“Military is obvious.”The remark from US President Donald Trump came almost casually as he stood amid the grand ceremonial spectacle arranged by his Chinese counterpart and host Xi Jinping in Beijing. Rows of Chinse soldiers stood in perfect formation. Red carpets stretched across the vast expanse of the Great Hall of the People. Children waved flags. Precision, discipline and power were on full display, not subtly, but deliberately, leaving Trump a bit toned down than his usual approach.For a president who has oftentimes boasted that the American military is the “greatest and best,” Trump’s tone carried something different this time: admiration mixed with recognition that the global military balance is no longer as one-sided as it used to be.For decades after the Soviet Union collapsed in 1990, Washington stood alone at the peak of global power. America’s military dominance became the defining feature of the post-Cold War world. But in Beijing on Thursday, China appeared eager to send a message to Trump and the world alike, that era may be changing.Trump repeatedly praised Xi during the visit, calling him a “great leader.” Yet behind the warm words and diplomatic smiles was a deeper undercurrent: this was not merely a state visit. It was a showcase of China’s confidence, military, technological and geopolitical.And Beijing did not stop at symbolism.Even as Trump received military honours, China’s messaging on Taiwan turned strikingly blunt. Chinese officials warned that US involvement in Taiwan-related matters could “lead to US-China conflict.”The warning came as tensions around Taiwan continue to sharpen. The self-ruled island, claimed by Beijing but backed militarily and politically by Washington, has increasingly become the most dangerous fault line in US-China relations.Taiwan hit back strongly.“The Beijing authorities are currently the sole risk to regional peace and stability,” Taiwan’s defence ministry said, accusing China of “military harassment” and grey-zone operations around the island. It added that “Beijing has no right to make any claims on behalf of Taiwan internationally.”But beyond Taiwan, another conflict has quietly revealed how modern geopolitical battles are evolving, and how China’s influence may already be extending into the future of warfare itself.Trump’s military offensive against Tehran under “Operation Epic Fury” thrust the Iran conflict into global focus. Reports surrounding the war repeatedly pointed toward Chinese technology playing a behind-the-scenes role in strengthening Iran’s military capabilities.The battlefield of the 21st century is no longer decided only by fighter jets, aircraft carriers or the size of defence budgets. Increasingly, power is being measured through drones, AI systems, cyber capabilities, satellite navigation and precision technology.And in many of those areas, Beijing is rapidly emerging as a serious challenger to Washington.One symbol of that shift is the BeiDou Navigation Satellite System, China’s answer to America’s GPS network. Iran has reportedly been using the BeiDou system since 2021 to improve drone accuracy and deploy decoy systems capable of complicating enemy targeting.That detail may seem technical. But strategically, it is enormous.
A quieter Trump in Xi’s staged show
Trump, in China and in Xi Jinping’s presence, appeared notably more restrained compared to his usual approach with other world leaders, where he is often more confrontational.From calling Shehbaz Sharif to the mic mid-presser for praise, to publicly grilling Volodymyr Zelenskyy over gratitude and even his outfit, Donald Trump has often turned diplomatic meetings into headline-grabbing moments marked by sharp exchanges. But with Xi Jinping, the tone has shifted.
Xi and Trump
Trump has repeatedly praised Xi as a “great leader,” replacing pointed remarks with warmer language and diplomatic smiles. Yet beneath the cordial optics, the visit has doubled as a carefully choreographed showcase of China’s military strength, technological ambition and growing geopolitical confidence.
China reshaping conflicts beyond its borders
It suggests that China is no longer only building weapons for itself. Its technology is beginning to shape conflicts far beyond its borders, testing itself indirectly against American military systems in real-world combat situations.The contrast is striking.The United States still spends more on defence than any other country in the world. China, meanwhile, possesses the world’s largest standing army. But modern warfare is increasingly becoming less about size and more about systems, who controls the algorithms, the satellites, the drones, the data and the artificial intelligence behind the battlefield.That is the real contest unfolding beneath the carefully choreographed handshakes in Beijing.Not simply a rivalry between two nations. But a struggle over who will define the next era of global power.
Empty missile bins behind superpower image
The Iran war revealed both the extraordinary strengths and the growing vulnerabilities of the American military machine.US forces fired thousands of missiles, drones and interceptors during operations against Iranian targets, striking command centres, military bases and weapons facilities with remarkable precision. Advanced systems like Tomahawk cruise missiles, JASSMs, Patriot interceptors and THAAD air defence systems performed effectively.But the scale of the operation also triggered alarm bells inside strategic circles.According to the CSIS assessment, America’s stockpile of long-range precision munitions was already under pressure well before the Iran conflict began. The war only accelerated the depletion.The concern is particularly serious because modern warfare against China would rely heavily on exactly those weapons.Unlike conflicts in the Middle East, a Pacific war would involve massive distances, heavily defended airspace and enormous missile exchanges. In such a scenario, long-range strike systems become the backbone of military operations.
The problem? America may not have enough of them.The report noted that production timelines for critical weapons remain painfully slow. Some systems take between three and four years to manufacture. Refilling depleted arms and ammunition inventories is not a quick process.And while US officials publicly insist America still possesses overwhelming military strength and stands at the top in defence expenditure, strategic analysts increasingly fear that prolonged conflict could rapidly expose shortages.
China’s war machine already on wartime footing
The deeper anxiety might come in the way of Washington as the pace at which China is expanding its military-industrial capabilities.According to the report, Beijing’s defence industry is already operating with a wartime mindset. China is rapidly producing warships, submarines, missiles, aircraft, drones and cyber capabilities across nearly every domain of warfare.
And unlike the United States, which still faces procurement delays and political bottlenecks, China’s centralised system allows faster scaling of military production.The concern is no longer just about numbers of tanks or fighter jets.Modern warfare has shifted toward drones, AI-enabled targeting, cyber systems, electronic warfare, satellite navigation and autonomous platforms. In many of these sectors, China is moving aggressively.The Iran conflict became a glimpse into that future.Reports surrounding Tehran’s drone and missile operations repeatedly pointed toward Chinese-linked technology. Iran’s use of the BeiDou Navigation Satellite System improved drone accuracy and enabled more sophisticated battlefield deception systems.
What once sounded futuristic is now becoming operational reality.Wars are increasingly being fought not only with bombs and bullets, but with algorithms, autonomous systems and satellite networks.
Taiwan becomes centre of the storm
At the heart of the US-China rivalry sits Taiwan.During Trump’s Beijing visit, China warned that mishandling the Taiwan issue could “lead to US-China conflict.” Taiwan, meanwhile, accused Beijing of being “the sole risk to regional peace and stability.”
For military planners, Taiwan is no longer simply a diplomatic flashpoint. It is the scenario around which future Pacific warfare is increasingly being modelled.The CSIS report highlights repeated war-game simulations in which US forces exhausted critical long-range missiles within just the first week of a Taiwan conflict.Taiwan itself reportedly ran out of anti-ship missiles almost immediately in several simulations.That finding has deeply alarmed strategists because China’s missile systems now threaten large parts of the Indo-Pacific, including American bases in Japan, Guam and the Philippines.US aircraft carriers and destroyers, once symbols of unmatched American power, are now considered increasingly vulnerable inside China’s missile range.
The age of ‘Hellscape’ warfare
The Pentagon’s answer to this growing challenge is an emerging concept known as “Hellscape.”The idea is simple but dramatic: turn the Taiwan Strait into an overwhelming maze of drones, underwater systems, unmanned attack vehicles (UAVs) and autonomous weapons that would make any Chinese invasion extraordinarily costly.Instead of relying only on expensive fighter jets or giant warships, the strategy focuses on “precise mass”, huge numbers of cheaper drones and unmanned systems working together.
Military planners increasingly believe future wars will not be won only by the side with the biggest navy or air force, but by the side capable of producing and sustaining enormous numbers of smart, expendable systems.And here again, China’s manufacturing strength becomes central.The report also warned that the United States and Taiwan may need hundreds of thousands of drones and unmanned systems in any prolonged Indo-Pacific conflict.That scale resembled industrial warfare more than traditional military campaigns.
America’s industrial wake-up call
Perhaps the most striking conclusion from the CSIS report is not about missiles or submarines, but about factories.The report argued that wars between great powers are ultimately won by industrial capacity.It pointed to America’s historic mobilisation during World War II and the Cold War, when presidents like Franklin D Roosevelt and Dwight D Eisenhower transformed the country into a defence production giant.Today, fear surrounding Uncle Sam remains as key as it no longer possesses that same speed or industrial readiness.Aircraft maintenance problems, overstretched naval deployments, vulnerable Pacific bases and delayed weapons production all point toward a system under strain.The report called for a modern industrial mobilisation effort, a wartime-style push to accelerate defence manufacturing, strengthen supply chains and rapidly expand production of drones, missiles and air defence systems.Because beneath the diplomatic handshakes in Beijing, the strategic contest is no longer only about who has the stronger military today.It is about who can sustain the next war tomorrow.


