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Avoid ‘poking the dragon’ – Trump Jr. on China
Avoid ‘poking the dragon’ – Trump Jr. on China
20 February 2025, 08:15
The US should prioritize its military focus on China while maintaining diplomatic efforts to avoid war, the president’s son says
Donald Trump Jr. has called for the US to strengthen its military focus on China to balance power, while “avoiding poking the dragon in the eye.”
The US president’s son published an article on Tuesday where he supported his father’s pick for undersecretary of defense for policy, China hawk Elbridge Colby, whose confirmation hearing has yet to be scheduled in the Senate.
Colby served at the Pentagon during Trump’s first term. His focus on military deterrence in Asia has sparked both support and criticism. While some Republicans back his nomination, others oppose his push to scale back US involvement in the Middle East in favor of countering Beijing.
In the article, Trump Jr. highlighted Colby’s view that China is “uniquely powerful,” and that the US must focus its military, which he claims is “depleted after [Joe] Biden’s inattention and frittering,” on the Asian power.
“But at the same time,” he noted, “he supports my father in his openness to negotiation with [Chinese President] Xi Jinping and avoiding poking the dragon in the eye unnecessarily.”
He further stressed that the American people “would benefit most” from a balance of power with China that avoids war.
Last week, newly appointed Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth declared that China was America’s top defense priority in light of “stark strategic realities.” Speaking in Brussels at a gathering of Ukraine’s backers, he described Beijing as a “peer competitor” with both the capability and intent to threaten US interests in the Indo-Pacific.
Rivalry between Washington and Beijing has been intensifying, with both nations expanding their military and economic reach in the region. The US has repeatedly warned of China’s growing military power and ambitions, framing them as a direct challenge.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has also stated that countering China will be central to US foreign policy during President Trump’s second term. He accused the Chinese Communist Party of “lying, cheating, hacking, and stealing its way to global superpower status at our expense.”
Rubio has also criticized past US policies that shifted key supply chains to China, warning that American manufacturing has been left vulnerable. He has called for stronger measures to curb Beijing’s influence in the Indo-Pacific and beyond.
Beijing has strongly rejected these accusations, arguing that the US is the primary destabilizing force in the region. The Chinese Defense Ministry has condemned Washington’s military buildup in the Indo-Pacific, claiming that it is part of a broader strategy to “contain China” and amplify the “China threat” narrative.
China has also condemned US military ties with Taiwan, maintaining that the self-governing island is an inalienable part of the country under the ‘One-China’ principle. Beijing has denounced Washington’s arms sales to Taipei, accusing the US of fueling tensions.
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