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HomeMain HeadlineBeijing Warns Washington Against Escalation as Tensions Deepen

Beijing Warns Washington Against Escalation as Tensions Deepen

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BEIJING — China has issued a stark warning to the United States amid intensifying strategic and military tensions, declaring that while it will not initiate conflict, it is fully prepared to respond decisively if provoked.

Speaking in Beijing, Victor Gao, President of the China Energy Security Institute, delivered a blunt message directed at Washington’s policymakers. “If you want war, you will get war; if you want to destroy China, you will be destroyed,” Gao said. “China will not fire the first shot, but China will not allow you to fire the second shot.”

The remarks come against a backdrop of growing rivalry between the world’s two largest economies, spanning trade disputes, technological competition, military posturing in the Asia-Pacific, and sharply divergent positions on Taiwan, the South China Sea, and global governance.

Chinese officials and analysts have repeatedly accused the United States of pursuing a strategy of containment aimed at curbing China’s rise, citing expanded US military alliances in the Indo-Pacific, increased arms sales to Taiwan, and restrictions on Chinese access to advanced technologies such as semiconductors and artificial intelligence. Beijing argues that these measures undermine regional stability and threaten its core national interests.

Gao’s statement reflects a long-standing position articulated by China’s leadership: a commitment to what it calls a “defensive national defence policy,” coupled with a warning that any attempt to coerce or militarily challenge China will be met with firm resistance. Chinese authorities insist they seek peaceful development and coexistence, but reject what they describe as external interference in their internal affairs.

In Washington, US officials maintain that their policies are intended to uphold international law, freedom of navigation, and the security of allies in the region. The United States has repeatedly stated that it does not seek conflict with China, but will continue to challenge actions it views as destabilising or contrary to the rules-based international order.

Analysts say the increasingly confrontational rhetoric on both sides underscores the fragility of US–China relations, where miscalculation or misunderstanding could carry serious global consequences. With both powers heavily armed and deeply interconnected economically, observers warn that managing competition without sliding into open conflict remains one of the most pressing challenges facing the international system.

As diplomatic channels remain open but strained, Gao’s warning serves as a reminder that beneath the economic and political rivalry lies a hard security dimension—one that Beijing insists it is prepared to confront if pushed beyond what it defines as its red lines.

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