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Eroding Power: How the U.S. Is Struggling to Deter China’s Rise

📌 Topline: A Wall Street Journal editorial argues that America’s ability to deter China—militarily, economically, and diplomatically—is eroding, citing gaps in defense readiness, strategic clarity, and global influence. The piece urges urgent recalibration of U.S. policy to prevent escalation in the Indo-Pacific.

 


📝 Description: The editorial contends that China no longer fears U.S. retaliation or containment, emboldened by its growing military capabilities and assertive posture in Taiwan, the South China Sea, and global trade. It criticizes Washington’s “strategic ambiguity” on Taiwan and warns that deterrence only works when threats are credible and capabilities visible.

 

The WSJ points to delays in defense modernization, insufficient naval presence in the Pacific, and waning alliances as signs of vulnerability. It also highlights Beijing’s expanding influence through trade, tech, and diplomacy—often outpacing U.S. efforts in the Global South.

 

The piece calls for a stronger military posture, clearer red lines, and revitalized alliances to restore deterrence. Without these, it warns, China may test U.S. resolve in ways that risk direct conflict.

 

📚 Summary:

  1. ⚠️ WSJ editorial says U.S. deterrence against China is weakening
  2. 🛡️ Points to gaps in military readiness and strategic clarity
  3. 🌏 China emboldened in Taiwan, South China Sea, and global diplomacy
  4. 🤝 Editorial urges stronger alliances and clearer red lines
  5. 🚨 Warns of rising risk of miscalculation and escalation


🌍 Context: As tensions rise in the Indo-Pacific, the debate over deterrence is no longer theoretical. The editorial adds to growing calls in Washington for a more assertive and coherent China strategy—before Beijing sets the terms of engagement.


🔗 References: WSJ & TQ Desk

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