
Xi: Bungled spy cases hurt fight to protect intellectual property
Professor Xiaoxing Xi says he's lost confidence in the U.S. government's fight to stop Chinese economic espionage.
Watch CBS News
Professor Xiaoxing Xi says he's lost confidence in the U.S. government's fight to stop Chinese economic espionage.
Sherry Chen says reality didn't sink in until agents labeled her "a prisoner" at the federal courthouse in Dayton, Ohio.
American Xiaoxing Xi, chair of Temple University Physics Department, was wrongly accused of sending American technology to China and worries about his career. Bill Whitaker's report "Collateral Damage" will air Sunday, August 26 at 7 p.m. ET/PT.
China has announced that the country has banned "seductive" photos or videos of people eating bananas online, in an attempt to curb sexually explicit material on the Internet. CNET senior editor Jeff Bakalar joins CBSN with more on China's bizarre ban.
China welcomes a newborn giant panda, the first one of 2016. CBSN's Josh Elliott shows us video of the brand new baby panda.
Giant pandas are a highly-endangered species. There are only about 1,800 in the wild in China, with others cared for in special preserves and zoos around the world. In Washington, D.C., the National Zoo's panda family (including its youngest member) gets almost as much attention as the First Family in the White House. Rita Braver reports.
A weak April jobs report led to stocks going up on Wall Street. Also, a Canadian company that started selling Rocky Mountain air to China last year is opening up for business in the world's most-polluted city. Brook Silva-Braga reports on the day's top MoneyWatch headlines.
President Biden called America's gun violence a national embarrassment after the latest mass shooting. Weijia Jiang has the latest.
Japan is one of the few industrialized nations not sanctioning China for human rights abuses. The U.S. would like that to change.
Heart-stopping video shows a man in China narrowly avoiding a terrifying crash. CBSN's Josh Elliott has the video.
President Obama is back at the White House after a week-long trip in the Middle East and Europe. Charlie Rose spoke to him soon after the president announced 250 additional U.S. troops will be going to Syria to help fight against ISIS. But the president also faces big challenges in Asia, including North Korea and China.
Apparel brands are accusing China of mistreating Uighur Muslims. Meanwhile, pressure is mounting on the Japanese government to confront Beijing's alleged human rights abuses. Foreign correspondent Lucy Craft reports for CBSN.
Weak earnings reports from Google and Microsoft sent shares of both tumbling. Also, Ford will export its new F-150 Raptor to China starting next year. Brook Silva-Braga reports on the day's top MoneyWatch headlines.
5 of the leading pro-democracy voices from the city were sent to prison, but four others, including an 82-year-old former lawmaker, got suspended sentences.
A massive earthquake kills hundreds in Ecuador; a woman could replace Andrew Jackson on the $20 bill; Amazon takes on Netflix. Watch these and more headlines from CBS MoneyWatch
For her first 60 Minutes story, CBS News correspondent Holly Williams travels back to China, a place she once called home.
American actor Jonathan Kos-Read has made a career in Chinese productions. He tells Holly Williams about how his roles have changed, and what it's like making movies on the world's biggest film lot.
Yu Dong, founder and CEO of Chinese studio Bona Film Group, has high hopes for his movies at a growing Chinese box office.
Zhang Zhao is CEO of Le Vision Pictures, one of China's leading studios. He says the movie market may be booming, but there’s still a lot of room to grow.
Christine Lagarde, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, is one of the most powerful leaders in global finance. She pushes for world cooperation, despite fears of economic insecurity and terrorism. Lagarde joins “CBS This Morning" to discuss the importance of regulating shadow banking and her worries about the health of the global economy.
China's film industry has grown so big so fast, that it is now looking to compete with Hollywood. Holly Williams reports on Sunday, Sept. 18 at 7 p.m. ET/PT.
Migrant families and nowhere to put them: How the new DHS chief plans to handle the southern border; then, deadly fentanyl bought online from China being shipped through the mail; and, how NATO and the U.S. are preparing for any Russian aggression off the coast of Norway
Rare metals used in most tech products could be cut off from U.S. by trade war with China; then, how a retired couple won millions using a lottery loophole; and, Samuel L. Jackson: A long, vigorous career still in full stride
Barack Obama on his book, President Trump, George Floyd, the divisions in the country, and more; And, is TikTok a harmless app or a threat to U.S. security?
Families remember loved ones lost to COVID-19; Then, How China is racing to collect Americans’ DNA; And, The big money market for your DNA.
Authorities had been searching for Travis Decker since May 30, when he didn't return his three daughters to their mother's home in Wenatchee, Washington.
The CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, with members appointed by RFK Jr., is meeting to discuss and vote on COVID-19 vaccine recommendations.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio criticized France's decision to recognize a Palestinian state, calling it "reckless" — French President Emmanuel Macron told CBS News the response was "excessive."
The outgoing head of Britain's MI6 spy agency says Russia's Vladimir Putin is "stringing us along," with no interest in a Ukraine peace deal.
In a video that captures the encounter, a student confronts a professor over class curriculum surrounding gender identity.
Republican leaders have ignored pleas from Democrats to negotiate on a plan to avert a shutdown.
A Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives agent shot a person in Aliquippa, Pennsylvania, the city's mayor said.
Overall grocery prices in August 2025 rose 2.7% compared to one year ago, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Price Index.
On Thursday, ABC took Jimmy Kimmel off the air after the FCC chairman hinted at action against ABC over comments the comedian had made about the suspect in Charlie Kirk's killing.