February 14, 2023

China’s use of balloons to overfly U.S. territory is not an accident – it’s part of China’s Long Game for capturing Taiwan and becoming the world’s leading superpower. 

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What is this Long Game?

China is the oldest country on earth, dating back to 4,000 B.C.

Honoring their ancient general-philosopher Sun Tzu, China’s earned a reputation for playing the “Long Game,” whether the game involves corporate stratagems or strategic military plans. 

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Add to this, when it comes to China, there are no coincidences. 

When planning for the long term, everything happening in the here and now are inevitably linked to their long game.  Which is why the South Carolina balloon was shot down less than a week before U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s long-planned trip to Beijing. 

In the face of this “intrusion” into American airspace, Blinken was forced to cancel his plan to conduct “peaceful” discussions with Chinese leaders, including Supreme Leader Xi Jinping.  This timing was no coincidence.

To understand how their “Long Game” works, consider the South China Sea, a vast area of the Pacific Ocean surrounded by Vietnam, the Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore … and China.  One-third of the world’s maritime shipping passes through the South China Sea, carrying more than $3 trillion in trade each year.  Huge oil and natural gas reserves are believed to lie beneath its seabed, while fisheries provide vital protein to help feed more than a billion people.  An international waterway surrounded by competing interests, China has viewed this body of water as an inland sea – their inland sea.

Long before China had a blue-water Navy, which they’re only now still building, China knew it wanted to take control of the South China Sea.  So, 40 years before they had the means of enforcing a hostile takeover, they’d already laid claims to the unoccupied Spratly Islands (Chinese: 南沙群島/南沙群岛), long claimed by the Philippines and Vietnam.  A quick glance at a map will make the “why” to those claims obvious. 

Fast forward to the early 2020s. China now occupies some of those islands while it’s literally creating new islands out of sub-surface reefs and seamount outcroppings. These man-made islands are big enough to play host to air force bases located a thousand or more miles away from mainland China.  Those bases, equipped with both modern Fifth-Generation J-20 stealth fighter-bombers and land-based hypersonic anti-ship missiles, are now in the position to interdict any seaborne traffic using the South China Sea, including American Navy aircraft carrier task forces that routinely patrol this vital seaway.