02 China's Worries in 2026 (PC version)
When China initiates the unification of Taiwan in 2026, the military process is the least of its worries. China's main focus will inevitably be on political thinking and planning. This includes: (1) predicting and dealing with the timing, conditions, and early signals of Japan and South Korea's withdrawal from the war process, and incorporating political changes in Japan and South Korea into the post-war political order process. (2) How will China respond to the escalation procedures of the United States? Will China set the highest military response level first or follow the United States' military escalation procedures step by step? Should the complete overthrow of the American imperial order be included in the response procedure? Should the nuclear war level be included in the response plan? (3) How does China assess and respond to the uncertainty in Europe? Is it to pre-emptively deter Europe from entering the East Asian battlefield? Or reactively counter European intervention? Or pre-emptively weaken Europe? (4) How is the nuclear risk assessed, and where does the greatest nuclear risk come from? Does China have a pre-emptive deterrence plan? Once European public opinion moves towards nuclear war, does China have substantive deterrence preparations? (5) How does China design and think about the new world order? Does China's philosophical foundation support a global imperial order? If the current imperial order of the United States collapses, how should China respond? Is it in China's interest to incite global rebellion, or is it in China's interest to cooperate with the United States? (6) Is China convinced that the global forces against the current order are ready?
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