// Global Analysis Archive
The captured qstheory.cn page is an index of “Xi’s Speeches” highlighting APEC, BRICS, UN climate, women’s leadership, and a key document on the 15th Five-Year Plan recommendations. While the capture lacks full speech text and shows extraction errors, the selection indicates a coordinated narrative centered on openness, sustainability, and development-oriented multilateral engagement.
Source material indicates Xi used the 31 December 2025 New Year address to frame the transition to the 15th Five-Year Plan with emphasis on economic scale, capability-building, and targeted social measures. Parallel messaging on climate governance, APEC regional cooperation, and sovereignty issues suggests continuity in strategic priorities, while the Lunar New Year gathering is described as politically suggestive but under-detailed.
Source reporting argues that Indonesia’s people-centered development rhetoric has not translated into structural protections for Indigenous Peoples, who remain disproportionately exposed to climate impacts and development-related displacement pressures. It highlights climate disinformation and malinformation as enabling factors that legitimize large-scale projects while weakening Indigenous land claims and participation.
The crawled Qiushi English page functions as an index highlighting leadership speeches across major multilateral venues and domestic planning guidance, indicating a coordinated narrative strategy linking development, openness, and sustainability. The extraction appears incomplete and lacks the underlying speech texts and clear timestamps, limiting analysis to agenda-setting signals rather than detailed policy content.
The source portrays Xi Jinping’s 31 December 2025 New Year address as a capstone narrative for the 14th Five-Year Plan and a launch point for priorities tied to the 15th Five-Year Plan. It also highlights intensified Taiwan messaging alongside reported large-scale drills, indicating elevated cross-Strait signaling risks entering 2026.
The December 31, 2025 address frames completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and sets expectations for the 15th, emphasizing high-quality development, innovation-led growth, and targeted social support measures. It also signals continued defense modernization, major infrastructure ambitions, and an expanded set of global governance initiatives alongside firm sovereignty messaging.
The source frames 2025 as the successful completion of China’s 14th Five-Year Plan, citing expected 2025 GDP of about RMB 140 trillion and advances in innovation capacity. It signals 2026 priorities around high-quality development, AI and domestic chips, major national projects, targeted social support, and continued opening and global governance initiatives.
Xi Jinping’s year-end address frames 2025 as a successful close to the 14th Five-Year Plan, highlighting expected GDP scale (RMB 140 trillion), technology advances in AI and chips, and targeted social support measures. It also signals continuity on sovereignty positions and an outward agenda centered on climate commitments and global governance initiatives ahead of the 15th Five-Year Plan.
The source argues that plastic pollution is on track to more than double within 15 years absent systemic change, with rising health, fiscal, and climate impacts and disproportionate burdens on SIDS and vulnerable communities. It highlights the Geneva INC chair election as a key process moment and points to Pew’s 2025 assessment advocating lifecycle measures—from production and design to reuse, waste management, and supply-chain transparency.
The address frames 2025 as the successful conclusion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and sets a mobilizing tone for the 15th Five-Year Plan period beginning in 2026. It emphasizes technology-led high-quality development, targeted social support, selective opening measures, and a stronger global governance narrative alongside reiterated sovereignty positions.
The address frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and signals policy continuity into 2026–2030 centered on high-quality development, innovation, and social welfare measures. It also reiterates China’s openness and climate commitments while emphasizing governance discipline and core national unity positions.
A December 31, 2025 address frames completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and sets the tone for the 15th FYP with emphasis on innovation-led high-quality development, selective social support, and Party conduct. It also reinforces sovereignty narratives on Hong Kong, Macao, and Taiwan while promoting multilateral engagement and updated climate commitments.
China’s year-end address frames 2025 as the completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and projects confidence entering the 15th Five-Year Plan period. The message prioritizes innovation-led high-quality development, targeted social welfare measures, and a more assertive role in global governance and climate commitments while reiterating sovereignty positions.
President Xi’s year-end address frames 2025 as a successful close to the 14th Five-Year Plan, highlighting an expected RMB 140 trillion economy and advances in AI, chips, major infrastructure, and defense modernization. It also sets the tone for the 15th Five-Year Plan with continued emphasis on high-quality development, Party discipline, climate commitments, and a more assertive global governance agenda.
The address frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan, citing an expected RMB 140 trillion economic output and highlighting advances in AI, domestic chip R&D, major infrastructure, and defense modernization. It sets the tone for the 15th Five-Year Plan with emphasis on high-quality development, targeted social support, continued opening-up, climate commitments, and an expanded global governance agenda.
China’s official 2026 New Year message frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan, citing expected 2025 economic output of RMB 140 trillion and highlighting advances in AI, domestic chips, and major national projects. It signals continuity into the 15th Five-Year Plan with emphasis on high-quality development, social welfare measures, openness initiatives such as Hainan customs operations, and a global governance and climate posture amid external turbulence.
President Xi’s Dec. 31, 2025 New Year message frames 2025 as a successful conclusion to the 14th Five-Year Plan and sets 2026 as the launch of the 15th Five-Year Plan focused on high-quality development, reform, and shared prosperity. The speech also reiterates climate commitments, global governance initiatives, and sovereignty-related priorities regarding Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Macao.
Xi Jinping’s 31 December 2025 New Year address links economic confidence, technology upgrading, and social policy signaling with a sharpened narrative of historical inevitability on Taiwan reunification. The speech also highlights summit diplomacy and climate commitments to support China’s positioning in global governance debates.
The Dec 31, 2025 address frames completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and projects 2025 economic output at around RMB 140 trillion while prioritizing innovation, major projects, and social support measures. It also signals continued openness initiatives, updated climate commitments, and a global governance agenda as China enters the 15th Five-Year Plan period in 2026.
The address frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and projects economic output near RMB 140 trillion, while prioritizing AI, domestic chips, strategic infrastructure, and defense modernization. It also signals continuity in governance discipline, targeted social support, selective opening via Hainan, and an active global governance and climate posture entering the 15th Five-Year Plan period.
Xi Jinping’s 2026 New Year message frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and sets expectations for an innovation-driven 15th Five-Year Plan beginning in 2026. The address emphasizes AI and semiconductor progress, major infrastructure and defense capability signaling, targeted social supports, and a continued effort to shape global governance and climate commitments amid heightened geopolitical sensitivities.
The source argues that U.S. aid cuts, climate-policy withdrawal, and new tariffs in 2025 imposed significant economic and governance stress on Pacific island nations and weakened U.S. credibility. It suggests China, Australia, and Japan are moving to fill gaps, but island states are increasingly cautious about debt, sovereignty, and being drawn into major-power competition.
A Dec. 31, 2025 message frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and positions 2026 as the launch of the 15th, emphasizing high-quality development, reform and opening-up, and shared prosperity. It also highlights climate commitments and global governance initiatives while reiterating priorities on national unity and Party self-governance.
The message frames 2025 as the successful completion of China’s 14th Five-Year Plan, citing expected GDP of RMB 140 trillion and advances in innovation, defense modernization, and social support measures. It sets 2026–2030 priorities around high-quality development, deeper reform and opening, technology upgrading (AI and chips), and an external posture emphasizing climate commitments and global governance initiatives.
The message frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and sets a baseline for the 15th Five-Year Plan beginning in 2026. It emphasizes innovation-driven industrial upgrading, major national projects, targeted social support measures, and an external agenda combining opening-up, climate commitments, and global governance initiatives.
The captured qstheory.cn page is an index of “Xi’s Speeches” highlighting APEC, BRICS, UN climate, women’s leadership, and a key document on the 15th Five-Year Plan recommendations. While the capture lacks full speech text and shows extraction errors, the selection indicates a coordinated narrative centered on openness, sustainability, and development-oriented multilateral engagement.
Source material indicates Xi used the 31 December 2025 New Year address to frame the transition to the 15th Five-Year Plan with emphasis on economic scale, capability-building, and targeted social measures. Parallel messaging on climate governance, APEC regional cooperation, and sovereignty issues suggests continuity in strategic priorities, while the Lunar New Year gathering is described as politically suggestive but under-detailed.
Source reporting argues that Indonesia’s people-centered development rhetoric has not translated into structural protections for Indigenous Peoples, who remain disproportionately exposed to climate impacts and development-related displacement pressures. It highlights climate disinformation and malinformation as enabling factors that legitimize large-scale projects while weakening Indigenous land claims and participation.
The crawled Qiushi English page functions as an index highlighting leadership speeches across major multilateral venues and domestic planning guidance, indicating a coordinated narrative strategy linking development, openness, and sustainability. The extraction appears incomplete and lacks the underlying speech texts and clear timestamps, limiting analysis to agenda-setting signals rather than detailed policy content.
The source portrays Xi Jinping’s 31 December 2025 New Year address as a capstone narrative for the 14th Five-Year Plan and a launch point for priorities tied to the 15th Five-Year Plan. It also highlights intensified Taiwan messaging alongside reported large-scale drills, indicating elevated cross-Strait signaling risks entering 2026.
The December 31, 2025 address frames completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and sets expectations for the 15th, emphasizing high-quality development, innovation-led growth, and targeted social support measures. It also signals continued defense modernization, major infrastructure ambitions, and an expanded set of global governance initiatives alongside firm sovereignty messaging.
The source frames 2025 as the successful completion of China’s 14th Five-Year Plan, citing expected 2025 GDP of about RMB 140 trillion and advances in innovation capacity. It signals 2026 priorities around high-quality development, AI and domestic chips, major national projects, targeted social support, and continued opening and global governance initiatives.
Xi Jinping’s year-end address frames 2025 as a successful close to the 14th Five-Year Plan, highlighting expected GDP scale (RMB 140 trillion), technology advances in AI and chips, and targeted social support measures. It also signals continuity on sovereignty positions and an outward agenda centered on climate commitments and global governance initiatives ahead of the 15th Five-Year Plan.
The source argues that plastic pollution is on track to more than double within 15 years absent systemic change, with rising health, fiscal, and climate impacts and disproportionate burdens on SIDS and vulnerable communities. It highlights the Geneva INC chair election as a key process moment and points to Pew’s 2025 assessment advocating lifecycle measures—from production and design to reuse, waste management, and supply-chain transparency.
The address frames 2025 as the successful conclusion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and sets a mobilizing tone for the 15th Five-Year Plan period beginning in 2026. It emphasizes technology-led high-quality development, targeted social support, selective opening measures, and a stronger global governance narrative alongside reiterated sovereignty positions.
The address frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and signals policy continuity into 2026–2030 centered on high-quality development, innovation, and social welfare measures. It also reiterates China’s openness and climate commitments while emphasizing governance discipline and core national unity positions.
A December 31, 2025 address frames completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and sets the tone for the 15th FYP with emphasis on innovation-led high-quality development, selective social support, and Party conduct. It also reinforces sovereignty narratives on Hong Kong, Macao, and Taiwan while promoting multilateral engagement and updated climate commitments.
China’s year-end address frames 2025 as the completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and projects confidence entering the 15th Five-Year Plan period. The message prioritizes innovation-led high-quality development, targeted social welfare measures, and a more assertive role in global governance and climate commitments while reiterating sovereignty positions.
President Xi’s year-end address frames 2025 as a successful close to the 14th Five-Year Plan, highlighting an expected RMB 140 trillion economy and advances in AI, chips, major infrastructure, and defense modernization. It also sets the tone for the 15th Five-Year Plan with continued emphasis on high-quality development, Party discipline, climate commitments, and a more assertive global governance agenda.
The address frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan, citing an expected RMB 140 trillion economic output and highlighting advances in AI, domestic chip R&D, major infrastructure, and defense modernization. It sets the tone for the 15th Five-Year Plan with emphasis on high-quality development, targeted social support, continued opening-up, climate commitments, and an expanded global governance agenda.
China’s official 2026 New Year message frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan, citing expected 2025 economic output of RMB 140 trillion and highlighting advances in AI, domestic chips, and major national projects. It signals continuity into the 15th Five-Year Plan with emphasis on high-quality development, social welfare measures, openness initiatives such as Hainan customs operations, and a global governance and climate posture amid external turbulence.
President Xi’s Dec. 31, 2025 New Year message frames 2025 as a successful conclusion to the 14th Five-Year Plan and sets 2026 as the launch of the 15th Five-Year Plan focused on high-quality development, reform, and shared prosperity. The speech also reiterates climate commitments, global governance initiatives, and sovereignty-related priorities regarding Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Macao.
Xi Jinping’s 31 December 2025 New Year address links economic confidence, technology upgrading, and social policy signaling with a sharpened narrative of historical inevitability on Taiwan reunification. The speech also highlights summit diplomacy and climate commitments to support China’s positioning in global governance debates.
The Dec 31, 2025 address frames completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and projects 2025 economic output at around RMB 140 trillion while prioritizing innovation, major projects, and social support measures. It also signals continued openness initiatives, updated climate commitments, and a global governance agenda as China enters the 15th Five-Year Plan period in 2026.
The address frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and projects economic output near RMB 140 trillion, while prioritizing AI, domestic chips, strategic infrastructure, and defense modernization. It also signals continuity in governance discipline, targeted social support, selective opening via Hainan, and an active global governance and climate posture entering the 15th Five-Year Plan period.
Xi Jinping’s 2026 New Year message frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and sets expectations for an innovation-driven 15th Five-Year Plan beginning in 2026. The address emphasizes AI and semiconductor progress, major infrastructure and defense capability signaling, targeted social supports, and a continued effort to shape global governance and climate commitments amid heightened geopolitical sensitivities.
The source argues that U.S. aid cuts, climate-policy withdrawal, and new tariffs in 2025 imposed significant economic and governance stress on Pacific island nations and weakened U.S. credibility. It suggests China, Australia, and Japan are moving to fill gaps, but island states are increasingly cautious about debt, sovereignty, and being drawn into major-power competition.
A Dec. 31, 2025 message frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and positions 2026 as the launch of the 15th, emphasizing high-quality development, reform and opening-up, and shared prosperity. It also highlights climate commitments and global governance initiatives while reiterating priorities on national unity and Party self-governance.
The message frames 2025 as the successful completion of China’s 14th Five-Year Plan, citing expected GDP of RMB 140 trillion and advances in innovation, defense modernization, and social support measures. It sets 2026–2030 priorities around high-quality development, deeper reform and opening, technology upgrading (AI and chips), and an external posture emphasizing climate commitments and global governance initiatives.
The message frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and sets a baseline for the 15th Five-Year Plan beginning in 2026. It emphasizes innovation-driven industrial upgrading, major national projects, targeted social support measures, and an external agenda combining opening-up, climate commitments, and global governance initiatives.
| ID | Title | Category | Date | Views | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RPT-3224 | Qiushi Index Signals China’s Priority Messaging: APEC, BRICS, Climate, and the 15th Five-Year Plan | China | 2026-03-28 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-1312 | Xi’s 14th-to-15th Five-Year Plan Pivot: Economic Scale, Social Signaling, and Sovereignty Messaging | China Politics | 2026-02-18 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-416 | Indonesia’s People-Centered Development Narrative Meets Indigenous Climate Vulnerability | Indonesia | 2026-01-30 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-218 | Qiushi’s “Xi’s Speeches” Hub Signals Priority Themes Across APEC, BRICS, Climate, and Five-Year Planning | China | 2026-01-26 | 1 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-2445 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Address: Five-Year Plan Transition and Sharpened Taiwan Signaling | China Politics | 2025-12-17 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-2187 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th Five-Year Plan Continuity, Tech Autonomy Push, and Expanded Global Governance Narrative | China | 2025-12-06 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-487 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals Innovation-First Growth and a Managed Transition to the 15th Five-Year Plan | China | 2025-12-06 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-2686 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th Five-Year Plan Priorities: Innovation, Social Stabilization, and Global Governance | China | 2025-12-02 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-742 | Global Plastics Treaty at an Inflection Point: Lifecycle Controls, Equity Pressures, and 2040 Climate Stakes | Plastic Pollution | 2025-11-26 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-2866 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th Five-Year Plan Priorities: Innovation, Openness, and National Capability | Five-Year Plan | 2025-11-17 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-856 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals Innovation-Led Continuity Into the 15th Five-Year Plan | China | 2025-11-16 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-2174 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th FYP Continuity: Innovation Drive, Social Stabilizers, and Sovereignty Messaging | China | 2025-11-07 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-1499 | China’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th Five-Year Plan Priorities: Innovation, Welfare, and Global Governance | China | 2025-11-03 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-2251 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th Five-Year Plan Priorities: AI, Self-Reliance, and Governance Reform | China | 2025-10-20 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-636 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th Five-Year Plan Priorities: Innovation, Welfare, and Global Governance | Five-Year Plan | 2025-10-15 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-2126 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th Five-Year Plan Priorities: Innovation, Major Projects, and Continued Opening | China | 2025-10-06 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-2106 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th Five-Year Plan Priorities and Global Governance Push | China Policy | 2025-10-03 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-3049 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Address: Inevitability Messaging on Taiwan and Confidence Signaling for the 15th Five-Year Plan | China | 2025-09-06 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-2447 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals Innovation-Led Growth and a Strong Start to the 15th Five-Year Plan | Five-Year Plan | 2025-08-25 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-1497 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals Innovation-Led Growth and a Disciplined Start to the 15th Five-Year Plan | Five-Year Plan | 2025-08-19 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-1357 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th FYP Continuity, Tech Self-Reliance, and Global Governance Push | China | 2025-08-18 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-212 | Pacific Islands Under Trump 2.0: Aid Retrenchment, Tariff Shock, and a Sharpening Contest for Influence | Pacific Islands | 2025-08-12 | 1 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-2186 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals Continuity Into the 15th Five-Year Plan | China Policy | 2025-08-11 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-2427 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th Five-Year Plan Priorities: Innovation, Strategic Infrastructure, and Managed Opening | China | 2025-07-28 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-2175 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals Innovation-Led Modernization and a Strong Start to the 15th Five-Year Plan | Five-Year Plan | 2025-07-27 | 0 | ACCESS » |