The war marks the president's fourth visit, who intends that his fluent dialogue pave the way for Chinese investments in Spain and the EU trade negotiation. Pedro Sánchez is back in China. Starting this Monday, he will deploy a top-level agenda that is not new, which he has repeated four times since 2023. The King and Queen were also there last November, completing a repeated sequence of visits and meetings that express Spain's commitment to prioritizing ties with the world's second power amid tension with the United States. In that framework, the Chinese press has placed the visit, highlighting that "Madrid needs to expand its network of partnerships to counterbalance Washington." Sánchez returns to the places and interlocutors of previous years, but in a different context. With the world waiting to see if there is any room for dialogue between the United States and Iran and the Spanish president as a European figure of "no to war," the head of the government will once again ...