Loveland Reporter-Herald

The St. Louis Post-dispatch on how direct superpower confrontat­ion with China no longer seems a distant scenario

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Ominous signs are growing about the potential for direct military conflict between the United States and China. It’s not every day when a top military commander predicts in a memo that military confrontat­ion could happen by 2025 with Beijing. But that’s exactly what Gen. Michael A. Minihan warned a few days ago. Minihan heads the U.S. Air Mobility Command headquarte­red at Scott Air Force Base, which helps remind folks in this region that, even though China is way over there, any talk of war can have major reverberat­ions right here in the Midwest.

War with China has been and probably remains an extremely remote possibilit­y. But the threat looms ever larger, particular­ly after a Chinese intelligen­ce balloon was discovered maneuverin­g in the skies above the northern United States. Secretary of State Antony Blinken postponed a visit to Beijing because of it.

Tensions have escalated with China ever since its constructi­on of artificial islands in the South China Sea and subsequent constructi­on of naval bases. China then began interferin­g with internatio­nal shipping, claiming encroachme­nt on sovereign Chinese territory.

New tensions are focused on China’s increasing­ly bold threats to take military action against Taiwan. The Biden administra­tion is boosting military aid to Taiwan and forging tighter military ties with Japan and other Asian Pacific nations. The Philippine­s in January reached an agreement to restore the U.S. military presence there.

Against that backdrop, the Feb. 1 memo from Minihan takes on far more significan­ce. Referring to Chinese Communist Party leader Xi Jinping, Minihan wrote: “I hope I am wrong. My gut tells me we will fight in 2025. Xi secured his third term and set his war council in October 2022.” Minihan outlined specific schedules for his command staff to ramp up preparatio­ns in coming months, warning against complacenc­y.

The Pentagon distanced itself from the memo, but all the other preparatio­ns and China’s balloon episode speak to a scenario belying any talk of calm and cordial diplomacy. Unless cooler heads prevail, the threat of a direct superpower confrontat­ion is looming closer to reality, meaning this region could well find itself right in the thick of it.

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