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KDB's avatar

This is a really good article, and we need a lot more like it,written from both sides of the political spectrum. The public needs to get educated and prepared without it turning into partisan signaling. To get some perspective on how serious this is, I asked chat gpt to estimate the odds. I mean if this was only a few percent likely to come to pass in the next 20 years I was not going to get too excited. However the first pass through It said it was 20-55% by 2035. I looked at how it determined this and to my uneducated military mind it wasn’t unreasonable. If it is anywhere close to this we need to prepare

What it really comes down to is stamina. The goal isn’t to “want a war”. It’s to make China believe that even if it can hurt , it still can’t break the U.S. politically or make us quit. That means a deal with the public knowing what we’re defending, what it could cost, and what we’re doing now so daily life doesn’t unglue if things get ugly.

The piece is pointing in that direction, but it would be even clearer if it separated three different kinds of preparation we need to do;

• prepare to win on the battlefield so they can’t just take Taiwan fast without a lot of pain

• prepare at home so we can keep fuel, goods, power, and basic services running

• prepare with our allies so supply chains stay and China can’t isolate us.

If we’re serious about preventing war, we need all three and most of all we need a united country so China does not believe they can crack us politically.

Norm Fox's avatar

This is a solid piece. Thank to TLP for adding Mr Purzycki’s pen (I think I’ve seen him in the comments but never as an author)

Two things we should be doing immediately are arming Taiwan to the teeth to turn her into a prickly porcupine who’s more trouble than she’s worth. Taiwan is a wealthy nation who can afford to pay for the weapons she needs which makes this an easy sell to the public.

The next step as you point out is to decouple our economy from China’s enough so that severing economic ties completely (I.e. halting all trade) will harm them far more than it harms us.

The CHIPS act was a great idea and could have been a huge step in this direction, but the Democrats rendered it practically useless by infecting it with DEI.

https://thehill.com/opinion/4517470-dei-killed-the-chips-act/

Reversing that should be order number one.

The country at large is not nearly as divided and acrimonious as people who spend way too much time online would have us believe. Still convincing Americans we should send troops to fight China absent a direct attack on us will prove a bridge too far. Our best and most reliable weapon against China remains economic and the simple fact that if we stop ceding our manufacturing to them while making it easier to mine for the rare earths we need (which we actually have plenty of here), while making it abundantly clear that we will cease all trade with them should they attempt to take Taiwan by force it will be more than enough. We also need to start treating people with ties to the Chinese Communist party the same way we treated people with ties to the Soviets. I.e. persona non grata.

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