The Trump-Xi Summit as Cover
Here is the conventional analysis: the upcoming summit restrains China. But flip that logic: what if Xi is using the summit as strategic camouflage? Everyday analysts bet on this: "China won't move before the summit" . A summit scheduled for late March creates a psychological buffer — a period during which an attack would seem unthinkable — that could be precisely the window Beijing exploits.
Xi has watched how Russia used diplomatic engagement as a smokescreen before Ukraine. He's a careful student of that lesson.
What if Taiwan isn't the first move?
Outside-the-box thinking requires abandoning the assumption that Taiwan is the next crisis. What if it isn't? What if Beijing's actual sequence is:
? Iran bleeds the US — munitions, carrier groups, political attention, and public appetite for another war all depleted. (Possibly underway now.)
? A sharp, limited crisis in the South China Sea — a sudden seizure of a Philippine-occupied reef or the harassment of Japanese vessels near the Senkakus, something that forces the US to respond again, further stretching resources and testing alliance cohesion, without triggering the full Taiwan tripwire.
? Then Taiwan — once the US is on its third crisis in two years, munitions are genuinely depleted, allies are exhausted, and American public opinion has shifted toward isolationism.
Perhaps, analysts focusing on "will China invade Taiwan during the Iran war?" are asking the wrong question entirely.
The Economic Weapon Nobody Is Discussing
China holds approximately $750 billion in US Treasury bonds and is the dominant supplier of rare earth elements critical to virtually every precision weapon the US manufactures. An unconventional move isn't necessarily military. Beijing could trigger a financial and supply chain crisis simultaneously with a Taiwan move — not as a side effect, but as a deliberate opening salvo designed to paralyze Washington's decision-making in the first critical 96 hours.
Imagine the first morning of a Taiwan invasion: carrier groups repositioning, rare earth export controls announced, Treasury bond liquidation begun, and cyberattacks hitting Pacific logistics infrastructure — all at once. The US government would be simultaneously managing a military, financial, and industrial crisis with no clear playbook.
The Most Uncomfortable Possibility
What if China's leadership has concluded something that Western analysts are psychologically resistant to accepting: that the United States, as currently constituted politically, will not fight a major war over Taiwan regardless of the military balance? Not because of military weakness, but because a deeply divided country, already in one war, facing economic disruption, with a political class consumed by internal conflict, simply will not sustain the political will to fight a prolonged, bloody peer conflict 6,000 miles away.
Under this view, all the wargaming, all the munitions counting, all the alliance analysis is largely beside the point. China's real calculation isn't "can we defeat the US military?" — it's "will the US public and Congress support a war president for even a couple of years it would actually take to reverse a Chinese seizure of Taiwan?"
If Beijing's answer to that question is no — everything else is just details. Remember, Xi is desperate to survive his failures. Desperate times call for desperate measures.
Author: renqiulan
