When I came across this book co-authored by Michael Beckley, I was immediately intrigued and decided to purchase it. I was very impressed by Beckley’s speech, The End of China’s Rise and The Future of Global Order, that he delivered at the 2024 World Knowledge Forum. Both he and Professor Brands are distinguished American political scientists, specialising in great-power competition, U.S.-China relations, and national security. Beckley serves as an Associate Professor of Political Science at Tufts University, while Professor Brands holds the esteemed position of Henry Kissinger Distinguished Professor at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. This book was released in August 2022.
China has experienced four decades of peace and prosperity, which has been an exceptional historical anomaly since the 1970s. However, the authors argue that China is not a rising power, but rather a risen one, now facing the limits of its growth. The nation stands on the brink of a demographic cliff, with its working-age population declining since 2014. Between 2020 and 2035, China is projected to lose roughly 70 million working-age adults while gaining 130 million senior citizens. By current trajectory, the country will have two workers available to support each retiree by 2050, placing immense strain on social and economic stability. While China’s economic expansion has been remarkable, it has come at a steep environmental cost. Half of its river water and nearly 90% groundwater are unsafe for consumption. Alarmingly, a quarter of its river water and 60% of its groundwater is so contaminated that the government has declared it “unfit for human contact” and unusable even for agriculture or industry. As a result, China has become the world’s largest importer of agricultural products and the largest net energy importer, including oil and natural gas. These deteriorations raise pressing questions about the future of China’s growth and sustainability.
Under Xi Jinping, China has been sliding back toward neo-totalitarianism, and this deterioration is undermining its economic growth. Rigorous studies based on objectively observable data, such as electricity consumption, construction activity, tax revenues, and railway freight, show that China’s actual growth rate is roughly half of its officially reported figures, and its economy is estimated to be 20% smaller than claimed. Despite private firms being the primary drivers of China’s wealth and employment, politically connected state-owned enterprises, often called ‘zombie firms’, have received 80% of the loans and subsidies distributed by Chinese banks. In contrast, private businesses have been starved of capital and forced to bribe party officials for protection, stifling innovation and efficiency. Decades of unproductive economic expansion, coupled with relentless corruption with the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) and its elite ‘princeling’ class, have left Communist China (共產中國) burdened with massive debt. Between 2008 and 2019, total debt exceeded 335% of GDP on the eve of the COVID-19 pandemic.
China’s increasing assertiveness and long-standing aggressive economic practices, such as intellectual property theft, forced technology transfer, and commercial espionage, have significantly escalated geopolitical tensions. In response, nations have implemented countermeasures, including trade restrictions, investment screening, strategic encirclement, and enhanced cybersecurity policies, creating a more adversarial global environment for China. Beyond these economic tactics, China has pursued mercantilist expansion through the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), seeking to secure mineral resources, dominate key markets, and extend its political and economic influence abroad.
China has engaged in a massive military buildup over the past few decades. Since the early 2000s, China has rapidly modernised its armed forces, invested heavily in advanced technology, expanded naval capabilities, missile development, cyber and space warfare, and increased its nuclear arsenal. As a result, China's growing military capabilities have heightened concerns among neighbouring countries, particularly in the Indo-Pacific region, where its rising influence continues to reshape regional security dynamics.
Chinese leaders, undoubtedly, are aware they are heading toward inevitable economic and political decline. History has shown that peaking powers often seek to expand abroad in a final push to achieve long-standing strategic ambitions before their window of opportunity closes, making such periods particularly dangerous. The authors express growing concern that China’s aggression toward Taiwan will escalate in the latter half of the 2020s. They argue that Americans must recognise the increasing likelihood of war with China, as Beijing believes they are strong enough to disrupt the existing international order aggressively. Still, Chinese leaders are losing confidence that time remains on their side. If conflict over Taiwan is inevitable, the authors present a chilling scenario in which China moves to annex the island in a bid to ‘reunify’ the nation. This unsettling catastrophe is also discussed in the book's introduction.
Overall, I appreciate that the book articulates many of the perspectives I have long held, and I agree with most of the authors’ insights. I was particularly shocked to learn the extent to which Communist China has become a serious threat to liberal democracies and my home country, Taiwan, when President Trump initiated Trade War 1.0 with China in 2018. Before that, I frequently travelled to China to perform for an IT technical & Sales role from 1996 to 2010. During this period, I also spent three years as an expatriate in Beijing, and my family and I were assigned to live and work there. My job role spanned various state-owned enterprises and government agencies, including top banks and telecommunication firms. I also had numerous meetings with Huawei, tax bureaus, and the government transportation department. Looking back, I am convinced that the mainland Chinese citizens experienced the most significant degree of freedom during that era before Xi Jinping assumed the power in 2012.
As an overseas Taiwanese, I want to share my perspectives and expectations on how the unfolding events in the coming years could shape Taiwan’s future. I grew up in Taiwan, where I completed my compulsory military service and worked there for several years until my early thirties. Most of my education, except for university, occurred in the Chiang Kai-Shek era. During his rule, Chiang adamantly maintained that he would someday lead his Nationalist Party, Kuomintang (KMT國民黨), to launch a counteroffensive to reclaim mainland China, a mission he declared after fleeing to Taiwan with his troops in 1949. In the school, we were taught we were Chinese, and mainland China was our motherland. I lived through Chiang’s authoritarian rule and experienced the prolonged period of martial law, which lasted for 38 years until it was lifted in 1987, making it the second-longest martial law imposed on any nation. Taiwan’s transition to democracy was a gradual reform process, beginning in the late 1980s and culminating in its first direct presidential election in 1996.
For seventy-six years, Communist China has continuously sought to disrupt and pressure Taiwan through a range of aggressive tactics:
• Military Threats and Provocations, including large-scale military drills and frequent incursions into Taiwan’s air defence identification zone (ADIZ). The People's Liberation Army (PLA) has intensified naval patrols and missile deployments aimed at intimidating Taiwan. Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan in August 2022 triggered a strong response from China. It marked a shift in China’s approach to Taiwan and set a new status quo of heightened military pressure and diplomatic isolation.
• Diplomatic Isolation: Communist China has systematically pressured countries and international organisations to deny Taiwan diplomatic recognition, seeking to limit its presence on the global stage.
• Economic Coercion: Communist China has leveraged trade restrictions and economic dependencies to manipulate Taiwan’s policies, using financial pressure to assert control.
• Cyber Warfare and Disinformation: The CCP has launched cyberattacks targeting Taiwanese government institutions and infrastructure while spreading disinformation campaigns designed to sway public opinion and erode confidence in Taiwan’s leadership.
• Political Influence Operations: Beijing has attempted to shape the Taiwanese political landscape by supporting pro-China candidates and parties, utilising media influence and financial incentives. After Chiang Kai-Shek and his son, President Chiang Ching-kuo, passed away, the KMT shifted from a steadfast anti-CCP stance to becoming increasingly aligned with the CCP’s interests, advocating pro-China policies, deepening economic engagement, and promoting closer ties to the mainland.
• Multi-pronged approach to punish Taiwan Independence Advocacy: Taiwan has never been under the CCP’s ruling, it has a fully functioning government, military, and economy. Nonetheless, the CCP has escalated efforts to delegitimise Taiwan’s sovereignty, issuing new legal guidelines defining Taiwan independence as a crime, threatening with severe punishments, including the death penalty, for those deemed separatists. In 2022, China's ambassadors in Paris and Australia publicly stated that the Taiwanese people would be "re-educated" when the CCP take over Taiwan.
A recent 2024 Pew Research Centre poll found that 67% of people in Taiwan identify themselves as Taiwanese, while only 3% consider themselves Chinese, and 28% see themselves as both Taiwanese and Chinese. Additionally, a 2021 survey revealed that 72.5% of Taiwanese expressed a willingness to defend Taiwan in the event of a Chinese invasion.
Since the end of World War II, Independence movements have reshaped the global political landscape, with more than 100 countries achieving sovereignty or undergoing transformation. Yet, many people wonder why the CCP has continued to cling to an outdated imperial mindset, and claim Taiwan remains an inseparable part of China.
• Symbol of National Unity: The CCP uses Taiwan as a political tool to reinforce its legitimacy, portraying reunification as essential to national strength and unity.
• Historical Framing: The CCP promotes the narrative that Taiwan is part of China's "ancestral land," shaping public perception through controlled historical interpretations.
• Escalating Rhetoric: Xi Jinping has declared that the Taiwan issue must not be deferred to future generations, signalling a more aggressive approach.
• Threat to Authoritarian Control: Taiwan’s thriving democracy presents a fundamental challenge to CCP rule. For over a century, China has failed to establish a liberal & democratic political system, leaving its citizens without fundamental freedoms in most aspects of daily life. If Taiwan can succeed economically while preserving democratic freedoms, it raises the question of why can’t China?
• The Century of Humiliation and China’s Rejuvenation: Throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries, China endured a series of military defeats and foreign interventions that led to national decline. These included the Opium Wars, which resulted in the cession of Hong Kong to the United Kingdom, and the First Sino-Japanese War, which forced China to surrender Taiwan. In response to these historical humiliations, the CCP has placed national rejuvenation at the core of its political agenda, aiming to end foreign domination, restore territorial integrity, and modernise China’s economy and military. Reuniting with Taiwan has become a critical component of the CCP’s national rejuvenation campaign, reinforcing its determination to assert control over the island.
• The Outdated Governance Model: Today, the CCP leadership operates more like a bureaucratic feudal system from the nineteenth century, resistant to political reform and unwilling to embrace true modernisation.
There are rumours that Xi might step down from the position of the General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party in the coming days, and he has lost the power to reign over the Central Military Commission. If these claims prove false, I firmly believe Xi will initiate an invasion of Taiwan within the next two to three years to cement his legacy as the CCP’s most formidable leader before entering his anticipated fourth term in 2027. If this war is not inevitable, what near-term strategy should Taiwan and Western allies adopt to navigate the volatile geopolitical landscape ahead?
• Taiwan’s president has announced that the defence budget will rise to 3% of GDP in the current financial year. Over the past five years, Taiwan has gradually increased its defence spending in response to criticism from US officials regarding its military readiness. Whether the KMT was in power or opposition, it has consistently advocated for significant reductions in Taiwan’s defence budget, limiting the government’s ability to allocate further military spending. Given the KMT’s political alignment with Beijing, Taiwan will unlikely surpass the 3% GDP threshold for defence spending. Taiwan’s slow and gradual increase in military expenditure has sparked serious concerns among Western allies regarding its commitment to defend their nation. In contrast, most allies led by the US have significantly increased their defence budget and are actively preparing for a potential Chinese invasion of Taiwan.
• The former president, Tasi Ing-wen, extended Taiwan’s compulsory military service from four months to one year. I believe the service should be at least one and a half years, ideally two years, to ensure soldiers can effectively train and adapt to operating advanced weaponry. However, given Taiwan’s current political climate, extending the service beyond six months would be extremely difficult to implement.
• While the US Congress struggles with partisan polarisation, the Taiwan Legislature remains deeply divided and confrontational. As a young democracy, Taiwan faces significant challenges in achieving national unity, which has become a pressing concern for its people. It is widely understood that the voters who support the opposition parties, such as the KMT and TPP (Taiwan's People Party), are generally not staunchly anti-CCP. Unlike Western liberal democracies, Taiwan lacks a bipartisan consensus on national security when confronted with existential threats.
The CCP’s ongoing bullying against Taiwan has persisted for so long that many Taiwanese have grown desensitised to it and favour the maintenance of the status quo. At the same time, they place considerable trust in their national Silicon Shield, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation (TSMC), for its dominance in semiconductor manufacturing, making Taiwan indispensable to the global economy, creating a strong incentive for Western nations, particularly the United States, to defend Taiwan against potential threats from China.
• Many of my Chinese friends, who are not CCP members, have always remarked that the party’s actions consistently contradict its words. They believe that whatever the CCP publicly claims will do the opposite. Former US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo famously stated that when dealing with the CCP, we must distrust and verify their statements. The CCP operates as the most ruthless organisation in the world. They are not a party serving the Chinese people, but rather a system functioning more like a mafia. Its primary objective is not governance but securing the legitimacy of the party, its party leader, and the elite ‘princeling’ class. At its core, it is a regime built on coercion and control.
• Despite Xi Jinping’s anti-corruption campaign, which has investigated nearly five million officials since 2012, corruption remains deeply entrenched in China’s political system. High-ranking officials continued to be implicated in bribery, embezzlement, and abuse of power, while the lack of transparency allows corruption to persist. Critics argue that Xi has used the campaign as a tool to eliminate political rivals rather than genuinely reform the system. Over the past four decades, China has amassed massive economic surpluses through exports. However, ordinary Chinese people have seen little benefit from these economic gains. Their GDP per capita remains low compared to Western Liberal democracies, with wealth concentrated primarily at the highest echelons of the CCP.
• The American technological and Wall Street financial institutions have inadvertently bolstered China’s military capabilities. The CCP employs a Military-Civil Fusion (MCF) strategy, systematically integrating civilian technological advancements into military development. This approach is designed to transform the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) into a world-class military force by leveraging innovations from China’s commercial and academic sectors. To counter this growing threat, American companies and the US government must take decisive action to blunt China’s MCF-driven advancement in artificial intelligence, semiconductors, quantum computing, biotechnology, and other critical technologies.
• The United States’ military capability in East Asia may be slipping behind China’s, and its military modernisation efforts will not fully materialise until the 2030s. To prevent conflict, the US must urgently enhance its deterrence capabilities, prioritising strategic military advancements while reinforcing partnership with Asian allies, such as the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (QUAD), to counter the CCP effectively.
The authors dedicate significant coverage to arguing why China is entering a “Danger Zone” after its long period of economic expansion comes to an end. They draw historical parallels to the origin of World War I, the launch of World War II in Asia by Imperial Japan’s militarisation in the 1930s, and even Russia’s recent invasion of Ukraine, suggesting that similar geopolitical forces may drive the CCP toward a decisive and potentially dangerous move in the second half of the 2020s. This book presents a striking and provocative narrative, offering crucial insights into how countermeasures might be developed to address the looming risks. It is a compelling read and deserves a five-star rating.