Opinion Facing three global crises, the American empire may be nearing final collapse

  • 🐕 I am attempting to get the site runnning as fast as possible. If you are experiencing slow page load times, please report it.
Link (Archive)

Facing three global crises, the American empire may be nearing final collapse​

Empires don’t just fall like toppled trees. Instead, they weaken slowly as a succession of crises drain their strength and confidence until they suddenly begin to disintegrate. So it was with the British, French and Soviet empires; so it now is with imperial America.

Great Britain confronted serious colonial crises in India, Iran and Palestine before plunging headlong into the Suez Canal and imperial collapse in 1956. In the later years of the Cold War, the Soviet Union faced its own challenges in Czechoslovakia, Egypt and Ethiopia before crashing into a brick wall in its war in Afghanistan.

America’s post-Cold War victory lap suffered its own crisis early in this century with disastrous invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. Now, looming just over history’s horizon are three more imperial crises in Gaza, Taiwan and Ukraine that could cumulatively turn a slow imperial recessional into an all-too-rapid decline, if not collapse.

As a start, let’s put the very idea of an imperial crisis in perspective. The history of every empire, ancient or modern, has always involved a succession of crises — usually mastered in the empire’s earlier years, only to be ever more disastrously mishandled in its era of decline. Right after World War II, when the United States became history’s most powerful empire, Washington’s leaders skillfully handled just such crises in Greece, Berlin, Italy and France, and somewhat less skillfully but not disastrously in a Korean War that never quite officially ended. Even after the dual disasters of a bungled covert invasion of Cuba in 1961 and a conventional war in Vietnam that went all too disastrously awry in the 1960s and early 1970s, Washington proved capable of recalibrating effectively enough to outlast the Soviet Union, “win” the Cold War and become the “lone superpower” on this planet.

n both success and failure, crisis management usually entails a delicate balance between domestic politics and global geopolitics. John F. Kennedy’s White House, manipulated by the CIA into the disastrous 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba, managed to recover its political balance sufficiently to check the Pentagon and achieve a diplomatic resolution of the dangerous 1962 Cuban missile crisis with the Soviet Union.

America’s current plight, however, can be traced at least in part to a growing imbalance between a domestic politics that appears to be coming apart at the seams and a series of challenging global upheavals. Whether in Gaza, Ukraine or even Taiwan, the Washington of President Joe Biden is clearly failing to align domestic political constituencies with the empire’s international interests. And in each case, crisis mismanagement has only been compounded by errors that have accumulated in the decades since the Cold War’s end, turning each crisis into a conundrum without an easy resolution or perhaps any resolution at all. Both individually and collectively, then, the mishandling of these crises is likely to prove a significant marker of America’s ultimate decline as a global power, both at home and abroad.

Creeping disaster in Ukraine

Since the closing months of the Cold War, mismanaging relations with Ukraine has been a curiously bipartisan project. As the Soviet Union began breaking up in 1991, Washington focused on ensuring that Moscow’s arsenal of possibly 45,000 nuclear warheads was secure, particularly the 5,000 atomic weapons then stored in Ukraine, which also had the largest Soviet nuclear weapons plant at Dnipropetrovsk.

During an August 1991 visit, President George H.W. Bush told Ukrainian Prime Minister Leonid Kravchuk that he could not support Ukraine’s future independence and gave what became known as his “chicken Kiev” speech, saying: “Americans will not support those who seek independence in order to replace a far-off tyranny with a local despotism. They will not aid those who promote a suicidal nationalism based upon ethnic hatred.” He would, however, soon recognize Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia as independent states since they didn’t have nuclear weapons.

When the Soviet Union finally imploded in December 1991, Ukraine instantly became the world’s third-largest nuclear power, though it had no way to actually deliver most of those atomic weapons. To persuade Ukraine to transfer its nuclear warheads to Moscow, Washington launched three years of multilateral negotiations, while giving Kyiv “assurances” (but not “guarantees”) of its future security — the diplomatic equivalent of a personal check drawn on a bank account with a zero balance.

Under the Budapest Memorandum on Security in December 1994, three former Soviet republics — Belarus, Kazakhstan and Ukraine — signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and started transferring their atomic weapons to Russia. Simultaneously, Russia, the U.S. and Britain agreed to respect the sovereignty of the three signatories and refrain from using such weaponry against them. Everyone present, however, seemed to understand that the agreement was, at best, tenuous. (One Ukrainian diplomat told the Americans that he had “no illusions that the Russians would live up to the agreements they signed.”)

Meanwhile — and this should sound familiar today — Russian President Boris Yeltsin raged against Washington’s plans to expand NATO further, accusing President Bill Clinton of moving from a Cold War to a “cold peace.” Right after that conference, Defense Secretary William Perry warned Clinton, point blank, that “a wounded Moscow would lash out in response to NATO expansion.”

Nonetheless, once those former Soviet republics were safely disarmed of their nuclear weapons, Clinton agreed to begin admitting new members to NATO, launching a relentless eastward march toward Russia that continued under his successor George W. Bush. It came to include three former Soviet satellites, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland (1999); three onetime Soviet republics, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania (2004); and three more former satellites, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia (2004). At the Bucharest summit in 2008, moreover, the alliance’s 26 members unanimously agreed that, at some unspecified point, Ukraine and Georgia, too, would “become members of NATO.” In other words, having pushed NATO right up to the Ukrainian border, Washington seemed oblivious to the possibility that Russia might feel in any way threatened and react by annexing that nation to create its own security corridor.

In those years, Washington also came to believe that it could transform Russia into a functioning democracy to be fully integrated into a still-developing American world order. Yet for more than 200 years, Russia’s governance had been autocratic and every ruler from Catherine the Great to Leonid Brezhnev had achieved domestic stability through incessant foreign expansion. So it should hardly have been surprising when the seemingly endless expansion of NATO led Russia’s latest autocrat, Vladimir Putin, to invade the Crimean peninsula in March 2014, only weeks after hosting the Winter Olympics.

In an interview soon after Moscow annexed that area of Ukraine, President Barack Obama recognized the geopolitical reality that could yet consign all of that land to Russia’s orbit, saying: “The fact is that Ukraine, which is a non-NATO country, is going to be vulnerable to military domination by Russia no matter what we do.”

Then, in February 2022, after years of low-intensity fighting in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine, Putin sent 200,000 mechanized troops to capture the country’s capital, Kyiv, and establish that very “military domination.” At first, as the Ukrainians surprisingly fought off the Russians, Washington and the West reacted with a striking resolve — cutting Europe’s energy imports from Russia, imposing serious sanctions on Moscow, expanding NATO to all of Scandinavia and dispatching an impressive arsenal of armaments to Ukraine.

After two years of never-ending war, however, cracks have appeared in the anti-Russian coalition, indicating that Washington’s global clout has declined markedly since its Cold War glory days. After 30 years of free-market growth, Russia’s resilient economy has weathered sanctions, its oil exports have found new markets and its gross domestic product is projected to grow a healthy 2.6% this year. In last spring and summer’s fighting season, a Ukrainian “counteroffensive” failed and the war is, in the view of both Russian and Ukrainian commanders, at least “stalemated,” if not now beginning to turn in Russia’s favor.

Most critically, U.S. support for Ukraine is faltering. After successfully rallying the NATO alliance to stand with Ukraine, the Biden White House opened the American arsenal to provide Kyiv with a stunning array of weaponry, totaling $46 billion, that gave its smaller army a technological edge on the battlefield. But now, in a move with historic implications, part of the Republican (or rather Trumpublican) Party has broken with the bipartisan foreign policy that sustained American global power since the Cold War began. For weeks, the Republican-led House has even repeatedly refused to consider President Biden’s latest $60 billion aid package for Ukraine, contributing to Kyiv’s recent reverses on the battlefield.

The Republican Party’s rupture starts with its leader. In the view of former White House adviser Fiona Hill, Donald Trump was so painfully deferential to Vladimir Putin during “the now legendarily disastrous press conference” at Helsinki in 2018 that critics were convinced “the Kremlin held sway over the American president.” But the problem goes so much deeper. As New York Times columnist David Brooks noted recently, the Republican Party’s historic “isolationism is still on the march.” Indeed, between March 2022 and December 2023, the Pew Research Center found that the percentage of Republicans who think the U.S. gives “too much support” to Ukraine climbedfrom just 9% to a whopping 48%. Asked to explain the trend, Brooks feels that “Trumpian populism does represent some very legitimate values: the fear of imperial overreach … [and] the need to protect working-class wages from the pressures of globalization.”

Since Trump represents this deeper trend, his hostility toward NATO has taken on an added significance. His recent remarks that he would encourage Russia to “do whatever the hell they want” to a NATO ally that didn’t pay its fair share sent shockwaves across Europe, forcing key allies to consider what such an alliance would be like without the U.S. (even as Vladimir Putin, undoubtedly sensing a weakening of U.S. resolve, threatened Europe with nuclear war). All of this is certainly signaling to the world that Washington’s global leadership is now anything but a certainty.

Crisis in Gaza

Just as in Ukraine, decades of diffident American leadership, compounded by increasingly chaotic domestic politics, let the Gaza crisis spin out of control. At the close of the Cold War, when the Middle East was momentarily disentangled from great-power politics, Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization signed the 1993 Oslo Accord. In it, they agreed to create the Palestinian Authority as the first step toward a two-state solution. For the next two decades, however, Washington’s ineffectual initiatives failed to break the deadlock between that authority and successive Israeli governments that prevented any progress toward such a solution.

In 2005, Israel’s hawkish Prime Minister Ariel Sharon decided to withdraw his defense forces and 25 Israeli settlements from the Gaza Strip with the aim of improving “Israel’s security and international status.” Within two years, however, Hamas militants had seized power in Gaza, ousting the Palestinian Authority under President Mahmoud Abbas. In 2009, the controversial Benjamin Netanyahu started his nearly continuous 15-year stretch as Israel’s prime minister and soon discovered the utility of supporting Hamas as a political foil to block the two-state solution he so abhorred.

Not surprisingly then, the day after last year’s tragic Oct. 7 Hamas attack, the Times of Israel published this headline: “For Years Netanyahu Propped Up Hamas. Now It’s Blown Up in Our Faces.” In her lead piece, senior political correspondent Tal Schneider reported: “For years, the various governments led by Benjamin Netanyahu took an approach that divided power between the Gaza Strip and the West Bank — bringing Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas to his knees while making moves that propped up the Hamas terror group.”

On Oct. 18, with the Israeli bombing of Gaza already inflicting severe casualties on Palestinian civilians, Biden flew to Tel Aviv for a meeting with Netanyahu that would prove eerily reminiscent of Trump’s Helsinki press conference with Putin. After Netanyahu praised the president for drawing “a clear line between the forces of civilization and the forces of barbarism,” Biden endorsed that Manichaean view by condemning Hamas for “evils and atrocities that make ISIS look somewhat more rational” and promised to provide the weaponry Israel needed “as they respond to these attacks.” Biden said nothing about Netanyahu’s previous arm’s-length alliance with Hamas or the two-state solution. Instead, the Biden White House began vetoing ceasefire proposals at the U.N. while air-freighting, among other weaponry, 15,000 bombs to Israel, including the behemoth 2,000-pound “bunker busters” that were soon flattening Gaza’s high-rise buildings with increasingly heavy civilian casualties.

After five months of arms shipments to Israel, three U.N. ceasefire vetoes and nothing to stop Netanyahu’s plan for an endless occupation of Gaza instead of a two-state solution, Biden has damaged American diplomatic leadership in the Middle East and much of the world. In November and again in February, massive crowds calling for peace in Gaza marched in Berlin, London, Madrid, Milan, Paris, Istanbul and Dakar, among other places.

Moreover, the relentless rise in civilian deaths well past 30,000 in Gaza, striking numbers of them children, has already weakened Biden’s domestic support in constituencies that were critical for his win in 2020 — including Arab Americans in the key swing state of Michigan, African Americans nationwide and younger voters more generally. To heal the breach, Biden is now becoming desperate for a negotiated ceasefire. In an inept intertwining of international and domestic politics, the president has given Netanyahu, a natural ally of Donald Trump, the opportunity for an October surprise of more devastation in Gaza that could rip the Democratic coalition apart and thereby increase the chances of a Trump win in November — with fatal consequences for U.S. global power.

Trouble in the Taiwan Straits

While Washington is preoccupied with Gaza and Ukraine, it may also be at the threshold of a serious crisis in the Taiwan Straits. Beijing’s relentless pressure on the island of Taiwan continues unabated. Following the incremental strategy that it’s used since 2014 to secure a half-dozen military bases in the South China Sea, Beijing is moving to slowly strangle Taiwan’s sovereignty. Its breaches of the island’s airspace have increased from 400 in 2020 to 1,700 in 2023. Similarly, Chinese warships have crossed the median line in the Taiwan Straits 300 times since August 2022, effectively erasing it. As commentator Ben Lewis warned, “There soon may be no lines left for China to cross.”

After recognizing Beijing as “the sole legal Government of China” in 1979, Washington agreed to “acknowledge” that Taiwan was part of China. At the same time, however, Congress passed the Taiwan Relations Act of 1979, requiring “that the United States maintain the capacity to resist any resort to force … that would jeopardize the security … of the people on Taiwan.”

Such all-American ambiguity seemed manageable until October 2022 when Chinese President Xi Jinping told the 20th Communist Party Congress that “reunification must be realized” and refused “to renounce the use of force” against Taiwan. In a fateful counterpoint, Biden stated, as recently as September 2022, that the U.S. would defend Taiwan “if in fact there was an unprecedented attack.”

But Beijing could cripple Taiwan several steps short of that “unprecedented attack” by turning those air and sea transgressions into a customs quarantine that would peacefully divert all Taiwan-bound cargo to mainland China. With the island’s major ports at Taipei and Kaohsiung facing the Taiwan Straits, any American warships trying to break that embargo would face a lethal swarm of nuclear submarines, jet aircraft and ship-killing missiles.

Given the near-certain loss of two or three aircraft carriers, the U.S. Navy would likely back off and Taiwan would be forced to negotiate the terms of its reunification with Beijing. Such a humiliating reversal would send a clear signal that, after 80 years, American dominion over the Pacific had finally ended, inflicting another major blow to U.S. global hegemony.

The sum of three crises

Washington now finds itself facing three complex global crises, each demanding its undivided attention. Any one of them would challenge the skills of even the most seasoned diplomat. Their simultaneity places the U.S. in the unenviable position of potential reverses in all three at once, even as its politics at home threaten to head into an era of chaos. Playing upon American domestic divisions, the protagonists in Beijing, Moscow and Tel Aviv are all holding a long hand (or at least a potentially longer one than Washington’s) and hoping to win by default when the U.S. tires of the game. As the incumbent, Biden must bear the burden of any reversal, with the consequent political damage this November.

Meanwhile, waiting in the wings, Donald Trump may try to escape such foreign entanglements and their political cost by reverting to the Republican Party’s historic isolationism, even as he ensures that the former lone superpower of Planet Earth could come apart at the seams in the wake of election 2024. If so, in such a distinctly quagmire world, American global hegemony would fade with surprising speed, soon becoming little more than a distant memory.
 
China's military isn't the powerhouse the CCP claims it to be
Everyone keeps saying this, but I'm not buying it.

The performance of the military tactically matters only in that it can maintain enough ground to prevent being overrun in the short term.

After that, war becomes a contest of the industrial base of the combatants.
This is why the entire NATO bloc is losing versus Russia:
They pushed commie green policy until their industrial sectors were dusty ruins, and Russia now produces artillery at 6 times the rate.

It doesn't matter if their weapons are not the latest and greatest if they can replace them while their foes cannot.

This, btw, is why the US won the 2 world wars.
Their military at the time was absolute rubbish compared to european powers, but they had the industry to keep dumping material in until they could catch up through experience.
This is also why the US is being embarrassed in Ukraine now: every manufacturing town that won us those world wars is now a graevyard of opiate overdoses and rusting hulks of what used to be foundries
 
Everyone keeps saying this, but I'm not buying it.

The performance of the military tactically matters only in that it can maintain enough ground to prevent being overrun in the short term.

After that, war becomes a contest of the industrial base of the combatants.
This is why the entire NATO bloc is losing versus Russia:
They pushed commie green policy until their industrial sectors were dusty ruins, and Russia now produces artillery at 6 times the rate.
This is the current year of 2024, Russia is fighting a 1970s war. The name of the game in 21st century warfare is decimating your opponent past his ability to resist long enough for muh industry to matter, which is why everyone is pouring tens of billions into wunderwaffen that can allegedly destroy 50-80% of the enemy's shiny toys (ships, planes, AFVs, artillery, AA, satellites) in the matter of a week, or a few weeks at most. The age-old race between offense and defense is viewed today as the offense being far, far ahead when it comes to the US and China
 
Empires in the modern era don't just collapse, they're systematically dismantled by superior powers. I think America's enemies that are sitting around waiting for the decline will be very surprised how much the USA can really take, especially since it's been proven time and time again that America can invade the world and flush out dissidents with refugees and opportunistic foreigners.
 
This is why the entire NATO bloc is losing versus Russia:
With the exception of a few UK spooks there isn't a single NATO soldier active in Ukraine and Russia is measuring its gains in meters per day when they thought they'd be in the capital within a week. If it were a NATO vs Russia fight then the Russians "army" would be conducting hit and run attacks from an "HQ" in somebody's basement right now, assuming the war wasn't already over.
This is also why the US is being embarrassed in Ukraine now: every manufacturing town that won us those world wars is now a graevyard of opiate overdoses and rusting hulks of what used to be foundries
The "one" thing Russia has going for it is that, when they are in a do or die situation but the US is not they can directly find more ammo for themselves than Russia can find surplus ammo beyond its own stocks for a non-allied friend.

Now go ahead and explain why Russia keeps losing ships to a nation that does not have a navy or air superiority.
 
China's military isn't the powerhouse the CCP claims it to be
Well seeing how Russia was touted as a military superpower and bumbled around in Ukraine for while, the opposite can be true.

China has been taking training a lot more seriously for the PLAN and PLAAF for over a decade and those will be the most important in a Taiwan scenario.
The only one of these three I even give a slight fuck about is Taiwan. Because its a country with worth and value that hasn't been actively trying to fuck over its American Ally for the last 50+ years.

Even then, nothing will happen. China is a paper tiger that puffs up like a pufferfish to look big and scary when its really just full of hot air. Anyone with half a brain and an ounce of morals could stand up to them and they would back down almost instantly (like they have a thousand times before). The real problem is that everyone on capital hill is a corrupt immoral dumbass.

Israel/Palestine can get fucked, Ukraine can get fucked, and keep America the fuck out of all these international conflicts. The time for America to be the world police is over and I for one welcome it. Let all these ungrateful cucks and corrupt assholes fend for themselves.
China plays the long game and has been continually modernizing it's military for 30 years.

It's also massively increased the Air force and Navy training budgets.

Europeans were similarly dismissive of the IJA and IJN in the 1930s....
 
With the exception of a few UK spooks there isn't a single NATO soldier active in Ukraine and Russia is measuring its gains in meters per day when they thought they'd be in the capital within a week. If it were a NATO vs Russia fight then the Russians "army" would be conducting hit and run attacks from an "HQ" in somebody's basement right now, assuming the war wasn't already over.

The "one" thing Russia has going for it is that, when they are in a do or die situation but the US is not they can directly find more ammo for themselves than Russia can find surplus ammo beyond its own stocks for a non-allied friend.

Now go ahead and explain why Russia keeps losing ships to a nation that does not have a navy or air superiority.
I have achieved war propaganda bingo!
None of it's true, but you saw some old Lazerpig videos and damnit you know everything now.
 
Human wave tactics?
With an amphibious assault?
With these tidal conditions?
With a completely untested paper-tiger military?
With the dead-man switch of semiconductor production?
With a nation on the brink of catastrophic demographic/economic implosion?
Localized ENTIRELY within an island practically purpose-designed to exemplify the worst of jungle and urban warfare combined?
View attachment 5824589
Do you actually think the average Taiwanese person is going on go full VC?

Lol. Imagine mainland Chinese but with more money and a softer standard of living.

Oh and a broadly similar demographic profile
 
Now go ahead and explain why Russia keeps losing ships to a nation that does not have a navy or air superiority.
Because the Black Sea is a shallow puddle and Ukraine is firing missiles and drones from the shore much like Yemen does, lol.

Speaking of which, why does the US not safeguard the naval trade in the region? I was told on this very forum that the global trade would collapse if the US stopped graciously protecting it and went full isolationist like Trump wants.
 
China's military isn't the powerhouse the CCP claims it to be
Ukraine has proved useful at least as a testing ground for modern warfare, and what it's shown is that drones are fucking rad for warfighting. China's ability to mass produce cheap drones and their population's love of cellphone games is pretty potent when it comes to frontline combat. I'm not counting them out just because their ability to project power is extremely limited for now.
 
why does the US not safeguard the naval trade in the region? I was told on this very forum that the global trade would collapse if the US stopped graciously protecting it and went full isolationist like Trump wants.
Shipping is now routing around the great horn to avoid attacks that are occurring going through the suez
It's causing massive delays and 40% cost increases in shipping.
So yes, we're getting there in terms of "global trade would collapse"

As for why the USN isn't stepping up:
Our diversity hire captains are too busy having accidents and failing to run their ships, which now have minimal ammo thanks to shipping it all to ukraine.
Oh, and Biden has them building Hamas a new port, because it's important that international terrorists be re-armed after committing the worst massacre since 9/11
 
China plays the long game and has been continually modernizing it's military for 30 years.

It's also massively increased the Air force and Navy training budgets.

Europeans were similarly dismissive of the IJA and IJN in the 1930s....
The IJA and IJN are examples of Asians NOT modernizing. They were using boats, army gear and tactics several decades behind the US and Europe, which is why they lost as hard as they did in WW2. The only reason they got as far as they did with their co-prosperity sphere was the US not being the war from the beginning and the European allies being bogged down fighting the European Axis.

I don't know why you picked an example that only proves my point. China is in a WORSE position than the 1930's Japanese (relatively), the Japanese at least had some degree of quality and far fewer internal problems to manage even if they were still behind technologically/tactically. China is reeling from massive internal turmoil, can't build shit with any degree of quality and are still decades behind the US in tactics and military technology.

They can jam as much of their fiat currency as they want into their military, but it hasn't yielded anything but broken boats and shitty copies of outdated US military weapons/tech.

They are a dictatorship first and foremost. The military is for keeping the citizens in line, not for fighting foreign wars. Its ironic how poorly dictatorships do in foreign conflicts relative to Democracies for that exact reason.
 
Do you actually think the average Taiwanese person is going on go full VC?

Lol. Imagine mainland Chinese but with more money and a softer standard of living.

Oh and a broadly similar demographic profile
Notwithstanding the motivational power being actively invaded has had on populations since the dawn of organized warfare, they wouldn't likely need to. The Ottomans didn't have to throw every single man woman and child at the ANZACS to make Gallipoli an unmitigated disaster, terrain and arrogant overconfidence did most of that for them. Taiwan has worse terrain, tighter chokepoints, more predictable invasion windows, and better accessibility to its allies than Gallipoli ever did. Amphibious assaults are already one of the single riskiest offensives you can make, and Taiwan is one of the worst places on earth to attempt it.

It's not just that China has to take over Taiwan, they'd have to do it fast enough to both prevent pulling the grenade on semiconductor tech and make it pointless for the rest of the Pacific to step in and retaliate. The potential for national embarrassment is enormous and the CCP can't afford to lose that kind of face with their colossal domestic problems. If they really wanted Taiwan back so badly, the safer play would be to sabotage their domestic politics with pro-Beijing plants like they did with HK.
 
Their dollar may only go a third of what it did four years ago, their kids may be getting trannyified in school by some liberal teacher and their country may be under active invasion by tens of millions of savages but the American will still find time to beat his chest and proclaim how they would totally kick every on elses ass.
 
Everyone keeps saying this, but I'm not buying it.

The performance of the military tactically matters only in that it can maintain enough ground to prevent being overrun in the short term.

After that, war becomes a contest of the industrial base of the combatants.
This is why the entire NATO bloc is losing versus Russia:
They pushed commie green policy until their industrial sectors were dusty ruins, and Russia now produces artillery at 6 times the rate.

It doesn't matter if their weapons are not the latest and greatest if they can replace them while their foes cannot.

This, btw, is why the US won the 2 world wars.
Their military at the time was absolute rubbish compared to european powers, but they had the industry to keep dumping material in until they could catch up through experience.
This is also why the US is being embarrassed in Ukraine now: every manufacturing town that won us those world wars is now a graevyard of opiate overdoses and rusting hulks of what used to be foundries
It would be a really hard question to answer nothing The CCP says can be trusted and to date the PlA remains untested in a modern war
And the US has a serious leadership issue as well domestic issues
I have achieved war propaganda bingo!
None of it's true, but you saw some old Lazerpig videos and damnit you know everything now.
Huh?
When your military gets BTFO'd by Sudan, you aren't a powerhouse.
Yeah the US military has egg on its face when it comes to the middle east. However a war with China would the M.O.Ws the real be all of wars this century neither is coming out with mortal wounds
Ukraine has proved useful at least as a testing ground for modern warfare, and what it's shown is that drones are fucking rad for warfighting. China's ability to mass produce cheap drones and their population's love of cellphone games is pretty potent when it comes to frontline combat. I'm not counting them out just because their ability to project power is extremely limited for now.
Ukraine was a arms deal to unload leftover stock
Are betters like fresh child slaves and bribes
 
However a war with China would the M.O.Ws the real be all of wars this century neither is coming out with mortal wounds
The chinese manufacture our antibiotics.

Not only does the US come out of a war with china with mortal wounds, it comes out with massive fatalities to bacterial infection.

Sad, but predictable when the chinese have the plurality of congress on the payroll.
 
Back