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Aaron Ruby's avatar

In fact what is not being publicly stated is the elephant in the room.

The war on Iran is fundamentally aimed at China.

This is true on many levels.

Obviously, coming after the submission of Venezuela and eliminating that source of petroleum for China, now the Trump administration is aiming to cut off another “independent” source of petroleum for China.

While China continues to have diversified sources of oil imports, all except for Russia are easily and willingly susceptible to US pressures and threats. Effectively Trump now has his hand on most of the spigots for oil for China.

The goal of the Trump administration is not some melodramatic Hollywood “surrender” by Iran, signed by a groveling Mullah on the deck of a US aircraft carrier.

Trump is seeking a “Venezuela model” where the same regime, even the same people, acquiesce to US demands. Stop the nuke program, stop attacking Israel, make nice with Saudi Arabia and company.

Trump doesn't care if they continue to chant, “Death to America!” He cares what they DO. And the Mullahs represent the Iranian capitalists and they will want to DO business.

Once Iran’s military capabilities are largely destroyed (and so far it's going ‘swimmingly’ for the US), then the US can simply sit back and blockade Iran until it submits one way or another, just as it did with Venezuela.

And then some Mullah can come forward and in the name of a compassionate Allah and the suffering of the Iranian people submit to Trump's dictates all while solemnly proclaiming the ‘sovereign will' of Iran.

China, and Russia all the more so, will now lose influence in the Middle East. What government in the Middle East will dare side with Russia or China, now?

Neither Russia or China can represent an alternative “pole” of influence to US imperialism. Neither has the military or economic weight to do so.

Russia is now absolutely humiliated after its failure and stalemate in Ukraine, its defeat in Syria and its failure to defend Iran over the last year (with its useless A300 air defense system, so bad that Turkey is negotiating getting rid of its A400 system), its loss of a potential naval base in Sudan, its humiliation in Venezuela, and its loss of the Caucuses, and Chinese encroachment on Central Asia, and now its failure to defend Cuba.

Now Trump is courting Putin to try to get Russia to simply stand aside from the coming US-Japanese war against China. No need for Russia to embarrass itself as an “ally” of the US, just don't do anything, and then Russia can keep a piece of the post-war pie. Let's make a deal!

Now Trump has also established the precedent of an imperial war by fiat. The Bonaparte can simply wage war because he says so. No need for the UN, or lies about WMD, or any excuses.

That is a dangerous precedent within the United States and in the world. Trump has just said, ‘I can do what I want, when I want. Tremble and obey!’

Ultimately, China remains the target. The thorn in Wall Street’s side.

I imagine that there must be very profound discussions and assessments taking place behind doors in China today.

The lesson for China from the US attack on Iran is:

War is coming.

GeopoliticsUnplugged's avatar

Nice read. The article provides a sharp snapshot of how Chinese experts are framing the US-Israel strikes on Iran: a meticulously executed "preemptive" or "decapitation" operation that could mark the beginning of the end for the Islamic Republic, with operational precision (daylight timing, intelligence integration) and strategic coercion ("using force to promote negotiations") taking center stage.

The consensus leans toward regime fragility under sustained pressure, command paralysis, resource deficits, and a potential "political black hole", even as some (like Li Shaoxian) argue institutional resilience and no ground invasion make outright collapse unlikely, potentially fueling stronger internal retaliation impulses instead.

For China, the subtext is pragmatic hedging: Hormuz remains a critical energy artery, and disruption risks imported inflation and supply-chain shocks across Asia, yet a post-regime pro-Western Iran could open doors for investment once sanctions lift.

Your piece captures Beijing's careful official line (condemnation + ceasefire calls) while hinting at quiet strategic upside with US resources stretched, discourse space for China on security norms, and less immediate pressure on the Belt and Road's Iranian node.

Solid overview of the academic pulse; the real watchpoint now is whether escalation dynamics (asymmetric Iranian responses vs. US retrenchment under Trump) force Beijing to pick sides faster than these analysts expect.

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