"The supreme art of war is to subdue the enemy without fighting."
— Sun Tzu, The Art of War
The Asymmetric Superpower
Modern China represents an entirely new genus of global power that cannot be compared to the British, French, or Japanese empires of old. While past imperialists relied on direct territorial colonization and military occupation to extract wealth, Beijing dominates through global supply chain integration and industrial output. China has established itself as the world’s sole manufacturing superpower. It accounts for roughly 33% of global manufacturing output—a share larger than the next nine largest manufacturing nations combined. In core sectors like electronics, advanced machinery, solar panels, and electric vehicles, its dominance is practically absolute.
This scale creates an unprecedented form of asymmetric interdependence. Unlike the Soviet Union during the Cold War, which was economically isolated from the West, modern China is the beating heart of the global economy. Western corporations rely on Chinese factories for everything from advanced industrial robotics to active pharmaceutical ingredients. Western consumer markets are tethered to Chinese logistics. You cannot decouple from or militarily contain China without plunging the Western world into an instant economic dark age.
The Weaponisation of Interdependence
Rather than sending colonial governors or gunboats to enforce its will, Beijing utilizes an evolution of its historical tributary system, using geo-economic tools to lock developing nations into its orbit. Through the multi-trillion-dollar Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), China acts as the world’s ultimate creditor and builder. It does not demand political allegiance upfront; it sends state-backed banks and state-owned enterprises to build massive infrastructure projects—ports, railways, highways, and power grids—across Asia, Africa, and Latin America.
When these developing nations inevitably struggle to repay the high-interest loans, Beijing executes a strategy of asset seizure via debt leverage. A prime example is the Hambantota Port in Sri Lanka, where the government was forced to sign over a 99-year lease of a strategic maritime hub to a Chinese state-owned firm to clear its debts. Similarly, China has quietly taken de facto control of the power grids in Laos and critical mining infrastructure in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Through the "Digital Silk Road," companies like Huawei and ZTE are building the 5G telecom networks and surveillance architectures for these nations, installing a digital nervous system that gives Beijing unprecedented intelligence advantages and control over global data flows.
The Multi-Front Creep
This strategy of creeping, non-violent absorption is visible across all of China's geopolitical frontiers, allowing it to redraw maps without triggering a conventional war:
- Salami-Slicing the Himalayas: Along its contested 3,488 km border with India, Beijing avoids large-scale military clashes. Instead, it uses "salami-slicing" tactics—moving the border markers forward millimeter by millimeter, building military-grade roads, helipads, and civilian "dual-use" villages directly on disputed land to establish permanent facts on the ground.
- The South China Sea: Rather than invading neighboring Southeast Asian nations, China simply claimed an entire ocean by drawing its unilateral "Nine-Dash Line". It physically dredged up coral reefs, turned them into heavily fortified artificial island fortresses equipped with runway strips and anti-ship missiles, and now aggressively blocks countries like the Philippines and Vietnam from fishing or drilling for oil within their own sovereign waters.
- The Colonization of Siberia: Following Russia's isolation from Western markets due to the Ukraine war, Moscow has been forced to link its financial survival to Beijing. China has effectively turned Russia into a junior partner, finalizing the massive "Power of Siberia 2" pipeline and securing ultra-cheap Siberian gas, timber, and copper on purely Chinese terms.
The Vacuum of the Declining Superpower
China’s rapid global expansion has been heavily accelerated by the strategic retreat of the United States. While Beijing operates under hyper-focused, 50-year state plans, the United States is paralyzed by deep domestic political polarization, staggering national debt, and systemic institutional gridlock. Washington’s internal culture wars and economic fatigue have eroded its political will to enforce the post-World War II global order, leaving a massive vacuum that the silent Leviathan is more than happy to fill.
(……to be continued..)
(Author: Freelance journalist Retired from Indian Information Services. Former senior editor with DD News, AIR News, and PIB. Consultant with UNICEF Nigeria. Contributor to various publications)
Krishan Gopal Sharma



.jpg)

Related Items
Drone strike causes fire at UAE nuclear power plant
WHO flags Ebola outbreak in Congo, Uganda as global emergency
Silent Leviathan: Can China succeed where history’s empires failed?