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FP - Analysis -- Elbridge Colby and the Reordering of the Indo-Pacific - The influential Pentagon official is narrowing choices available to U.S. allies. - February 23, 2026, 10:15 AM

 FP  -  Analysis

Elbridge Colby and the Reordering of the Indo-Pacific

The influential Pentagon official is narrowing choices available to U.S. allies.

February 23, 2026, 10:15 AM


By Alejandro Reyes, an adjunct professor and senior fellow at the Centre on Contemporary China and the World at the University of Hong Kong.

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Elbridge Colby stands behind a chair with a microphone, about to sit down. He wars a dark business suit and a serious expression. Behind him are seated officials, aides, and one child.


Elbridge Colby, U.S. undersecretary of defense for policy, arrives for his confirmation hearing in Washington on March 4, 2025. Michael Brochstein/Sipa USA/via Reuters


When the United States releases a National Defense Strategy, it is tempting to read it as a snapshot of the moment—a reflection of the threats, priorities, and politics of a particular administration. The 2026 National Defense Strategy demands a different take. It is less a snapshot than a settlement: the point at which a decade-long argument about U.S. power, limits, and prioritization hardens into enforceable doctrine.


This strategy does more than elevate China as the pacing challenge or place the Indo-Pacific at the center of U.S. defense planning. It narrows the range of acceptable ambiguity, restructures alliance expectations, and quietly redraws how much room U.S. partners across the region have to maneuver.


Formally, the strategy defines a security environment shaped by four core challenges: China as the primary pacing threat, Russia as a persistent but secondary adversary, North Korea and Iran as acute regional disruptors, and growing instability in the Western Hemisphere. It responds by organizing U.S. defense planning around four lines of effort centered on homeland defense, denial in the Indo-Pacific, allied burden-sharing, and industrial revitalization.


The coherence of the National Defense Strategy is not accidental. It reflects the maturation—and political transformation—of a line of strategic thinking most closely associated with Elbridge Colby, who today serves as the U.S. undersecretary of defense for policy, the Defense Department’s chief strategist and third-ranking official.


Colby occupies an unusual position in modern Washington. He was the lead official behind the 2018 National Defense Strategy, later systematized its logic in his provocative book The Strategy of Denial, and then returned to government in Trump 2.0 to oversee the drafting and implementation of the 2026 strategy. Few officials have shaped U.S. defense thinking so directly across diagnosis, theory, and implementation.


That continuity gives the 2026 strategy a clarity that is rare in American defense policy. It also reveals how ideas change under political pressure. The new document carries forward Colby’s denial-based framework but applies it through a distinctly Trumpist lens—shaped less by formal theory than by instinctive nationalism, territorialism, and power politics.


What began as an effort to discipline U.S. overextension has become a governing doctrine that tolerates less ambiguity, imposes sharper expectations, and narrows the space for maneuver, particularly for allies situated along the Indo-Pacific’s most contested frontiers.


Trump sits at the center of a boardroom table with his mouth opens as he speaks into a microphone, flanked on both sides by members of the military. All are dressed formally in business suits or military uniforms.


U.S. President Donald Trump (center) in a meeting with military leaders in Washington on Oct. 23, 2018. Win McNamee/Getty Images


The 2018 National Defense Strategy (NDS) marked a genuine turning point in U.S. defense thinking. For the first time since the early post-Cold War period, it stated unambiguously that interstate strategic competition, rather than terrorism, had become the central organizing problem of Washington’s defense planning. China and Russia were identified as revisionist powers seeking to reshape regional orders and constrain the choices of others. The document emphasized eroding U.S. military advantage, contested domains, and the reality of finite resources.


Yet the 2018 NDS was also deliberately incomplete. Even as it stressed prioritization, it affirmed the need to maintain favorable balances of power across multiple regions. The Indo-Pacific was elevated, but Europe, the Middle East, and the Western Hemisphere all remained core theaters. Alliances were described as the United States’ durable asymmetric advantage, and reassurance remained central. The strategy named the problem while deferring its resolution.


The document had to reassure allies and signal prioritization without fully embracing its consequences. Scarcity was acknowledged, but explicit trade-offs were avoided. The document conceded that the United States could no longer do everything everywhere, yet it stopped short of specifying which commitments were structural and which were discretionary.


In hindsight, the 2018 NDS cleared the ground. It ended the illusion that the post-Cold War order could be sustained indefinitely, leaving unanswered the question that prioritization inevitably raises: If the United States must choose, where—and how—should it concentrate power?


A Chinese military helicopter flies against a hazy blue sky overhead as tourists mill about a large structure of rocks and a crumbling old building.

A Chinese military helicopter flies past tourists at a viewing point over the Taiwan Strait, on Pingtan Island, the closest point to Taiwan in China, on April 7, 2023.Greg Baker/AFP via Getty Images


That question is what Colby sought to answer in The Strategy of Denial. Published a few years after the 2018 NDS, the book pushed the logic implicit in that document to its conclusion. Where the NDS diagnosed great-power competition, The Strategy of Denial supplied an architecture.


At its core lies a stark proposition: The United States does not need to dominate every region to remain secure, but it must prevent any rival—above all, China—from achieving regional hegemony. In practice, this means concentrating U.S. military power on denying China control of Asia rather than pursuing global primacy or relying on threats of punishment after the fact. Deterrence, in this framework, rests on making aggression infeasible and war irrational.


Geography does much of the work. Colby anchors deterrence in the physical realities of the Indo-Pacific, particularly the first island chain, a Cold-War-era strategic term for the line of islands and archipelagos that run along the western Pacific rim of the East Asian mainland. He treats the chain as a defensible perimeter that is critical to blocking Chinese power projection. This logic forces uncomfortable conclusions. Some commitments are more defensible—and therefore more credible— than others. Sustaining denial requires accepting risk elsewhere.


Equally important is what the book avoids. The Strategy of Denial is not a manifesto for retrenchment or a populist critique of alliances. It treats alliances as indispensable but conditional, valued insofar as they support the central strategic objective of preventing Chinese regional hegemony. The aim is discipline rather than provocation.


In this sense, The Strategy of Denial resolved the ambiguities of the 2018 NDS. It accepted that prioritization entails exclusion, that credibility must be differentiated, and that U.S. strategy must be organized around a single overriding problem. What remained uncertain was how such a bounded theory would fare once translated back into governing doctrine.


Vance, standing in a dark suit and tie, leans over to shakes hands with a seated Colby, dressed similarly. Namecards on the desk in front of them identify the men.

U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance (left) greets Colby during Colby’s confirmation hearing before the Senate Armed Services Committee in Washington on March 4, 2025. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images


The 2026 National Defense Strategy marks the point at which denial becomes doctrine. The framework that Colby once argued now appears as settled premise. China is treated as the pacing challenge, deterrence by denial anchors force planning, and geography is decisive. The Indo-Pacific is the primary center of gravity, with the first island chain serving as the critical defensive perimeter. Alliance burden-sharing is no longer aspirational but foundational.


Colby’s public remarks underscore this translation. In his first overseas speech as undersecretary of defense for policy, delivered in South Korea in January 2026, he cast the strategy as a rejection of post-Cold War abstractions untethered from power and geography. Stability, he argued, would depend on maintaining a favorable balance of power through credible deterrence. The logic mirrors The Strategy of Denial, but what had been an intellectual correction now appears as governing doctrine, presented as the restoration of strategic realism under presidential direction.


Here, the Trumpist lens becomes fully visible. The 2026 NDS retains Colby’s architecture but hardens and reorders it in ways shaped by the president that it serves. It demands differentiated responsibility across the Indo-Pacific.


Homeland and hemispheric primacy move from background assumptions to explicit foundations. Where The Strategy of Denial treated the Western Hemisphere as largely secure, the 2026 strategy treats the Americas as a strategic sphere requiring active denial and control. The effect is to extend denial logic beyond Asia to the United States’ own neighborhood, making hemispheric security a prerequisite rather than a backdrop to Indo-Pacific prioritization.


Alliance logic shifts as well. In Colby’s book, alliances are indispensable but conditional. In the 2026 NDS, conditionality becomes enforceable obligation. Defense spending, industrial capacity, and political resolve are framed as prerequisites for strategic centrality, pushing alliance realism into a more transactional register.


These shifts do not repudiate denial. They show what happens when a theory designed to discipline U.S. overreach is filtered through a presidency that prizes territorial clarity, leverage, and visible resolve. Colby supplies the structure. Trumpism supplies the pressure.


Trump leans in close to whisper something in Xi's ear as they shake hands while standing in a building doorway. U.S. and Chinese flags are displayed on either side of the door. Aides in suits are clustered off to the side as they watch.


Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping shake hands as they depart following a meeting at in Busan, South Korea, on Oct. 30, 2025.Andrew Harnik/Getty Images


One of the most consequential effects of this translation is how it reconfigures allied agency. By narrowing priorities and hardening expectations, the 2026 NDS does not eliminate options for U.S. partners but reshapes them, producing a more differentiated landscape of alignment and autonomy.


For decades, many allies benefited from U.S. security guarantees while maintaining diversified economic and diplomatic relationships, including with China. The 2026 strategy tightens that slack. By anchoring deterrence in denial along specific geographic perimeters, it makes allied behavior structural rather than supplementary.


This does not force a binary choice between Washington and Beijing. Economic engagement with China remains compatible with stability so long as it does not erode the strategic balance. What becomes less sustainable is security ambiguity among states whose geography places them at the core of the denial architecture.


The result is a more differentiated alliance system. States that invest in defense capacity and assume operational responsibility gain greater latitude and influence. Those that seek maximum flexibility while minimizing contribution face a narrowing range of credible options. Hinging persists, but it is increasingly conditional.


Eight military ships at sea head toward the camera, the white waters of their wakes extending off toward the horizon.

South Korea, the United States, and Japan sail in formation during a joint naval exercise in international waters off South Korea in this handout image on April 04, 2023. South Korean Defense Ministry/via Getty Images


These dynamics play out unevenly across Asia.


Nowhere is agency more compressed—or more consequential—than around Taiwan. Although the 2026 National Defense Strategy does not name the island directly, its emphasis on denial along the first island chain, of which Taiwan is a key strategic part, places it at the center of the regional balance. In The Strategy of Denial, Taiwan is the linchpin: Its loss would fracture the defensive perimeter and push U.S. and allied forces back toward the central Pacific.


The 2026 strategy reflects this logic while avoiding overt declaratory commitments. It prioritizes denial-oriented capabilities, resilience, and force posture around the Taiwan Strait. Taiwan’s agency lies less in diplomatic maneuver than in preparation, investing in survivable defenses, and aligning its posture with a strategy designed to make rapid conquest infeasible. Political ambiguity may persist; military ambiguity becomes harder to sustain. Taiwan is expected not only to be defended but also to be defensible.


The South China Sea occupies a different category. While strategically important, it is not treated as a denial centerpiece. Here, the strategy tolerates greater variation in state behavior. Southeast Asian claimants retain wider agency within clearer limits.

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This differentiation is visible across regional actors. The Philippines, through expanded access arrangements and closer operational cooperation, moves nearer to the outer edge of the denial architecture. Vietnam, not referenced in the strategy and not a formal ally, retains greater latitude to hinge while deepening security ties with Washington. Diplomatic and economic engagement with China continues, but security choices that erode the military balance face tighter constraints.


The Korean Peninsula sits between these poles. The 2026 NDS signals maintained deterrence against North Korea while placing greater emphasis on South Korean self-reliance and burden-sharing within a broader Indo-Pacific balance. Seoul gains autonomy in conventional defense but less latitude to free ride. Economic and diplomatic flexibility persists; military ambiguity does not. The alliance is recast less as guardianship against a discrete threat than as part of a wider denial posture.


Beyond the denial core, the strategy is more flexible. The 2026 National Defense Strategy places less emphasis on minilateral groupings than on functional alignment. India, though not mentioned, retains significant strategic autonomy, which the strategy appears to accept as compatible with regional balance. The Quadrilateral Security Dialogue coordinates without binding. AUKUS integrates deeply among a smaller subset of trusted partners. The result resembles what Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has described as “variable geometry”: tight integration where geography demands it and looser coordination where autonomy still serves strategic ends.


The Association of Southeast Asian Nations occupies the outer edge of this architecture, largely by omission. The strategy does not treat the region as an institutional anchor deterrence or expect its members to enforce denial. Their agency lies instead in shaping the regional environment through access, infrastructure choices, and diplomatic posture.


Even here, limits are visible. As denial logic hardens elsewhere, autonomy becomes more conditional, bounded less by formal alignment than by whether local choices reinforce or complicate the balance of power.


Taken together, these dynamics reveal what the 2026 National Defense Strategy represents. It does not abolish agency for U.S. partners. It redistributes it. Geography, contribution, and operational relevance now determine how much room states retain to maneuver—and how much discipline they are expected to accept.


This clarity may strengthen deterrence in the short term but carries risk. Alliances long accustomed to flexibility may comply when conditions are benign yet resist when discipline demands real sacrifice. A system that relies less on reassurance and more on enforcement must contend with the possibility that predictability becomes brittle under stress.


The deeper significance of the strategy lies not only in what it says, but in what it closes off. It narrows the space for permissive alignment and signals that the next phase of U.S. strategy will test not only adversaries but also partners accustomed to discretion. Whether denial holds as governing doctrine will depend less on its internal coherence than on how allies respond when clarity constrains rather than comforts. That is the wager that the United States has now made.


Alejandro Reyes is an adjunct professor and senior fellow at the Centre on Contemporary China and the World at the University of Hong Kong. He is also a scholar-in-residence at the Asia Society Hong Kong Center.


FP - By Ali Wyne, the senior research and advocacy advisor for U.S.-China relations at the International Crisis Group. - February 25, 2026, 10:48 AM - Time on His Side With Taiwan

 Analysis

Thanks to Trump, Xi Has Time on His Side With Taiwan

Beijing is less likely to risk an invasion while Trump is facilitating its pressure campaign against Taipei.

By , the senior research and advocacy advisor for U.S.-China relations at the International Crisis Group.
Two people are seen from behind stand with their necks craned to look up at a TV screen showing a news broadcast. On the screen, a video shows Trump and Xi shaking hands.
Two people are seen from behind stand with their necks craned to look up at a TV screen showing a news broadcast. On the screen, a video shows Trump and Xi shaking hands.
People watch a news program showing a meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping in South Korea, seen in Taipei on Oct. 30, 2025. I-Hwa Cheng / AFP via Getty Images

At his January 2025 confirmation hearing to become the U.S. secretary of state, Marco Rubio assessed that “unless something dramatic changes” in Asia’s military balance, China would attempt to invade Taiwan before the end of the decade. This view is widely shared. In May, for example, the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party warned that “the clock is ticking to stop a war in the Indo-Pacific—and this Congress may be America’s last full chance to do it.”

The good news is that the short-term likelihood of a Chinese attack on Taiwan has diminished, even as it remains too high. The cause of this development, however, is not exactly reassuring. The events of the past year give Chinese leader Xi Jinping good reason to believe that his U.S. counterpart, President Donald Trump, will facilitate his attempt to extend China’s influence over the island without having to gamble on an invasion.

Any Chinese invasion attempt would be a risky endeavor. Even though China’s military modernization is accelerating, the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) is in turmoil. Meanwhile, the United States and Taiwan are fielding new capabilities and deepening their security cooperation, and Washington is moving to deploy missile and unmanned systems to the Philippines and nuclear-powered submarines to Australia. Against this backdrop, Beijing surely appreciates that any “victory” that it might win could be a Pyrrhic one—especially given the potential for nuclear escalation and the likelihood that a conflict would prove to be protracted.

By contrast, the political trends in both Washington and Taipei are presently in China’s favor. As a result, Xi is justified in thinking that he can make progress toward reunification without incurring the military, economic, and political uncertainties that would attend an invasion attempt.


Despite authorizing several high-profile, high-value arms sales to Taiwan during his first term and in the first year of his second term, Trump has, on the whole, evinced little concern for the island’s security.

He said in a January interview that Taiwan is “a source of pride for him [Xi]. He considers it to be a part of China, and that’s up to him, what he’s going to be doing.” Trump, for his part, appears to view the island principally through the lens of its chipmaking capacity. He declared in July 2024 that Taiwan had stolen the U.S. semiconductor industry and “doesn’t give us anything” (and repeated that charge after the Supreme Court’s tariff ruling on Friday).

In March 2025, the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company announced that it would increase its investment in the United States by $100 billion. Trump subsequently remarked that while a Chinese invasion of Taiwan would be “a catastrophic event,” he believed that the company’s investment would leave “a very big part” of the company’s business in the United States, where it would theoretically be safe in the event of a cross-strait war.

Xi also has a stick that has proved effective with Trump—and a carrot that could entice the president. On account of its rare-earths leverage, China can inflict significant pain across the U.S. economy, as it amply showcased during last year’s trade standoff with the United States. At the same time, Xi could continue playing up Trump’s perception of himself as the supposed peacemaker in chief, as he began to do when the two met in South Korea in October.

“Mr. President, you care a lot about world peace,” Xi said, “and you are very enthusiastic about settling various regional hot spot issues.” Xi could well convince Trump that the best way to be a global peacemaker would be empathizing with Xi’s vision of Asian security and supporting Taiwanese lawmakers who aim to facilitate negotiations between Taipei and Beijing on cross-strait issues.

One could also imagine that over time, in exchange for economic pledges from Xi, Trump might be willing to make security concessions that steadily afford China more breathing room to intensify its multifaceted pressure campaign against Taiwan. It is telling that the two leaders reportedly discussed future U.S. arms sales to the island. Regardless of what decision Trump ultimately makes, he has now signaled a willingness to negotiate a topic that U.S. officials had effectively taken off the table with the second of the “six assurances” that the Reagan administration gave to Taiwan in 1982.

Beijing also sees auspicious political dynamics in Taipei. Chinese officials have made no secret of their contempt for Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te, whom they regard as more separatist-minded than his predecessor, Tsai Ing-wen. But he oversees a divided legislature; the informal opposition coalition of the Kuomintang (KMT) and the Taiwan People’s Party controls 60 of its 113 seats, while his Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) only controls 51.

Another key player in shaping political dynamics within Taiwan—and between China and Taiwan—is Cheng Li-wun, a former DPP member who now leads the KMT, the main opposition party. She has said that she would like to meet with Xi early this year, potentially ahead of Trump’s scheduled meeting with the Chinese leader in April.

Cheng contends that Taiwan cannot depend on a United States that has elected Trump twice. Shortly before she was tapped to lead the KMT, she warned that Taiwan “must not become a sacrifice or Trump’s bargaining chip,” lest it “become another Ukraine.” She has gone further since taking the helm of the party, declaring that Taiwan will not “be involved in an internecine struggle” between the United States and China and even suggesting that a detente between Beijing and Taipei could “bring about cooperation between the U.S. and China.”

Cheng has also cited unreasonable demands that the Trump administration is placing on Taipei: Trump wants Taiwan to spend 10 percent of its gross domestic product on defense (for context, Lai hopes that that figure will reach 5 percent by 2030), and U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick wants Washington to have onshored 40 percent of Taipei’s semiconductor production by the end of Trump’s second term. While her DPP counterparts cast Cheng as misguided, even unpatriotic, her pronouncements align with multiple polls that confirm growing misgivings among the Taiwanese public about U.S. reliability. Cheng is far from a political juggernaut, but she has helped catalyze political sentiment that Beijing can only find encouraging.

Finally, notwithstanding domestic challenges and turmoil in the PLA, China’s overall power is growing, whether one considers its military capabilities, its technological strides, or its diplomatic footprint. Thus, it can continue to build a steadily more favorable correlation of forces across the Taiwan Strait while strengthening its pressure campaign, which aims to wear down Taipei psychologically. China is now competing more confidently than it was when Trump retook office, having withstood the administration’s tariff fusillade last year.

Moreover, Washington continues to alienate allies and partners in Europe—and sow doubt in Asia—with its “America first” foreign policy. It would be foolish for Beijing to get in Trump’s way while he is eroding the diplomatic network that has long been a pillar of the United States’ global influence.


No one in Washington should breathe a sigh of relief, though, for there remain ample grounds for concern. There are numerous provocations that China could undertake short of an invasion, including restricting maritime access to Taiwan. Some observers fear that the PLA’s emerging leaders, lacking actual combat experience, might be less capable of providing realistic military assessments to Xi—and might be even more willing to advocate an invasion attempt than the commanders who have been purged in recent months.

Finally, Asia’s waters and the skies above it are becoming ever more crowded, raising the risk of a clash between U.S. and Chinese military assets. The recent disruptions to the PLA’s chain of command have also, in turn, heightened the prospect of a ham-fisted response by Beijing that fuels rather than dampens escalatory dynamics.

As Russian President Vladimir Putin’s hubris has demonstrated, leaders can make disastrous decisions if they sit atop sclerotic bureaucracies wherein top officials are reluctant to offer candid advice. U.S. officials should not project their conceptions of “rationality” onto their counterparts in other countries. China might decide that it has no choice but to attempt an invasion if it assesses that Taiwan would otherwise slip away.

The most likely triggers would be political, such as an indication by Taiwan that it is poised to declare independence or by the United States that it is set to make an explicit defensive commitment to the island. Alternatively, Xi might conclude that the next three years offer the most propitious window for China to achieve reunification since Trump’s successor may be much more proactively supportive of Taiwan.

For now, though, Xi has little reason to abandon the pressure campaign that he has been overseeing. Neil Thomas, a specialist in China’s elite politics, has observed that Xi is “a calculated risk-taker rather than a reckless gambler,” one who, during nearly a decade and a half at the helm of his country, has focused on “strengthening China’s position incrementally rather than chancing on a decisive clash.”

And Xi has seen the dividends of incrementalism elsewhere, whether one considers Hong Kong’s evolution into a financial appendage of China or China’s steady militarization of the South China Sea. At least for now, Xi seems willing to stick with incrementalism on Taiwan as well.

This post is part of FP’s ongoing coverage of the Trump administrationFollow along here.

FP - By Deng Yuwen, a Chinese writer and scholar. - February 9, 2026, 6:00 AM - Xi Jinping Can Never Trust His Own Military China’s leader has created a system of permanent insecurity.

 Argument

An expert’s point of view on a current event.

Xi Jinping Can Never Trust His Own Military

China’s leader has created a system of permanent insecurity.

By , a Chinese writer and scholar.
Then vice chairman of the Central Military Commission of the People's Republic of China Zhang Youxia (front), swears an oath with members of the Central Military Commission after they were appointed during the opening of the fourth plenary session of the National People's Congress on March 11, 2023 in Beijing, China.
Then vice chairman of the Central Military Commission of the People's Republic of China Zhang Youxia (front), swears an oath with members of the Central Military Commission after they were appointed during the opening of the fourth plenary session of the National People's Congress on March 11, 2023 in Beijing, China.
Then vice chairman of the Central Military Commission of the People's Republic of China Zhang Youxia (front), swears an oath with members of the Central Military Commission after they were appointed during the opening of the fourth plenary session of the National People's Congress on March 11, 2023 in Beijing, China. Lintao Zhang/Getty Images

After the fall of two top generals, Zhang Youxia and Liu Zhenli, in late January, China’s Central Military Commission (CMC) was left with only Chairman Xi Jinping and one vice chairman, Zhang Shengmin. Over the past two years, many senior officers in the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) have been investigated. By an incomplete count, more than a dozen active-duty full generals have gone down.

Xi has moved against his generals with greater severity than against civilian officials. That vigor is especially evident in the systematic cleanup of the CMC, the PLA’s highest command body.

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What exactly is the White House’s China policy now? Is the fact that it’s difficult to articulate an advantage or a weakness? Kurt Campbell, the ‘Asia czar’ under the Biden administration, and former deputy secretary of state, sat down with FP’s Ravi Agrawal to examine U.S. policy toward China today and how much it’s changed in the last year. Watch now.

In officialdom, it is rare to find someone without at least a suspicion of corruption; the real question is whether the leadership chooses to act. Xi’s predecessors did not refrain from anti-corruption because they lacked the will. The decisive difference was the power structure. Xi has built a system of personal authority second only to Mao Zedong—how he built it is not the subject here.

His opponents like to describe his rule as totalitarian. As an expression of moral outrage, that’s fine, but in stricter analytical terms, Xi’s system has not become the kind of totalitarianism associated with Mao or Soviet leader Joseph Stalin. This is not merely a difference in degree but a partial difference in kind.

Classic totalitarianism has three salient features: first, a grand project to remake society and human nature, typically expressed through mass mobilization; second, politics in command, with private life fully politicized; and third, rule by terror in which secret police serve as the primary instrument, enabling arbitrary arrest, punishment, or elimination of opponents without necessary or proper procedures. Communist totalitarianism also includes an economic element: the abolition of private property and comprehensive public ownership.

Xi’s system resembles this in parts, but overall it lacks the sustained mobilization of mass movements aimed at remaking society, and it lacks the Mao-era capacity—organizational and psychological—to convert political pressure into nationwide frenzy at will. A more accurate description, then, is that it is an intensified autocracy: a technological and organizational reinforcement of traditional authoritarian rule in the digital age.

It manifests as finer-grained social control, tighter discipline imposed on the bureaucracy, and more centralized orchestration of policy and propaganda. It certainly imposes political pressure and suppresses thought and speech. At most, however, it seeks to remake and purify the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) itself, not human nature.

This remaking manifests most fiercely in the PLA, where Xi has put in place a more personalized and finalistic arrangement of power to maintain security, one that comes close to totalitarianism inside the once relatively independent and closed off military system. That is the CMC chairman responsibility system, an idea introduced by Xi in 2014 that emphasizes the chairman’s total control over all military matters.

Xi has elevated this into the military’s highest political institution and highest political principle, turning it into the instrument of absolute control. Through ideology, organization, rules, procedures, and accountability, it penetrates every part of the PLA, further personalizing and concretizing the CCP’s absolute leadership over the military. The endpoint of loyalty is not an abstract party but the chairman; the endpoint of obedience is not collective decision-making but personal judgment.

Xi’s design is elegant, but implementing an absolute leadership system inside the military runs into an unavoidable structural contradiction: The chairmanship system, in form, requires all command and management to be unified under the chairman as an individual, yet in reality, that cannot be done by the chairman personally.

Xi lacks the time and bandwidth, and he certainly does not possess the expertise in highly specialized domains—operations, training, equipment, readiness, and reform—to carry out the day-to-day command and managerial functions himself. His role is closer to that of a supreme decision-maker and final arbiter. The daily operation of the military is delegated to trusted deputies, and CMC vice chairmen sit at the core of that proxy structure. In practice, then, he operates through the vice chairmen—a mixture of serving generals and political commissars with the title of general. In theory, Xi makes decisions and renders final judgments; vice chairmen handle execution and implementation.

This is where the problem lies. Xi wants vice chairmen to be mere handlers, carrying out his instructions, plans, and requirements—competent generals who do not encroach on power or form a center around themselves. But that’s not how people—or systems—work. The proxies end up asserting authority themselves, and their professional expertise gives them interpretative authority. By selectively implementing the chairman’s orders, or going through the motions while quietly resisting them, they obtain their own form of power. This doesn’t necessarily mean subversion or opposition to Xi; sometimes it may just be using professional judgment to steer the execution of an order in a practical fashion—but one that still departs from Xi’s intent. The generals, after all, know what the military can and can’t do far better than the chairman does.

Yet this creates another problem. As the proxies become more powerful, they develop personnel networks of their own. The appointment of senior officers belongs, of course, to the chairman. Yet vice chairmen typically possess recommendation power and a de facto veto, especially in the domains they oversee. Once a personnel network takes shape, a secondary power center forms around the vice chairman.

But that ends up creating a secondary center of power, and the chairman instinctively perceives that as a threat. Military power stops becoming a direct line from chairman to troops and acquires a circuit breaker in between. The facts the chairman sees may be filtered, the implementation of orders may be translated by professional gatekeepers, and cadres’ loyalty may be to their patron rather than to the chairman. An absolute leadership system cannot tolerate this.

That is why Xi’s anti-corruption campaign has continued to reach higher levels of the military. The trigger is often not how much someone stole but the chairman’s realization that the channel has been captured by proxies—that he cannot obtain truthful information and his orders are not fully carried out. Then the only choice is to strike, under the guise of “anti-corruption.” This was the problem for Zhang, Liu, and the others before them; the role they were placed in by the system controlled by Xi inevitably made them a problem for Xi.

This also explains why the military campaign has been sharper than its civilian counterpart. The more the PLA is shaped into a system of personal loyalty, the more, in practice, it relies on proxy figures such as the vice chairmen—and the more power they inadvertently develop.

The more the chairman centralizes, the more he depends on proxies; the more he depends on them, the more he fears them; the more he fears them, the more he purges them; and the more he purges them, the harder it becomes to find proxies who are capable, willing to take responsibility, yet absolutely safe. Military and political security may look tighter under ferocious purges, but it may also become more fragile as truthful information and real capabilities drain away.

Deng Yuwen is a Chinese writer and scholar.

FP - Analysis - February 20, 2026, 2:10 PM - By Sarah Godek , research associate with the China program at the Stimson Center. - China’s Afghan Gold Rush Is Turning Deadly The Taliban government can’t protect Chinese miners from local hostility.

 Analysis

China’s Afghan Gold Rush Is Turning Deadly

The Taliban government can’t protect Chinese miners from local hostility.

 By
 
, research associate with the China program at the Stimson Center.
Workers and construction equipment are seen from a distance in a moonlike, cratered landscape torn up by mining activity. On a ridge in the distance are a few tents and simple, single-story buildings.
Workers and construction equipment are seen from a distance in a moonlike, cratered landscape torn up by mining activity. On a ridge in the distance are a few tents and simple, single-story buildings.
Miners work at a gold mine in the Yaftal Sufla district in Badakhshan province of Afghanistan on Jan. 11. Omer Abrar/AFP via Getty Images

Since the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan in 2021, China has dominated Afghanistan’s mining industry. But the mines, primarily located along both sides of the Afghanistan-Tajikistan border, are now turning into a lethal minefield. Chinese nationals have been increasingly targeted by militants, with the most recent incidents resulting in the death of five Chinese miners and workers in Tajikistan in cross-border attacks from northern Afghanistan. Chinese mining is spurring resentment from locals, while the miners are also caught in the crosshairs of both anti-Taliban feeling and border tensions.

Since the Taliban takeover, Chinese nationals have been in a gold rush in northern Afghanistan due to record high gold prices. Some of the efforts are legal, with both the Chinese government and Taliban leadership’s support, but many are ad hoc arrangements, at best informally sanctioned by local Taliban leaders. The influx of inexperienced investors has resulted in a sense of lawlessness, with local Afghans clashing with both Taliban and Chinese miners in the area mostly over mining rights.

Clashes have also broken out between the Tajik and Taliban border forces, as some Chinese mining activity has altered border rivers, which threatens to reshape national boundaries. With the additional challenge of unidentified armed militants, as seen in November 2025 attacks on nationals in Tajikistan, Chinese citizens are in imminent danger.

While Beijing has urged citizens and enterprises to evacuate the area, Chinese workers engaged in illegal mining will likely stay and continue to incite security incidents. The Taliban and Tajikistan have not been able to prevent attacks, though they have pledged new efforts to impede them. Beijing has few good options; if pressure on Kabul and Dushanbe fails, it may have little recourse beyond ensuring that all citizens fully evacuate the area.

At least seven incidents have targeted Chinese citizens in the Afghanistan-Tajikistan border area since November 2024, killing at least nine Chinese nationals and injuring at least 10 more. Around 80 percent of these attacks were directly related to gold mining.

The string began when a cross-border attack from Afghanistan by unidentified armed militants struck a gold mine camp in Tajikistan in November 2024, killing one and injuring four Chinese nationals as well as a Tajik citizen. This was a turning point for China, which subsequently issued an advisory against traveling to Afghanistan for the first time since December 2021.

Further incidents involving Chinese nationals occurred throughout 2025: in January in Takhar, when a Chinese gold mine worker was targeted while getting supplies, and in July and October in Badakhshan. In the July incident, a Chinese mining engineer’s bodyguard was reportedly caught in a clash over mining rights. The October incident also involved Chinese mining companies.

Two late November cross-border attacks from Afghanistan, including an explosive-laden drone attack and a shooting, then killed five Chinese nationals. The militants involved were never identified. The Chinese embassies in Afghanistan and Tajikistan consequently issued multiple advisories to evacuate. Most recently, clashes with locals over gold mining in Takhar in early January 2026 resulted in protesters setting equipment on fire. Takhar sees the largest Chinese investment in Afghanistan—worth $310 million-350 million—after the Mes Aynak copper and Amu Darya oil projects.

This grim situation results from the fragile environment for gold mining in the border area. To cope with security challenges, most Chinese mining projects in northern Afghanistan rely on the Taliban for security, and the Taliban also take a cut from the operation. For example, 56 percent of the profits of the Takhar project reportedly go to Taliban authorities.

Yet this can also make Chinese projects a target, as locals resent the Taliban for handing over mining rights to China without their participation. While locals are more frustrated with the Taliban than the Chinese, the Chinese workers on the ground offer targets of opportunity.

Chinese mining expansion and river dredging for gold have also changed the natural course of the border river between Afghanistan and Tajikistan and therefore the national boundary to facilitate dredging further out, which incited the August 2025 clashes between the Taliban and Tajik border forces. Further clashes between the two sides in October prompted the aforementioned incident in Badakhshan that killed Chinese nationals.

Chinese workers are also targets of unidentified armed groups operating in northern Afghanistan, such as those that carried out the November cross-border attacks. Tajikistan claims that drug smugglers and criminal groups were the culprit, while the Taliban claims vaguely that there are certain groups trying to harm the organization’s relations with other countries. Neither Tajikistan nor the Taliban wants to take responsibility, and they both point fingers.

The Taliban, for their part, made some efforts. They condemned the November attacks, sought a joint probe with Tajikistan, announced a new unit to secure the border, and conducted raids resulting in one or two arrests while Taliban-sympathetic media suggested that the attacks were planned outside of Afghanistan. Tajik officials have, in turn, blamed the Taliban for not preventing armed incursions, also strongly condemning the attacks and pledging to immediately upgrade security measures. This spat reveals the challenges to any effective cooperation.

China has no perfect options to address this situation. Beijing could cease the mining operations, pressure the Taliban and Tajikistan to do more, or it could intervene directly. None of these approaches, however, solve the problem.

Beijing has tried to rein in Chinese mining operations, and it even attempted to shut down all mines in 2025. In JanuaryMarchJune, and July, the Chinese Embassy in Afghanistan first warned against illegal mining. With the escalation of attacks, the embassy has now issued evacuation advisories for all mining companies, legal and illegal. This approach is the simplest solution for China to protect workers at legitimate projects, some of whom have now evacuated and relocated to provincial capitals, which are safer.

The challenge is illegal mining. There is no guarantee that Chinese workers at illegal mines will leave, and they will continue to instigate further problems. While these miners are responsible for their own actions, especially now that Beijing has encouraged them to evacuate, it would still reflect poorly on the government for more nationals to be killed in attacks.

Alongside attempting to cease mining operations in the border area, China has been pressuring the Taliban and Tajikistan to stop cross-border attacks. Chinese Ambassador to Afghanistan Zhao Xing met with Taliban officials throughout December to seek Taliban cooperation to deter “attempts by malicious actors to harm the strong and growing relationship between Kabul and Beijing.” Pressure on Tajikistan was acute: China’s ambassador to Tajikistan called the country’s foreign minister and a high-level national security official on Dec. 1 to demand that Tajikistan take all necessary measures to protect Chinese enterprises and citizens.

China has also stated its demand at the United Nations for Afghanistan to investigate and severely punish the perpetrators and called on both sides to take effective measures to protect Chinese “personnel, projects, and institutions.”

This strategy has had some efficacy; despite tensions with Dushanbe, the Taliban claimed in December that the two sides were taking bilateral measures, including by establishing joint security committees. The impact limited, however. The Taliban do not control all armed groups in Afghanistan, and the group can have different definitions of “terrorism.” China’s permanent representative to the U.N. alluded to this by calling on the Taliban government to “correctly understand the issue of counterterrorism” and “take more resolute and forceful actions to eliminate all terrorist forces in Afghanistan.”

On the Tajik side, the border is far from secured, with border force corruption further complicating attack prevention. Tajikistan could also seek assistance in securing the border; a program facilitated by the regional Collective Security Treaty Organization to strengthen the country’s border was reported in January 2025. This could help on the Tajik side of the border, but it would not eliminate the cross-border attacks from Afghanistan and could also dilute China’s influence.

The option that China is least likely to pursue is direct intervention, although it is an option. While China has provided Tajikistan’s military with counterterrorism support and training, Chinese forces will not likely directly intervene to protect their nationals’ interests due to China’s principle of noninterference and reluctance to send troops abroad.

Beijing has no perfect options and will likely continue to urge citizens to stay away from the country. As Beijing eyes a longer-term strategy to increase economic linkages, officials will continue to work with and pressure Tajikistan and the Taliban to adopt measures to foster a stable security situation. Stronger connectivity projects are unlikely to happen unless and until Tajikistan and the Taliban have effectively mitigated the risks.

Note: This analysis also draws from events highlighted in Stimson’s “Update on China-Afghanistan Relations.”