5 Maps That Explain China's Strategy

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The People’s Republic of China has always been portrayed as

an increasingly aggressive country prepared to challenge

the United States.

At the same time, China has avoided significant involvement

in the troubles roiling in the rest of Eurasia.

In other words, there is a gap between what is generally

expected of China and what China actually does.

To understand what China’s actual national strategy is, let’s look at the following five maps.

But there is also the China inhabited by the Han Chinese,

the main Chinese ethnic group.

Han China is surrounded within China by regions populated by other nations, including Tibet, Xinjiang, Inner Mongolia, and

Manchuria.

These four regions are a buffer around China, providing strategic depth to repel

invaders.

All four, however, resisted Chinese domination, as Tibet

and Xinjiang still do today.

The line, called the 15-inch Isohyet, separates the area in the east that receives enough

rainfall to maintain an agricultural economy.

As a result, the majority of Chinese live in this area, while

non-Han Chinese regions in the west are lightly inhabited or

uninhabited.

That means the Chinese population is crowded into a

much smaller area and is farther from its neighbors.

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Destiny Vandeput
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The economic difference between China’s coastal region and the rest of China is striking.

Economically, only the coast is above the median. Every other

area is below it.

Over 650 million Chinese citizens live in households earning less than $4 a day,

according to World Bank data.

Obviously, the overwhelming majority of these people live outside the coastal region.

The China that most Westerners think about is the

thin strip along the coast.

The rest (500–1,000 miles west), however, is a land of Han

Chinese living in Third World poverty.

China’s southern border consists of the Himalayas in the west and hilly jungle country in

the east.

It is impossible to conduct major military operations in the Himalayas and a nightmare to

fight in hilly jungles of southeast Asia.

To the north, China is bordered by Siberia, which no country has ever tried to invade or mount an invasion from.

Therefore, China’s primary strategic interest is maintaining the territorial integrity of China

from internal threats.

If it lost control of Tibet or Xinjiang, China’s borders would

move far east, the buffer for Han China would disappear, and then China would face a

strategic crisis.

China has vital maritime interests built around global

trade, but the problem is the sea lanes are under American control.

China’s coastal seas are surrounded by archipelagos of

island states with narrow passages between them.

China currently lacks resources to build a navy that could

match the US, so the country is buying time by trying to appear

more capable than it is.

The Chinese will maintain this posture until it has the time and

resources to close the gap.

In summary, China has three strategic imperatives. Two internal and one external.

First, it must maintain control over Xinjiang and Tibet. Second, it must preserve the regime and

prevent regionalism.

And last, it must find a solution to its enclosure in the East and

South China Seas.

China’s strategic priority now, however, is internal stability. And that defines everything

else China does.

SUBSCRIBEGeorge Friedman provides unbiased assessment of the global outlook in his free publication, This Week in Geopolitics.

Subscribe now and get an in-depth view of the forces that will drive events and investors in the next year, decade, or even a century from now.

Subscribe here

Destiny Vandeput
added a comma after publication

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