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China is playing a dual game: using missile tests to deter geopolitical alliances like the Quad, while simultaneously deepening its economic indispensability through a massive trade surplus with Europe. This strategy aims to maintain its influence by being too threatening to challenge militarily and too integrated to sanction economically.

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China is predicted to avoid a direct war with the US by playing both sides. It will likely strike transactional economic deals with America to protect its interests while simultaneously providing financial support to Russia, maintaining a non-aligned but influential position.

Unlike in the West, China's economic dysfunctions like industrial overcapacity paradoxically strengthen its global position. This creates massive trade surpluses and investment leverage, forcing other nations to welcome Chinese capital and increasing Beijing's geopolitical heft.

By publicly stating a desire to avoid the historical pattern of a rising power (China) clashing with a declining one (US), Xi Jinping strategically framed the future of the relationship as an economic partnership rather than an inevitable military conflict.

Unlike the US, China expands its influence by offering to build highways, airports, and electrical grids for other nations. This 'soft power' approach, funded by a large trade surplus, has allowed it to gain significant control in regions like Africa without military intervention.

For the first time, China's economic power—measured by purchasing power parity, manufacturing output, and control over critical minerals—has shifted the global power balance. This gives President Xi a stronger negotiating position than his U.S. counterpart, as China can now weaponize economic dependencies more effectively.

China aims for maximum self-sufficiency while simultaneously encouraging foreign economic dependence on its market. This calculated strategy creates powerful geopolitical leverage, as countries like Germany become hesitant to challenge China for fear of damaging their significant commercial interests.

China's showcase of advanced military hardware, like its new aircraft carrier, is primarily a psychological tool. The strategy is to build a military so 'forbiddingly huge' that the US would hesitate to engage, allowing China to achieve goals like reabsorbing Taiwan without fighting. This suggests their focus is on perceived power to deter intervention.

While the U.S. employs aggressive, short-term tactics, China plays a long game. They use economic incentives and a 'friendly' image to win allies, which erodes America's global standing over time as nations seek a less volatile partner.

China embraces economic globalization, crediting it for lifting 800 million from poverty. However, it explicitly rejects the "militarized globalization" represented by security pacts like AUKUS or NATO expansion. This differentiates its approach from the Western model, which often intertwines economic integration with shared security and political values.

China is no longer just mirroring US trade restrictions in a tit-for-tat manner. It is now offensively mapping its own supply chains to identify and control global choke points, proactively weaponizing its dominance in critical materials and technologies to exert geopolitical pressure.