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Communist China’s Conquest-Oriented Threat To Global Stability

Communist China’s Conquest-Oriented Threat To Global Stability

Published 1 year ago
Description

The People’s Republic of China (PRC), under the iron grip of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), has pursued a foreign policy that reeks of conquest and coercion, targeting nations like Australia, Japan, and Taiwan with calculated aggression. This approach, cloaked in diplomatic platitudes, seeks to bend sovereign states to Beijing’s will through economic leverage, military intimidation, and cultural infiltration.

The world must recognize the PRC’s actions for what they are—a bid for global dominance—and unite, particularly with the United States, to economically cripple China’s ability to threaten international peace and cultural integrity.

* Segment 2: America’s Third Watch Segment

* Segment 3: The Epidemic of Violence As Conflict Resolution In The US Black Community

A recent flashpoint in China’s belligerent posture is its reaction to Australia’s move to repatriate the strategically vital Darwin Port, leased to the Chinese-owned Landbridge Group in 2015. On April 7, 2025, Beijing issued a thinly veiled warning through Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian:

"We urge the Australian side to provide a fair, non-discriminatory and predictable business environment for Chinese enterprises investing and operating in Australia, and refrain from overstretching the concept of national security or politicising normal business cooperation."

This statement is a masterclass in hypocrisy. The CCP frames Australia’s defense of its sovereignty as discriminatory, while ignoring its own track record of weaponizing trade and investment to punish nations that defy its agenda. Australia’s decision to reclaim the port stems from legitimate security concerns, given its proximity to key military bases and its role in Indo-Pacific trade routes. Beijing’s protest reveals its intent to maintain strategic footholds abroad, treating foreign assets as pawns in its geopolitical chess game.

China’s playbook in Australia extends beyond Darwin. Since 2017, when Australia began scrutinizing Chinese influence in its politics and universities, Beijing retaliated with crippling trade sanctions, costing Australian exporters an estimated AU$20 billion. These measures targeted beef, barley, wine, and coal—sectors chosen to maximize economic pain and send a message: compliance with CCP interests is non-negotiable. The sanctions followed Australia’s call for an independent inquiry into COVID-19’s origins, exposing China’s sensitivity to scrutiny and its willingness to economically bludgeon smaller nations into submission. This isn’t diplomacy; it’s economic warfare aimed at eroding Australia’s autonomy.

Japan faces a similar onslaught. China’s aggressive posturing in the East China Sea, particularly around the Senkaku Islands, combines military provocations with economic pressure. The CCP’s coast guard and naval vessels routinely encroach on Japanese waters, testing Tokyo’s resolve while Beijing ramps up rhetoric claiming the islands as its own.

Japan, a key US ally, is targeted not just for its strategic location but for its role in the Quad—a security partnership with the U.S., Australia, and India that China views as a direct challenge. Beijing’s strategy is clear: in

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