Why China Is Confident About a War with the US

War is physical and China has far superior physical capabilities
by Hua Bin via The Unz Review 

In part one of the essay, I have touched on the critical asymmetries in Chinese and US capabilities in a shooting war.
I discussed China’s asymmetric advantages in geography, will to fight, military preparedness, as well as the knowledge and intelligence of commanders and soldiers.
In this second part, I will focus on the most critical capability gap between the two – the physical capability for
war fighting.
This is the material aspect that determines winning and losing, regardless empty rhetorics and biased beliefs. The term physical capability means what each belligerent can bring to the fight in terms of weapons, their quality and quantity, the speed they can be produced and replenished, and how much they would cost.
In short, we are talking about who can sustain a high intensity conflict with superior weaponry as well as superior industrial scale, speed, and cost.
The winner is going to be the one with the superior physical capabilities in war fighting and war production –the most fundamental material aspect of wars.

Asymmetry in Physical Capabilities

China will prevail, in the final analysis, because it enjoys vastly superior physical capabilities over the US.
The confidence is built upon physical reality – China’s ability to make everything needed for such a war, make a lot of them, and make them cheaply and quickly.
I’ll let data and facts to make the case. To do that, I have inserted a large number of hyperlinks to specialist websites on the technical and military subjects covered.
For those interested in technical details, I encourage you to click on the links. Otherwise, you only need to read the headline summaries.
Everyone is aware the US and China are the two largest economies in the world. Many use the size of the economies as proxies for national power.
However, two critical differences exist between the two countries. They serve as the fundamental macro context to understand the physical capability gap between the two states.
First difference is the composition of the two economies. Simply put, China has an industrial economy while the US has a financialized economy. The implication of this difference on physical capabilities is enormous.
Second difference is state capacity in mobilization and execution of large physical projects, including war.
China is led by engineers while the US by lawyers and bankers.
On one side, the leaders are problem solvers; on the other side, the leaders are friction creators and profiteers.
The difference in leadership has implications on how war is prepared and prosecuted.

Industrial power vs. financial power

At market exchange rate, the US economy is $30 trillion vs. China’s $20 trillion. At purchasing power parity,
China’s economy is between 30% to 60% bigger than the US, according to most experts including CIA and the World Bank.
30% of Chinese economy is manufacturing vs. 10% in the US. China’s manufacturing value added is 35% of global total vs. US at 12%, even at nominal value.
China’s merchandise trade surplus reached $1.2 trillion in 2025 while the US ran a deficit of $1.1 trillion.
The US economy is service based and over 85% of GDP come from sectors such as FIRE (finance, insurance and real estate)
Healthcare (accounting for 18% GDP alone) Retail and distribution (i.e. selling stuff that others make) Software and technology
Business services (legal, accounting, advertising, etc.)
Hospitality Education Media & entertainment Imputed value (6% GDP such as hypothetical rental value of owner-occupied housing; China doesn’t count accounting entry such as imputation in GDP calculation).
The US runs a large service trade surplus with the rest of the world, mainly in technology exports and finance.
The service economy may provide good-paying white-collar jobs. But its value is often untradable and easily inflated.
Service sector size accounts for the difference between Chinese and US economies. This is the economic sector that is the most difficult to make apple to apple comparisons.
An American Uber driver provides exactly the same service as a Chinese Didi driver but makes 5 or 6 times the pay.
Healthcare in China accounts for 7% of GDP vs. 18% in the US but life expectancy is longer in China.
Education is mostly public and basically free in China, including university education. It accounts for a tiny percentage of GDP contribution but China graduates 12.5 million college students a year vs. 2.1 million in the US.
Apart from making comparisons difficult, such service-based economic activities are largely intangible and useless in national emergencies and wars.
On the other hand, China’s economy is much more physical and tangible with dominant positions in most of the world’s industrial sectors from steel making, chemical production, electricity generation, machinery, electronics, ship building, automotive, solar, battery, construction, pharmaceuticals, to mining and refining minerals.
In most industrial categories, China is the world’s leading producer, often producing more than the rest of the world combined (e.g. ship building, drones, mobile phone, computer, humanoids, electric vehicle, solar panels, as well as most categories of critical minerals – to name a few).
Look around your house and find out how many things are either made in China or made with intermediary goods from China.
Service sector accounts for just 55% of Chinese economy.
In essence, China has a fundamentally different and more substantive economy from the US.
A superficial nominal GDP comparison fails to highlight the gap in true national power.
China has mastery over atoms while the US has mastery over bits. China is far closer to the US in the mastery of bits than the US is to China over atoms. It is also closing any gap much faster.
Wars are physical. In any shooting wars that feature cost exchange and scale, China’s physical advantages over the US and its vassals are insurmountable.
An imperfect analogy – the US today is like a former champion boxer who has switched to painting and writing poetry in the last 40 years while China has been spending his day in the gym pumping iron.
A wise man once said Machiavellian and Warren Buffet will be knocked cold by Mike Tyson in a fist fight.
In a boxing match, it doesn’t matter how many tricks or how much money you have. What matters is the ability to deliver physical impact.

Physical capabilities gap

In nearly all physical sectors, China enjoys vast superiority in scale, speed, and cost. The differential is getting bigger over time.
These include – Infrastructure – building roads, bridges, ports, tunnels, etc.

One such example is the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore that was damaged by a container ship
in a 2024 accident.
The 2.6 kilometer basic steel truss bridge over the Patapsco River is expected to take 6 years and $5.2 billion to rebuild.
Compare that with the Hong Kong-Macau-Zhuhai Bridge in southern China, the world’s longest sea-crossing bridge-tunnel system.
The engineering marvel is 55 kilometers long, including 23 km bridge sections, 6.7 km underwater tunnel, 25 km connecting viaducts and artificial islands.
It is designed to withstand magnitude 8 earthquakes and super-typhoons with a lifespan of 120 years. It took Beijing 9 years and RMB127 billion ($19 billion) to construct. It opened in 2018 and this month welcomed its 1-billionth passenger (there are customs checkpoint to record the coming and goings).
Transportation – China owns 8,000 merchant ships vs. US’s 177. According to US Navy Secretary John Phelan, China had around 1,800 ships under construction in 2022. The US had 5. China’s share of global shipping order is 71%.
Since 2005, China built 50,000 kilometers high-speed rail. The global total, including China, is 60,000. The US has zero.
China produced 34.5 million automobiles in 2025, including 16.6 million EVs; the US produced 10 million cars including 1.5 million EVs Electricity – China’s total electricity generation reached 10.6 trillion kilowatt-hours (kWh) in 2025 vs. US generation of 4.2 trillion kWh, according to the US Energy Information Administration.
The agency reported that China added 445 gigawatts of power capacity in the first 11 months of 2025 while the US was projected to add 64 GW in 2025.
China’s annual electricity consumption growth is equal to the total annual production of Germany. And China is adding TWO Germany’s worth of generation capacity every year.
China has 36,000 kilometers Ultra High Voltage (UHV) transmission lines vs. 0 in the US.
State Grid, the world’s 3 largest corporation by revenue behind Walmart and Amazon, just announced a RMB4 trillion ($574 billion) investment plan over the next 5 years to upgrade its grids and boost renewables as AI demand accelerates energy usage.
China produces over 50% global electricity generation supply chain from prime movers, generators, transformers, capacitators, circuit breakers, switches, power compensators, to inverters and converters.
Nearly all of above items need to be imported in the US Energy – the US is the world’s largest producer of fossil fuel; while China dominates green energy production – 80% of global solar and battery supply, 65% of wind turbines, and 31% of hydro power
High tech hardware – China accounts for over 50% global electronics, smart phone, computer, smart home device, robot, drone, and humanoid production.
For example, Hangzhou-based startup Unitree delivered 5,500 humanoid robots in 2025, compared with the leading US makers Tesla, Figure AI, and Agility Robotics who each shipped roughly 150 units.
Machinery/equipment – China is the top producer of cranes, tunnel boring machines, mining and refining equipment, MRI machine, computer numerical control machine, fibre optic cable (including those used by Ukraine’s drones)
Mining and refining of critical minerals – China dominates rare earth and other critical minerals for high tech production, green transition, and defense such as polysilicon, gallium, tungsten, germanium, cobalt, graphite, lithium, nickel, copper, and artificial diamonds.
Pharmaceuticals – China dominates the global market for key starting materials (KSMs) and active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs).
China controls 60-80% global API market, especially generic APIs such as antibiotics, pain killers, and cardiovascular drugs.
China accounts for 60-75% global supply of KSMs, particularly for complex, multi-step syntheses where cost efficiency and scale matter.
If a war breaks out between the US and China, US hospitals need to find new suppliers for 95% of their antibiotics.
Traditional heavy industry – in steel, cement, bulk chemicals, building materials, China’s production is often 10 times or more than the US.
Tech infrastructure – according to Gemini, China deployed 3.4 million 5G base stations by the end of 2024, or 60% global total vs. 200,000 in the US; China installed 10.3 million public EV charging stations by end of 2024, or 70% global total vs. 220,000 in the US
Urban development – there are 145 Chinese cities with population of 1 million and over vs. 11 in the US.
Even with their 4X population size difference, China has a well-publicized “housing overcapacity issue” known as “ghost towns” (too many empty houses); while the US has an equally well-known “homeless” problem or should I say, correctly, “unhoused” problem.
Military hardware – the US delivers 1.6 to 2 destroyer a year (Arleigh Burke class) while 4 11,000-ton Type 055 hulls are built side-by-side simultaneously in one shipyard in Shanghai.
China is building 16 Type 093B nuclear attack submarines at the same time while the US produces 1.2 a year when Navy budget requires 2.3 per year.
China is test flying 3 separate 6 generation fighters since December 2024. The J-36 has flown 3 variants already. The US NGAD F-47 6 gen fighter is forecast to fly its first prototype by 2028 at the earliest.
As the US air force is still conceptualizing collaborative combat aircraft (CCA), China has fielded numerous autonomous unmanned “loyal wingman” drones already, including GJ-11, GJ-21, Anjia, FH-97A, CH-7, etc.

Anecdotal cases show the same pattern

The data comparison I listed may be a bit drab. A couple of anecdotal cases could be more illustrative.
In June 2024, 2 US astronauts were stranded on the International Space Station when NASA’s Starliner suffered thruster failures and helium leaks.
Instead of the original one week mission, they were forced to stay for 9 months before a SpaceX capsule came to their rescue in March 2025.
In November 2025, 3 Chinese Taikonauts on Shenzhou-20 mission were similarly stranded on the Tiangong Space Station when their return capsule was hit by space debris. What happened next couldn’t be more different.
China’s Manned Space Agency (CMSA) sent a replacement spacecraft to return them home. Their stay was extended by a mere 9 days.
After undergoing on-orbit internal repairs, the empty Shenzhou-20 capsule was undocked and successfully returned to earth on January 19, 2026.

Another example is more personal.

I just bought my first EV made by Shanghai Automotive (SAIC) – a MG IM L6 model. It is a mid-market 5-seater SUV and cost about RMB135,000 after promotions ($19,300).
My last ICE car – a 2012 Maserati Quattroporte (4.7L, Ferrari F136 V8 engine) – cost RMB2,450,000 ($338,000).
The Quattroporte is a beauty and a beast. It has 430 horsepower and can reach top speed of 285 km/h. The car can accelerate from 0 to 100 km/h in 5.1 seconds.
I didn’t buy the IM L6 for speed or thrill. It’s a family car. However, I am pleasantly surprised to find out the IM L6 has maximum power output of 570 kW, equal to 775 horsepower.
Its 0 to 100 acceleration is 2.7 seconds and top speed 300 km/h.
Weirdly, my mid-market sports utility electric vehicle has a higher power and speed than the Maserati Quattroporte.
These anecdotal examples may not be relevant to a discussion about wars but should give people a sense of China’s physical capabilities.
The West’s industrial dependency on China China’s chokehold on rare earth elements (REEs) is a well-established fact by now. Beijing enjoys virtual monopoly in rare earth refining and magnet production, particularly the most valuable heavy rare earth.
But the REEs chokehold is merely the tip of the iceberg. China is the dominant global producer in a wide range of critical minerals and commodity products such as antibiotics.
It also has a significant position in the global semiconductor supply chain, especially in the mature nodes such as those found in automotive, electronics, and smart home devices.
The recent case of Chinese-owned Netherlands-based Nexperia is a case in point.
When the Dongguan chip packaging facility embargoed Europe auto makers for the illegal Dutch government capture of Nexperia’s European operations, most European automakers such as VW were on the verge of stopping their assembly lines.
The West depends on Chinese intermediate goods and capital equipment for a wide range of its own industrial production and green transition.
Even if there are supply sources the West can switch to, it will likely incur massive capital expenditure and uffer a significant cost increase – at a time when the collective west is still struggling with inflation.

Examples of China’s physical superiority

In this part, I’ll simply list a random batch of tech and military news headlines that are in my inbox from the past week to illustrate China’s physical superiority and military rise.
You can click into the hyperlinks for further details.
The links to military tech reporting are to give a flavor of the pace and scale of Chinese mil-tech innovations.
Xiaomi beat Ferrari supercar in straight-line drag race test (by Interesting Engineering)
https://interestingengineering.com/transportation/xiaomi-ev-beats-ferrari-sf90-xx
China deploys the world’s first megawatt-level airborne windmill (by Interesting Engineering)
https://interestingengineering.com/energy/worlds-first-megawatt-airship-rises-6560-ft
China builds the world’s most powerful “hyper-gravity machine” that compresses space and time (by Futurism)
https://futurism.com/robots-and-machines/china-builds-hypergravity-centrifuge
China just launched the world’s most complex railway project for $50 billion – 1,800 km Sichuan-Tibet high
speed rail line to be built at 4,000 meter altitude (by Click Petrol & Gas)
https://en.clickpetroleoegas.com.br/China-mobilizes-thousands-of-engineers-to-altitudes-above-4-000-
meters–cutting-through-entire-mountains-to-open-1-600-km-of-tunnels-and-viaducts.-vml97/
China files plan to send 200,000 satellites into orbit (by ZME Science)
https://www.zmescience.com/future/china-just-filed-plans-for-200000-satellites/
Researchers at National University of Defense Technology accelerates a 1-ton train to 700 km/h in 2 seconds
using electric maglev technology (by Click Petrol & Gas)
https://en.clickpetroleoegas.com.br/asaf04-asaf04-5/
Alibaba’s Qwen leads global open-source AI with 700 million downloads (by China News Agency)
https://english.news.cn/20260113/004b0522f987475cbf83ffc3a8d009aa/c.html
China’s secret lithography project challenges ASML’s monopoly (by IDN Financials)
https://www.idnfinancials.com/news/59732/chinas-secret-lithography-project-challenges-asmls-monopoly
World turning to China for efficient, low cost, and customizable AI (by ZD Net)
https://www.zdnet.com/article/china-open-ai-models-versus-us-llms-power-performance-compared/
China dominates global humanoid market with over 80% of installations (by South China Morning Post)
https://www.scmp.com/tech/big-tech/article/3340142/china-dominates-global-humanoid-robot-market-over-
80-installations?
share=raDAZCPx7WHUx%2BK906GVUYj7syx4%2FMctgZDlNT5O08bKeOhWZAYqKe9dpmSKCawLYXswmYRbCD
China’s nuclear submarine fleet overtakes Russia as production surges (by Military Watch)
https://militarywatchmagazine.com/article/china-nuclear-submarine-production-surge
China develops Type 096 ballistic missile subs to challenge US Ohio-class and future Columbia-class subs (by
Army Recognition)
https://www.armyrecognition.com/news/navy-news/2026/china-develops-type-096-ballistic-missilesubmarine-
to-challenge-us-undersea-nuclear-deterrence
China’s 3 J-36 sixth generation fighter completes test flight (by Defense rd Security Asia)
https://defencesecurityasia.com/en/china-j36-sixth-generation-fighter-third-prototype-milestone-flight-test/
J-10 fighter seen equipped with YJ-21 hypersonic anti-ship missile (by Army Recognition)
https://www.armyrecognition.com/news/aerospace-news/2025/chinas-j-10-fighter-seen-with-possible-yj-21ehypersonic-
anti-ship-missile-in-new-images
China’s supercooled radar chips boost stealth jet detection range by 40% (by Interesting Engineering)
https://interestingengineering.com/military/chinas-supercooling-tech-boosts-radar-chips-performance
Chinese cargo ship packed with modular missile launchers (by The War Zone)
https://www.twz.com/sea/chinese-cargo-ship-packed-full-of-modular-missile-launchers-emerges
Chinese cargo ship (same one as above) with electromagnetic drone launcher and vertical missile cells (by US
Navy Institute)
https://news.usni.org/2026/01/07/chinese-merchant-ship-sports-electromagnetic-drone-launcher-verticallaunching-
systems
Chinese Navy fields intercontinental anti-ship hypersonic missile capable of reaching US west coast (by US Navy
Institute)
https://news.usni.org/2025/12/26/chinese-forces-fielding-intercontinental-anti-ship-ballistic-missilescapable-
of-reaching-u-s-west-coast-pentagon-says
China’s DF-27A hypersonic missile with strike range between 8,000 to 9,000 kilometers at average speed of Mach
8.6 (by Defense Security Asia)
https://defencesecurityasia.com/en/china-df-27a-hypersonic-missile-test-mach-8-indo-pacific/
China’s ultra long range sixth-gen fighter marks milestone with third prototype model (by Military Watch
Magazine)
https://militarywatchmagazine.com/article/china-ultra-long-range-sixth-gen-milestone-flight\
China deploys high-power microwave weapon against drone swarms (by Army Recognition)
https://www.armyrecognition.com/news/army-news/2026/china-deploys-hurricane-3000-microwave-weaponfor-
operational-counter-drone-warfare
Chinese scientists develop supercooling to boost the performance of gallium nitride (GaN) radar systems by 40%
(by South China Morning Post)
(GaN-based AESA radar is the world’s most advanced radar system and widely used in China’s stealth planes and
navy ships as well as ground stations)
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3340053/chinas-supercooling-tech-packs-40-more-punchchips-
used-military-radar?
share=yNY9w3aw1QXLsZrGkrWhP60POB7SWXw62KlWFTUNAeimtWvG%2FLKtPgXFUhhY5jk%2FdfEWkQcsIO%
China will field 1,000 J-20 heavy stealth fighters by 2030 (by Military Watch)
https://militarywatchmagazine.com/article/china-1000-j20-stealth-2030-rusi
Scientists invent 6G surface to turn enemy radar beams into energy for stealth jets (by Interesting Engineering)
https://interestingengineering.com/military/china-6g-surface-turn-radar-beam-power
Military air logistics revolution with unmanned cargo planes (by Military Watch)
https://militarywatchmagazine.com/article/china-leads-air-logistics-revolution-tianma1000
China’s vision for future air war – space aircraft carrier (by Biship Strow)
https://www.bishopstrow.com/18-166299-china-unveils-its-vision-of-future-war-with-space-aircraft-carriersome-
pieces-are-already-in-place-trending/

Examples of US military capability gaps

In contrast with the accelerating Chinese military and technological innovations, the US military is encountering numerous challenges in its physical capabilities.
An example of the widening gap with China is the US Navy’s surface combatant failures.
A basic Google Gemini search on “failed US surface combatant programs in the past 2 decades” turns out the below results –
In the past two decades, the U.S. Navy has faced significant challenges with its surface combatant acquisition, resulting in several programs being truncated, restructured, or canceled due to cost overruns and design instabilities.

Major Failed or Truncated Programs

Constellation-class Frigate (FFG-62): Canceled in November 2025 after only the first two ships were under construction. Although intended to be a low-risk design based on the European FREMM, extensive modifications led to design instability and cost ballooning. The Navy plans to replace it with a simpler “Small Surface Combatant” (FF(X)) based on the Coast Guard’s Legend-class National Security Cutter.
Littoral Combat Ship (LCS): Characterized by the GAO as a major failure due to mechanical unreliability, hull cracking, and the failure of planned “mission modules” to become operational. Originally intended for over 50 ships, the program was curtailed, and several ships have been decommissioned decades before their intended
service life ended.
Zumwalt-class Destroyer (DDG-1000): Truncated from 32 ships to just 3 due to spiraling costs. The centerpiece Advanced Gun System (AGS) was effectively neutralized when the Navy canceled its specialized, hyper-expensive ammunition.
CG(X) Next-Generation Cruiser: Canceled in 2010 during the early design phase as part of broader defense cuts. It was intended to replace the Ticonderoga-class cruisers but was deemed too expensive for then-current budgets.

Service Life Management Failures

Cruiser Modernization Program: An audit found the Navy “wasted” nearly $2 billion attempting to keep 11 aging Ticonderoga-class cruisers in service. Despite these investments, the ships faced persistent maintenance issues, leading to early retirement for many and a shift in resources toward newer platforms.

Recent Strategic Shifts (2025–2026)

By early 2026, the Navy’s surface strategy has pivoted toward:
Large Surface Combatant (DDG(X)): Replacing the Cruiser/Destroyer fleet, though its procurement was delayed into the late 2020s to refine requirements.
Uncrewed Vessels: Increased focus on smaller, cheaper autonomous platforms to augment the fleet and offset the loss of traditional large programs.
For a deeper dive into the pathetic and wasteful failure of the highly expected Constellation Class frigate program, you can read this November 2025 War Zone report. https://www.twz.com/sea/navy-sinks-theconstellation-class-frigate-program.
Another example is hypersonic missile program, where the US gap with China and Russia is already at generational level.
China has at least a 10-year head start on hypersonic development and deployment vs. the US. According to Pentagon’s China Military Power Report, China has conducted more hypersonic missile tests in the past 5 years than the rest of the world combined.
Despite the well-known gap, Pentagon has repeatedly failed to make progress and meet its own deadlines after billions of dollars of investments.
The US Conventional Prompt Strike (CPS) weapon system, its core hypersonic missile program, is not in operational status.
The plan is to start fielding in USS Zumalt and Virginia-class submarine sometime in 2026 or 2027. The technology is shared with the US Army’s Long Range Hypersonic Weapon (LRHW), a.k.a. Dark Eagle.
After years of failure, the program reported first successful tests in June 2024. However, recent news shows the program’s deployment faces repeated delays. https://www.scmp.com/news/world/united-statescanada/article/3340291/us-blows-past-another-deadline-field-its-first-hypersonic-missile?
share=lsmcEGlVOPfUdPOQSZlCBQQvTO6xyLf5s8Af4k2QVpoih7WmmE4RHmf1XC6b6IT93FHTkim%2B1BqRPJa2
According to public sources, the Pentagon has invested more than US$12 billion since 2018 in an attempt to develop, test and deploy a hypersonic system.
The first battery will cost about US$2.7 billion, including missiles, according to the Government Accountability Office.
Besides the high costs, the field deployment of the weapon system has suffered repeated delays.
The army missed a previous deadline of September 2023 to field the technology, and blew past another deadline in the past September.
In December 2025, the US Army announced “a significant advancement of military capabilities” when it
activated a battery that operates the Dark Eagle hypersonic missile.
The Army did not mention at the time that the missiles were not ready until it is recently disclosed the operational deployment will be some time in 2026 or 2027.
The US Navy currently estimates the CPS system has a “flyaway” unit of cost of $51 million per missile. For fiscal 2026, the Navy request $663 million specifically for the production of 11 missiles.
In stark contrast, China has fielded numerous hypersonic missiles with various types of technologies (dualconical, wave-rider, scramjet, HGV), range (1,000 km to 9,000 km, just below ICBM range), speed (Mach 5 to Mach 16).
Pentagon estimates China has over 600 such missiles fielded. The actual number is likely to be much higher.
Chinese hypersonic weapons cost from $15-25 million per missile (US estimates) for the high-end (such as DF-17, DF-26 and DF-27A) to $99,000 per unit for the low-end/export models (such as YKJ-1000).
According to the January 2026 China Military Power Report by the US Department of War, China is commissioning hundreds of hypersonic missiles every year while the US will only reach serial production in 2026, with plan for 48 to 72 missiles produced per year by 2030.
Due to its scale and cost advantages, China can conduct saturation attack with hypersonic missiles against US carrier groups.
A saturation attack is designed to overwhelm defender’s systems by firing more munitions than their sensors and interceptors can handle simultaneously.
US war simulations show China can saturate a US carrier group’s defenses for less than $30 million using a swarm of missiles with “high-low mix”, while the US would spend over $200 million in interceptors just trying to survive the first wave.
In extreme scenario, China could launch dozens of YKJ-1000 at a target in saturation swarms that is mathematically impossible to fully intercept, ensuring 100% probability of a mission kill.
Even under the most optimistic scenario where the US carrier groups survive the swarm attack, the cost exchange will be so lopsided that the US cannot sustain a high intensity conflict.
Why the US cannot close the physical capability gap with China
The asymmetry in physical capabilities between China and the US is the result of decades long neoliberal economics that prioritize short-term financial returns over long-term industrial competitiveness.
The neoliberal economic dogma advocates outsourcing and “asset light” corporate strategy that moves production overseas and deemphasizes capital investment.
As a result, US businesses have focused on where return on investment is highest – product design, marketing, and distribution.
And they have delegated the “dirty work” of physical supply chain and production to poor third-world country workshops.
The best case studies of this business model are Apple and Nvidia, two of America’s most valuable companies.
Apple’s flagship product, the iPhone, is designed in California and made in Dongguan. Apple moved the dirty and low margin work of making the phone to China while retaining the high value-added design, branding, marketing, and distribution at home.
The result is Apple can design a great phone but cannot make a single one in the US.
Nvidia similarly is focused solely on GPU chip design and its CUDA software ecosystem while outsourcing the physical work of making the chips to TMSC in Taiwan with machines made by ASML in the Netherlands.
This hyper asset-light business model rewards Nvidia a gross margin over 80% and a market cap of $4 to 5 trillion.
However, if China starts a military operation against Taiwan, Nvidia will have no physical chips to supply its AI data center clients.
While the capitalists in the US have created massive paper wealth, the country has lost its ability to deliver physical results.
This neoliberal economic model has led the US to become a financialized shell economy with an inflated service sector and a large but shallow GDP.
(Republished from Substack by permission of author or representative)
The governing system, in parallel, has degenerated into a “vetocracy” where fragmented interest groups regularly bloc collective endeavors.
State capacity is manifested in its propensity to regulate, debate, and stall rather than to produce and execute.
Societal ethos favor usury, lawfare, software, and media make-believe while viewing physical labor with distaste and aversion. Talents are directed to speculation and get-rich-quick schemes.
China has taken the opposite path and focused its resources squarely on the “real economy”.
President Xi’s campaign in the last decade to burst the real estate bubble, rein in monopolistic predatory internet platforms, pour resources to Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), and invest in Made in China 2025 has saved China from the western death spiral of deindustrialization and financialization.
This is the root cause of China’s physical superiority and there is no reversing.

Jewish-neoliberal Trojan horse in Russia, John Helmer

The Plunder of Venezuela

Greenland to the US, Europe to Russia

by Claudiu Secara

Gangsters against Thugs

In 1994, I published a book titled “The New CommonWealth. From Bureaucratic Corporatism to Socialist Capitalism.”

It described the so-called dismantling of the Soviet Empire as a ruse. At the pinnacle of Soviet military power, one might even say, military supremacy over the US, it was hardly conceivable that the Soviet Union would just capitulate in a war or rather, in a race to war, that it had won.

The most likely reason for the amazing turn of events — the dissolution of the Warsaw Treaty, and the exit of the Soviet states, was a pact worked out over the past few years for a redrawing of the spheres of influence. The Soviets, now Russia, would take the whole of Europe (minus the UK, at least for starters), while the US would take all of the Americas and more.

The New Russia immediately lifted all trade and travel and investment barriers to Europe. It built, at high speed, oil and gas pipelines, basically annexing all of Europe’s sources of energy. The US obliged by taking out of existence any alternative energy sources for the incredulous Europeans. Closed the coal mines, shut down Europe’s power plants and systematically crushed any alternative source from places like Iran, Iraq, Syria, Libya, etc. Not to forget the vigorous pursuit of illegal immigration, a recipe for erasing the national cohesion of the European peoples.

On the other side of the pond, Clinton agitated for NAFTA and the integration of American continental economies.

Everything seemed to be sealed; job done.

But then something else happened. By 2014 a sudden minor conflict started in Kiev over the future realignment of Ukraine. Should it cut ties with Russia, or should it align with the EU and even NATO? A minor aviation accident in a war zone under dubious circumstances the MH370 incident evolved into a real casus belli, rallying the European peoples against the supposed Russian aggression, i.e. the shutting down of a Western civilian airplane innocently carrying Western passangers. And it went downhill from there.

However, it seemed more and more that, after being taken by surprise by the Russian ruse, by Russia’s supposed disarmament, Russia’s supposedly destitute economy, the Europeans saw through the plot. It wasn’t Russia that was on the menu. It was Europe, sold out to Russia.

That also paralleled the revolt on the American side by the vigilantes. NAFTA turned out to be a big self-destructive lie, with the entire American manufacturing base relocating, as Ross Perot foresaw– with the famous sucking sound of jobs and productive capacity moving south of the border. Also, Russia’s sudden assertive role in Europe, its ubiquitous infiltration in all spheres of the Western society, subsidizing parties and candidates favorable if not outright subservient to Russian interests—all of that strange reversal of who was in control of whom—triggered a strong anti-Russian backlash.

The deal of the 1980s between Gorbachev and Bush/Cliinton was declared OFF.

Roll forward to today. What does all this add up to?

Comes Trump to the rescue. Blatantly, brazenly, uninhibited, not to say shamelessly, he pursues the old deal, with some improvements. You, Russia, can have a free hand in taking over the disarmed, hopeless Europeans, and I, Trump, am taking over Venezuela, Cuba, and especially Greenland. All of this is a deal made by and under the guidance of the Zionist interests who now control both, a weak Russia and a weak United States. Can either side refuse the offer?!

The big losers? The hated, once powerful and smart Europeans. All the other parties, the Zionists, the Russians and the US, celebrate their day of victory over their one-time Masters.

But. But while all these creepy maneuvers are consuming everyone in good standing, their financial resources and their economies and productive forces, there is another player in the shadows. And that is China.

Can the new, united pack of wolves now attack China? Can they win?

My money is on “NO”. They cannot win.

But that’s for another post.

Germany and the UK Targets of Russian Nuclear Strike

via Moscow Times https://ru.themoscowtimes.com/2026/01/15/blizkii-k-kremlyu-politolog-nazval-germaniyu-i-velikobritaniyu-glavnimi-tselyami-vozmozhnogo-yadernogo-udara-rossii-po-evrope-a184637

Moscow may launch a nuclear strike against Germany or the United Kingdom in the next one or two years in order to “punish” Europe, which continues to help Ukraine defend itself from Russian aggression, said Sergei Karaganov, an adviser to the presidential administration.

“My choice would be Britain and Germany,” he said in an interview with American journalist Tucker Carlson, answering a question about which countries could be the target of a nuclear attack by the Russian Federation. – I pray to the Almighty that this does not happen. But Germany should be the first, because Germany is the source of the worst in European history.”

The talk about a possible nuclear attack came after Tucker’s question about what consequences for Europe could be in the event of the assassination of Russian President Vladimir Putin by Ukrainians or Europeans. “Then, of course, it would mean that we would punish — hopefully not the United States — but Europe would be wiped off the map of humanity. It should be erased from the geopolitical and geostrategic map, because it is an annoying obstacle,” Karaganov said.

He clarified that a nuclear attack on Europe could occur within two years if “they do not stop this senseless war and instability in and around Ukraine,” and such an attack would be preceded by strikes with conventional conventional weapons. “Using nuclear weapons is a double sin, and I don’t want Russia to commit such a big sin. But if necessary, we must eliminate the European threat to humanity,” said Carlson’s interlocutor.
In October 2024, Karaganov stated that nuclear weapons in the hands of Russia are a “gift from the Almighty,” who helped scientists find them. “We must not anger God — we must actively use the weapons that we have been given for self—salvation,” he said. Prior to this, Karaganov also called for a nuclear bomb attack on the Ukrainian Armed Forces.

Earlier, Bild wrote that Putin’s adviser, along with his wife, owns an apartment in Berlin, which he proposes to destroy. According to journalists, renting out real estate brought Karaganov 850 euros per month. In 2023, the pro-Kremlin ideologue learned that sanctions could be imposed against him, after which he decided to “donate” his share in the Berlin apartment to his wife.

Downhill for Mr. Trump from here on

by Claudiu Secara

At this point I would say that we are past the peak of Trump’s pro-Zionist power grab. The defeat in Iran is unmistakable. Venezuela is not up for grabs despite the very murky circumstances of the kidnapping of President Maduro. No one in Venezuela was arrested for collaborating with the US in that operation, which, I would say, indicates that what the former Colombian president asserted was/is true. Maduro became a liability for the Venezuelans themselves and they handled him over to the US.

Greenland is also circling the wagons, so to speak, with the Europeans firmly standing in defense of Denmark. No 51st state for Trump.

Internally, more chaos. The execution style crime perpetrated by ICE against Ms Good in Minneapolis and the following public lies by Kristi Noem and others are subject to congressional impeachment. The Zionist training of the paramilitary forces like ICE throughout the Western hemisphere might come to be seen as toxic. Even the British canceled their 2 billion ponds contract with Israeli Elbit Systems security, apparently as a victory for the Pro-Palestinian movement and the pro-Palestinian hunger strikers.

Even the top US banking executives rallied against Trump’s claim to have the power to set the interest rate for credit card balances as an overreach of the executive powers.

Never mind Trump’s claim of peace-making in Ukraine in 24 hours…

The country is skeptical of the story of the assassination of Charlie Kirk, as well as of the Zionists horrendous genocide in Gaza.

Mr. Trump has only one way to go from here and that is to go only down, down downhill. And then we’ll have the midterm elections.

He might be lucky if he is not referred to the International Criminal Court. And the Zionists are getting more and more desperate.

The Machinery of Terror

by Chris Hedges via https://www.unz.com/article/the-machinery-of-terror/

I have seen the masked goons who terrorize our streets before. I saw them during the “Dirty War” in Argentina, where 30,000 men, women and children were “disappeared” by the military junta. Victims were held in secret prisons, savagely tortured and murdered. To this day, many families do not know the fate of their loved ones.

I saw them in El Salvador, when death squads were killing 800 people a month. I saw them in Guatemala under the dictatorship of José Efraín Ríos Montt. I saw them in Augusto Pinochet’s Chile and in Saddam Hussein’s Iraq. I saw them in Iran under the rule of the ayatollahs where I was arrested and jailed twice and once deported in handcuffs. I saw them in Hafez al-Assad’s Syria. I saw them in Bosnia, where Muslims were herded into concentration camps, executed and buried in mass graves.

I know these goons. I have been a prisoner in their jails and spent hours in their interrogation rooms. I have been beaten by them. I have been deported, and in several cases banned, from their countries. I know what is coming.

Terror is the engine that empowers dictatorships. It eliminates dissidents. It silences critics. It dismantles the law. It creates a society of timid and frightened collaborators, those who look away when people are snatched off streets or gunned down, those who inform to save themselves, those who retreat into their tiny rabbit holes, pulling down the blinds, desperately praying to be left in peace.

Terror works.

The iron doors have not yet shut. There are still protests. The media is still able to document state atrocities, including the Jan. 7 murder of Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent Jonathan Ross. But the doors are closing fast. ICE has deported over 300,000 people and detained nearly 69,000 others — as well as been involved in 16 shootings, including four killings — since Trump began his campaign against immigrants.

ICE, our Americanized Gestapo, is being birthed.

Resistance must be collective. We must assert not only our individual rights, but economic, social and political rights — without them we are powerless. Resistance means organizing to disrupt the machinery of commerce and government. It means preventing arrests by patrolling neighborhoods to warn of impending ICE raids. It means protesting outside detention facilities. It means strikes. It means blocking streets and highways and occupying buildings. It means providing photographic evidence. It means sustained pressure on local politicians and police to refuse to cooperate with ICE. It means providing legal representation, food and financial assistance to families with members detained. It means a willingness to be arrested. It means a nationwide campaign to defy the state’s inhumanity.

If we fail, the dimming flames of our open society will be snuffed out.

Authoritarian states are constructed incrementally. No dictatorship advertises its plan to extinguish civil liberties. It pays lip service to liberty and justice as it dismantles the institutions and laws that make liberty and justice possible. Opponents of the regime, including those within the establishment, make sporadic attempts to resist. They throw up temporary roadblocks, but they are soon purged.

Alexander Solzhenitsyn in “The Gulag Archipelago” notes that the consolidation of Soviet tyranny “was stretched out over many years because it was of primary importance that it be stealthy and unnoticed.” He called the process “a grandiose silent game of solitaire, whose rules were totally incomprehensible to its contemporaries, and whose outlines we can appreciate only now.”

“What would things have been like if every Security operative, when he went out at night to make an arrest, had been uncertain whether he would return alive and had to say good-bye to his family?” Solzhenitsyn asks. “Or if, during periods of mass arrests, as for example in Leningrad, when they arrested a quarter of the entire city, people had not simply sat there in their lairs, paling with terror at every bang of the downstairs door and at every step on the staircase, but had understood they had nothing left to lose and had boldly set up in the downstairs hall an ambush of half a dozen people with axes, hammers, pokers, or whatever else was at hand? After all, you knew ahead of time those bluecaps were out at night for no good purpose. And you could be sure ahead of time that you’d be cracking the skull of a cutthroat. Or what about the Black Maria sitting out there on the street with one lonely chauffeur — what if it had been driven off or its tires spiked? The Organs would very quickly have suffered a shortage of officers and transport and, notwithstanding all of Stalin’s thirst, the cursed machine would have ground to a halt!”

Czesław Miłosz, in “The Captive Mind,” also documents the creep of tyranny, how it advances stealthily, until intellectuals are not only forced to repeat the regime’s self-adulating slogans but, as our leading universities did when they caved to false allegations of being bastions of antisemitism, embrace its absurdism.

Manufactured fear engenders self-doubt. It makes a population — often unconsciously — conform outwardly and inwardly. It conditions citizens to relate to those around them with suspicion and distrust. It destroys the solidarity vital to organizing, community and dissent.

The historian Robert Gellately, in his book “Backing Hitler: Consent and Coercion in Nazi Germany,” argues that state terror in Nazi Germany was effective not because of omnipresent state surveillance, but because it fostered a “culture of denunciation.”

Rat out your neighbors and coworkers and survive. If you see something, say something.

The worse it gets, the more established institutions, desperate to survive, silence those who warn us.

“Before societies fall, just such a stratum of wise, thinking people emerges, people who are that and nothing more,” Solzhenitsyn writes of those who see what is coming. “And how they were laughed at! How they were mocked!”

The Austrian writer Joseph Roth, whose early warnings about the rise of fascism were largely dismissed, and who told fellow intellectuals to stop naively appealing to “the remains of a European conscience,” saw his books tossed into the bonfires in the spring of 1933 during the Nazi book burnings. So far, we have not burned books, but have banned nearly 23,000 titles in public schools since 2021.

The authoritarian state cannibalizes the institutions that foolishly aid and abet the witch hunts. It replaces them with pseudo-institutions populated with pseudo-legislators, pseudo-courts, pseudo-journalists, pseudo-intellectuals and pseudo-citizens. Columbia University is a shining example of this willful self-immolation. Nothing is as it is presented.

There are increasing numbers of violent kidnappings by masked ICE agents in unmarked cars on our city streets. People are ripped from their vehicles and beaten. They are arrested outside schools and day care centers. They are raided at work, thrown onto the floor, handcuffed, driven away in vans and shipped off to concentration camps in countries such as El Salvador. They are seized when they appear at court for a green card application or interview to finalize a visa.

Once detained, they disappear into the labyrinth of over 200 detention centers, where they are moved from one facility to the next to hide them from family, lawyers and the courts. Due process, once a constitutional right afforded to everyone in the United States, no longer exists.

“Laws that are not equal for all revert to rights and privileges, something contradictory to the very nature of nation-states,” Hannah Arendt writes in “The Origins of Totalitarianism.” “The clearer the proof of their inability to treat stateless people as legal persons and the greater the extension of arbitrary rule by police decree, the more difficult it is for states to resist the temptation to deprive all citizens of legal status and rule them with an omnipotent police.”
The FBI, in an example of how justice is perverted, refuses to cooperate with local law enforcement agencies in Minneapolis, blocking access to any evidence that would allow them to file criminal charges against Jonathan Ross.

Killing of unarmed citizens by the state is carried out with impunity.

ICE has more than doubled the size of its force since early 2025 — to 22,000 agents — hiring 12,000 new officers in four months from a pool of 220,000 applicants. It plans to spend $100 million over a one-year period to hire even more recruits, part of the $170 billion for border and interior enforcement, including $75 billion for ICE, to be spent over four years. Salaries for these new recruits, poorly trained and often haphazardly vetted, will range from $49,739 to $89,528 a year, along with a $50,000 signing bonus — split over three years — and up to $60,000 in student loan repayments.

ICE is building new detention centers nationwide in 23 towns and cities. It promises that once it is fully operational, it will go door-to-door as part of the largest deportation effort in American history.

ICE agents, intoxicated by the license to kick down doors while wearing body armor and firing automatic weapons at terrified women and children, are not warriors as they imagine, but thugs. They have few skills, other than weapons training, cruelty and brutality. They intend to remain employed by the state. The state intends to keep them employed.

None of this should surprise us. The repressive techniques used by ICE and our militarized police were perfected overseas in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Libya and Occupied Palestine, and earlier in Vietnam. The ICE agent who murdered Good was a machinegunner in Iraq. A night raid in Chicago, with agents rappelling from a helicopter to storm an apartment complex filled with terrified families, does not look any different from a night raid in Fallujah.

Aimé Césaire, the Martinician playwright and politician, in “Discourse on Colonialism” writes that the savage tools of imperialism and colonialism eventually migrate back to the home country. It is known as imperial boomerang.

Césaire writes:

And then one fine day the bourgeoisie is awakened by a terrific boomerang effect: the gestapos are busy, the prisons fill up, the torturers standing around the racks invent, refine, discuss.
People are surprised, they become indignant. They say: “How strange! But never mind—it’s Nazism, it will pass!” And they wait, and they hope; and they hide the truth from themselves, that it is barbarism, the supreme barbarism, the crowning barbarism that sums up all the daily barbarisms; that it is Nazism, yes, but that before they were its victims, they were its accomplices; that they tolerated that Nazism before it was inflicted on them, that they absolved it, shut their eyes to it, legitimized it, because, until then, it had been applied only to non-European peoples; that they have cultivated that Nazism, that they are responsible for it, and that before engulfing the whole edifice of Western, Christian civilization in its reddened waters, it oozes, seeps, and trickles from every crack.
During the interregnum between the last gasps of a democracy and the emergence of a dictatorship, the nation is gaslighted. It is told the rule of law is respected. It is told democratic rule is inviolate. These lies mollify those being frog-marched into their own enslavement.

“The majority sit quietly and dare to hope,” Solzhenitsyn writes. “Since you aren’t guilty, then how can they arrest you? It’s a mistake!”

Maybe, the fearful say, Trump and his minions are only being bombastic. Maybe they don’t mean it. Maybe they are incompetent. Maybe the courts will save us. Maybe the next elections will end this nightmare. Maybe there are limits to extremism. Maybe the worst is over.

These self-delusions prevent us from resisting while the gallows are being constructed in front of us.

Authoritarian states start by targeting the most vulnerable, those most easily demonized — the undocumented, students on college campuses who protest genocide, antifa, the so-called “radical left,” Muslims, poor people of color, intellectuals and liberals. They strike down one group after the next. They blow out, one by one, the long row of candles until we find ourselves in the dark, powerless and alone.