carry through. The US puts out reams of quality data across many bureaucracies. If those start getting called into question, it opens up an enormous can of worms in terms of trusting the US just as an investment destination.”

 

On Friday, August 1, 2025, Senior Fellow Sourabh Gupta was interviewed by CGTN’s The Heat on the increased U.S.-China and Taiwan Strait tensions in the aftermath of Speaker Pelosi’s visit.

 

  • “I think the way India is going to move forward handling this is trying to keep convincing Mr. Trump that the offer that is on the table is a good one, and it will try to add to that offer a little bit here and there. But whether this will satisfy Mr. Trump is another question.”
  • “The problem for India is it is already a high tariff country. So it’s much harder for India to get down to 0 tariffs.”

 

On Tuesday, July 31, 2025, Senior Fellow Sourabh Gupta was interviewed by CGTN’s World Insights on how the third round of negotiations in Stockholm are shaping up.

 

  • “I think it is very important for them to meet and meet early. I was hoping that one of the most important deliverables coming out of this meeting in Stockholm is the two sides getting an understanding when their presidents will actually meet. I think very good timing to meet would be just prior to the APEC summit in late October.”
Sourabh Gupta on CGTNs The Heat on August 4, 2025
Sourabh Gupta on CGTNs World Insights on July 31, 2025