How to Have a Favorable Balance of Power with China
Robert Greenway, Director of the Center for National Defense at the Heritage Foundation, says a stable US-China relationship would include a more productive trade relationship and the defense of our allies in the Indo-Pacific region. “In the end, their activities and their military posture and trajectory are escalatory,” Greenway says. “They will eclipse us in many ways conventionally and in a nuclear deterrent standpoint by the end of 2040 if things don’t change.”
Tags
just the newsPrevious video
How Things Go South with DEI, and How it Puts Lives on the LineNext videoDEI is Everywhere (and Your Tax Dollars Are Paying for it)

