China Is Rewiring the World’s Money Pipes. America Is Losing the Backdoor to Power

China’s new money pipes are spreading faster than America can react. Here is what the shift really means.

China payment systems are no longer a local convenience. They have turned into a global architecture that lets money move outside America’s reach. The shift is quiet. It is already happening in markets from Bangkok to Brasília. The story is not about currency alone. It is about who owns the pipes under the financial world.

For decades, American influence rested on a simple truth. Most cross border payments touched United States controlled networks at some point. Visa carried the card. Mastercard took a fee. SWIFT delivered the message. Every swipe produced data. Every wire created visibility. Together these networks formed an invisible empire that few people talked about but almost everyone used.

Now that architecture is losing ground.

Something changed when China built its own rails. The fight is no longer only about the dollar versus the yuan. It is about American plumbing versus Chinese plumbing. Once money begins to flow through new pipes, the power that comes from owning the old pipes begins to fade.

China started with UnionPay. Beijing did not want foreign card networks dominating its home market, so it built its own. What looked defensive at first became strategic. UnionPay grew until it became the world’s biggest card network by number of cards and transactions. Much of the West barely noticed. Shopkeepers in Istanbul and Dubai did. They placed blue UnionPay stickers on their doors because Chinese tourists came ready to spend.

UnionPay was only the first layer. The deep shift came from mobile payments.

Alipay and WeChat Pay turned the phone into a wallet. Payments linked directly to bank accounts. No credit. No revolving debt. No painful merchant fees. The business model focused on volume, data and follow on services.

China began exporting the idea once it worked at home. Thailand connected its QR system. Singapore followed. Malaysia and Indonesia joined. Then the Gulf. Then Brazil. You can stand in a Jakarta market today and watch a tourist pay through a Chinese app. The money moves from a yuan account to a local bank without touching an American rail.

This is how infrastructure changes. Not with dramatic speeches. With small merchant decisions and quiet software updates.

A restaurant in Kuala Lumpur pays a heavy cut to Visa for every foreign card. It pays less to Alipay. The cheaper pipe wins. Governments then follow the pipes that serve their economies best.

America cannot match the cost structure. Its system depends on credit and fees. China payment systems rely on pure payments first and profit from the services around them. That contrast sits at the heart of the shift. One model extracts value from each transaction. The other tries to make each transaction so cheap that no one can refuse it.

The loss for America is threefold. A loss of visibility. A loss of revenue. A loss of leverage.

When payments move away from United States networks, the data moves as well. Intelligence agencies and regulators once enjoyed a clear view of global transactions. That view is narrowing in regions where Chinese pipes dominate. Beijing gains what Washington loses. A shopkeeper in Doha may not think about it, but governments do.

Revenue is drifting too. Visa and Mastercard counted on Asia, Africa and Latin America for future profits. Those regions are now experimenting with QR codes, Chinese wallets and local rails that do not need United States infrastructure.

The third loss is leverage. Sanctions work when everyone is forced to travel on the same road. If a country can take another route, the threat weakens. China payment systems give countries that escape route. Leaders do not need to love Beijing. They just need a second option.

China is not stopping here. It is promoting the digital yuan, or e CNY. The currency settles instantly. It carries metadata. It can even hold conditions. United States financial systems still rely on technology built in the 1970s. Batch files. Delayed settlement. Structures for another era. China is building modern pipes in open space. America is trying to repair an old building while people are still living inside it.

I sometimes think about this shift from Karachi. A small trader in Clifton does not follow global finance. He simply wants fast payments without losing profit to fees. When Chinese engineers visit and pay through Alipay or WeChat Pay, the money may never touch an American node. No Visa. No Mastercard. No SWIFT. Just a clean channel from a Chinese wallet to a Pakistani bank.

This is how global systems change. Through the daily choices of traders, students, tourists and governments who prefer what works.

Countries in Africa and Latin America are also watching. They remember how easily Western tools turned into weapons. Sanctions. Account freezes. Asset seizures. Multipolar rails feel safer. They may come with new risks, but they also come with more room to breathe.

If you follow debates on de dollarization, you will notice similar patterns. Payments and trade are drifting toward networks that offer more flexibility. I have written about it before in pieces on the R5 system and China’s role in reshaping the Middle East.

One conclusion is difficult to avoid. United States payment dominance was never about the dollar alone. It was about the pipes beneath the dollar. When those pipes change, the power attached to them changes too. Not instantly. Slowly. Piece by piece.

The world is not entering a normal cold war. It is entering a plumbing war. Pipes are being rebuilt. Standards are shifting. Countries that once felt trapped in a single system now see that they have another path.

China payment systems sit at the centre of that new path. They carry the cards. They scan the QR codes. They support the digital yuan. Each new connection erodes the dominance of the old model and teaches millions of people to live inside a different financial reality.

Maybe this was inevitable. Global markets want cheaper payments. Merchants want fairer fees. Governments want choices that are less political. China provided an answer. Much of the world accepted it.

The real question is simple. If the pipes of the financial world start connecting more to Beijing than to Washington, who will control the next great flow of money and whose rules will shape our daily lives.

R5 Payment System Is Building a World America Cannot Shut Down

The R5 payment system is no longer a rumour in policy circles. It is becoming a blueprint for a new financial order where Washington no longer sits at the gate. BRICS countries are building it to trade with one another without passing through SWIFT or American banks. These channels give the United States the power to watch or block global transactions. BRICS wants out.

R5 stands for ruble, rupee, renminbi, real, and rand. Five currencies, one shared financial highway. The project is driven by a simple idea. Countries should not rely on a payment system that one government can unplug. Russia learned that the hard way after sanctions. China fears similar treatment. India faces pressure every time it buys Russian oil. South Africa and Brazil worry about being caught in geopolitical crosswinds.

The Moment the West Should Have Seen Coming

For half a century, the same tools shaped global finance. The dollar dominated settlement. SWIFT carried the messages. U.S. correspondent banks acted as gatekeepers. This created visibility. If a payment passed through New York, America could scan it, freeze it, or kill it. This was not conspiracy. It was structure.

Now imagine a transfer moving from Shanghai to Johannesburg without touching Western rails. No SWIFT. No U.S. intermediary. No American regulator watching.

That is what frightens Washington. The dollar is important, but visibility is the true power.

A Karachi Story That Explains Everything

A trader near Karachi’s Lee Market once showed me an invoice from China that took three weeks to clear. Not because of China. Not because of Pakistan. The delay came from an American bank routing the payment through New York, where it tripped a compliance review. The shipment sat in a container yard while he drank cold chai and stared at the sea.

He told me he felt punished for a transaction that had nothing to do with the United States.

People like him will be the first to feel the shift if the R5 payment system matures. They will pay in local currencies. They will transfer funds on BRICS rails. No delays because Washington pressed a key. It sounds small. It is not.

What R5 Is Actually Building

The architecture comes in layers.
Messaging first.
Settlement second.
A clearing union eventually.
Digital currencies linked across borders someday.

Western analysts call it unrealistic. They said the same about China’s space programme. They said the same about India’s digital payments network. Today both are global leaders.

BRICS is not trying to replace the dollar in full. It is trying to build a second road. A road that America cannot shut down. A road where countries are not judged by Washington before their payments move.

And that alone shifts the balance of power.

Sources:

World Bank: BRICS share in global trade
https://www.worldbank.org

IMF paper on de-dollarisation
https://www.imf.org/en/Publications

BIS research on payment systems
https://www.bis.org

Other Stories :
Seizing Russia’s Money May End the West’s Power, Not Putin’s

How China Redrew the Middle East Without Firing a Shot

China redrew the Middle East without sending troops, building bases, or declaring alliances. The shift began quietly through trade, diplomacy, and currency deals. Regional leaders now treat China as a central power, not a distant outsider. This change touches every part of the Middle East’s political map.


How China Redrew the Middle East Through Economics

For decades, American power shaped Middle Eastern decisions. Washington believed its military presence guaranteed influence. It assumed that aircraft carriers, security guarantees, and aid packages would keep governments aligned with U.S. interests. That assumption no longer holds. China reshaped the Middle East through economics, not force.

Beijing became the largest trading partner for almost every state in the region. Saudi Arabia sells more oil to China than to any other buyer. The United Arab Emirates sends more exports toward Chinese ports than toward Western capitals. Iran relies on China for energy trade and financial relief. These links gave Beijing leverage even before it used diplomacy to change regional politics.


How China Redrew the Middle East Through Diplomacy

The turning point came in March 2023 when China brokered an agreement between Saudi Arabia and Iran. The deal restored diplomatic ties between rivals who had fought proxy wars for decades. American officials had tried and failed to build a similar opening. China succeeded without planes or warships. It used patience, economic ties, and the promise of stable relations. China redrew the Middle East by offering results that the United States no longer could.

Regional leaders noticed something else. China and Russia do not lecture governments about internal politics. They do not attach human rights conditions to cooperation. They talk about stability and business. This approach appeals to leaders who watched the United States abandon Hosni Mubarak, distance itself from Afghanistan, and push for rapid political transitions. Many concluded that alignment with Washington creates risk. Working with China reduces uncertainty.


How China Redrew the Middle East’s Currency System

Energy trade accelerated the shift. For fifty years, oil was sold almost entirely in dollars. The “petrodollar” defined global markets. Yet China reshaped the Middle East currency system by encouraging settlements in yuan, dirhams, and rupees. Saudi firms tested yuan-based contracts. The UAE settled major energy purchases in non-dollar currencies. Iraq used yuan for large oil shipments to Chinese buyers. Transaction by transaction, the old system loosened.


A New Middle East That No Longer Depends on Washington

China redrew the Middle East’s security environment without a military presence. Regional states now hedge between powers. They keep ties with Washington, but they also deepen cooperation with Beijing and Moscow. They seek investment, technology, and political cover from multiple partners. This produces a new map of overlapping networks rather than a single dominant power.

The consequences reach far beyond the region. The United States built much of its global status on control of Middle Eastern oil and the stability of friendly monarchies. If those monarchies diversify their alliances, the foundation of American influence weakens. China’s rise shows that influence does not require bases or battles. It requires economic gravity.

This transformation is not sudden. It is the result of steady shifts in trust, trade, and diplomacy. The region is learning that it can resist pressure and still prosper. China redrew the Middle East by offering a different model of power. It traded fear for predictability and threats for contracts. The map changed because leaders saw that they no longer had to choose one side.

The old order relied on hierarchy. The new order relies on options. And options are something China offers more reliably than the United States today.

Read other stories:

Why Do Some People Call Israel “Illegitimate” but Not Pakistan or Jordan?

When Beijing Holds the World’s Tech Industry Hostage


Seizing Russia’s Money May End the West’s Power, Not Putin’s

Europe is preparing to convert Russia’s three hundred billion dollars of frozen reserves into Ukrainian reconstruction funds. The plan appears strong on paper, offering moral satisfaction and allowing leaders to assert decisive action. However, beneath this surface confidence lies a significant shift in the global financial system.

The West established its financial authority on the principle that money held in Western banks would remain politically neutral. Seizing Russia’s assets fundamentally challenges this belief, which has underpinned the dollar era and attracted trillions of foreign reserves into American and European institutions. It has fostered a conviction among governments that their wealth is untouchable. If Europe breaks this long-standing rule, the ramifications will echo throughout the financial world, eroding trust in Western vaults.

In response to European actions, Russia will likely react strongly. Currently, Western companies retain nearly one trillion dollars in assets within Russia — spanning industrial stakes, energy ventures, property portfolios, and financial operations. This reality underscores that none of these assets exist outside of political contexts. Should Europe take Russian reserves, Russia is poised to reclaim what remains within its borders. This is not merely symbolic; it marks the initiation of a long-term financial confrontation.

Moreover, the global payment system is more fragile than many acknowledge. SWIFT operates on the foundation of trust, and the mechanics of cross-border flows hinge on predictable rules. Having witnessed this from the inside, I can affirm that when trust erodes, the system does not collapse abruptly but instead deteriorates gradually. It becomes increasingly cautious and political.

Countries such as China, India, and the Gulf states are observing this situation closely, particularly concerning the seizure of Russian assets. They are wary of placing their reserves in the hands of volatile decisions from Brussels or Washington. Consequently, there is a shift toward gold, local currency trade, and BRICS settlement platforms. Once perceived as experimental moves, these strategies now arise as a form of quiet insurance.

While Europe aims to isolate Russia by appropriating its assets, it risks isolating itself. Currency strength hinges on trust. If global reserve holders begin redirecting their savings away from Western banks, the global balance of power could gradually shift — not instantly or dramatically, but akin to tides reshaping a coastline.

The moral rationale is straightforward: Russia instigated a war, and Ukraine warrants support. Nevertheless, financial systems do not conform to moral narratives; they prioritize stability and historical precedence. Once the West demonstrates that foreign reserves can be confiscated, the long-term repercussions could extend well beyond this specific conflict.

Putin is acutely aware of these dynamics. He understands that money gravitates toward stable regulations. If Western financial norms begin to waver, the future may pivot towards systems constructed outside the traditional dollar and euro spheres. The pivotal moment might not occur on the battlefield but rather when Europe takes Russia’s money, revealing that global savings are ready to shift in response to the broader implications of such actions.

Sources

Questions for Readers

  • What are your thoughts on the potential consequences of seizing frozen assets?
  • How do you see this situation impacting global trust in Western financial systems?
  • Do you believe that alternative currency systems will gain prominence in light of these developments?

What If Russia Is Not Collapsing but Mutating?

Every week, someone predicts the same ending: Russia will collapse soon. A new sanction, a military setback, an internal scandal — and analysts declare the beginning of the end.
Yet Russia is not collapsing. It keeps reshaping itself in ways many observers still fail to grasp.

I am not defending the system. I am trying to understand why it keeps surviving.


Why the Collapse Narrative Never Ends

Western commentators expect pressure to break Russia the way it broke the Soviet Union. But today’s Russian system is not built like the USSR. It is more decentralised, more flexible, and able to redirect shocks inward without total breakdown.

The scale of Western sanctions is huge. The European Council updates the restrictions regularly:
https://www.consilium.europa.eu/en/policies/sanctions/restrictive-measures/russia-ukraine-crisis/

Even so, the cracks analysts expect have not appeared.


How Russia Adapts Under Pressure

1. The Shadow Fleet Keeps Oil Flowing

Nearly 40% of Russia’s oil exports now move through a “shadow fleet” of old tankers sailing without Western insurance.
Financial Times report:
https://www.ft.com/content/6df16e05-6cda-4e87-a624-61b0eaa745b0

Reuters investigation:
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/russias-shadow-fleet-how-moscow-moves-oil-beyond-reach-west-2023-06-14/

A collapsing state does not build parallel energy routes this quickly.


2. Western Chips Still Reach Russia Through Third Countries

Despite strict export controls, banned components continue entering Russia through Central Asia, Gulf states, and the Caucasus.

Bloomberg’s findings:
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-09-12/russia-gets-western-chips-via-central-asia-report-shows

EU export-control documentation:
https://policy.trade.ec.europa.eu/enforcement-and-protection/export-controls_en

This is not collapse. It is adaptation.


3. Defence Production Is Increasing, Not Falling

NATO estimates that Russia is now producing three times more artillery shells than before the Ukraine war:

IISS research highlights how Russia’s defence industry has restructured itself:

This is not the behaviour of a system breaking apart.


Elasticity, Not Efficiency, Keeps the System Alive

Russia’s state is not efficient. It leaks money and depends on informal networks. But it stretches instead of snapping.
The IMF notes that the economic contraction is far smaller than expected:
https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2023/04/11/russia-outlook-economic-update

The World Bank also reports an unexpected degree of stability:
https://www.worldbank.org/en/country/russia/publication/russia-economic-report

The system survives because it distributes pressure across regional elites, security networks, and a public accustomed to economic strain.


Russia Is Mutating, Not Collapsing

Under pressure, Russia has chosen transformation rather than breakdown. It has:

  • expanded its Arctic military presence,
  • deepened ties with China,
  • opened new trade corridors through the Global South,
  • restructured the budget around war production,
  • revived outdated Soviet-era factories for mass manufacturing.

Carnegie describes this as Russia’s shift toward “long-war foreign policy”:
https://carnegieendowment.org/2023/10/18/russia-s-war-and-international-order-pub-90682

Chatham House calls it “marathon strategy” rather than collapse:
https://www.chathamhouse.org/2023/02/russias-long-war-strategy

This is mutation — a system changing shape to survive.


Why This Mutation Matters for Global Politics

1. Europe Faces a Long-term Adversary

NATO expansion — especially Finland and Sweden — reflects the recognition that Russia is not collapsing. It is regrouping.

2. Sanctions Power Weakens Globally

If Russia bypasses sanctions, others will follow.
Iran, Venezuela, Turkey — and eventually states like Pakistan may consider alternative trade routes.

3. China–Russia Cooperation Deepens

Not out of love. Out of survival.
Joint Arctic routes and energy agreements show a structural partnership forming.

4. The Global South Learns a New Playbook

A major power surviving Western isolation sends a message: the world is no longer unipolar.

A collapsing Russia would reshape the map.
A mutating Russia reshapes the world order.


A Quiet Ending

Sometimes, late at night in Karachi when the electricity flickers, I think about how states survive. They do not always break. They bend. They adjust. They find strange paths forward.

Maybe Russia is doing the same thing — only at a geopolitical scale the world is not ready for.

If Russia is not collapsing, then waiting for a dramatic ending is useless.
We need to think about what happens when a state survives by becoming something new.

The Netherlands Backtracks on Nexperia: When China Silently Won the Chip War

The Dutch government’s attempt to seize Nexperia, hailed as a defense of European technology, quickly unraveled as they invited its Chinese CEO back amid China’s export control on essential chips. This situation exposed Europe’s reliance on Chinese semiconductor supply chains, highlighting the fragility of perceived technological sovereignty and raising questions about true independence from China.

From Triumph to Retreat

When the Dutch government moved to seize Nexperia, the headlines sounded victorious.
Commentators praised it as a bold defense of Europe’s technological sovereignty. It was seen as a stand against China’s creeping control of global semiconductors.

But the celebration faded fast. Within months, the same officials who had boasted of protecting “strategic assets” were quietly inviting Nexperia’s Chinese CEO back. The reversal was swift, quiet, and humiliating.

What went wrong?

At first, the Netherlands believed it had won a national honor. In reality, it only got an empty frame. The essential parts — testing, packaging, and sourcing — remained in China. Europe took the signboard, but China retained the system.


China’s Silent Counterpunch

Beijing didn’t need to respond with threats. It simply issued a 48-hour export control order, targeting key automotive-grade chips.
No public statement, no war of words — just a flick of the pen.

Within ten days, assembly lines across North America and Europe stalled.


Factories Feel the Shock

Honda was among the first to feel the pain. Its Alliston and Celaya plants cut production in half, forcing hundreds of workers onto half-pay standby.

Volkswagen reported its first quarterly loss in five years — €2.3 billion — blaming chip disruption for “choking production.”

Mercedes-Benz reduced SUV output in Stuttgart by 30 percent. Meanwhile, Toyota’s spokesperson in North America tried to sound calm. The spokesperson insisted they could “hold out for a while.” Few believed it.

According to the U.S. Alliance for Automotive Innovation, representing 13 major automakers:

“The Nexperia chip cutoff has already disrupted production for two million vehicles. If this continues, 12 factories could shut down, and 300,000 jobs may be lost.”

Alt text: Automotive industry disruption following China’s chip export controls.


The Hidden Power of “Simple” Chips

What stunned Western observers most was how ordinary these chips were.
These weren’t the flashy AI processors driving innovation headlines. Instead, they were automotive-grade microcontrollers. These are the small, reliable chips that control brakes, lights, and dashboards.

“China’s dominance in mid-tier automotive semiconductors has been underestimated for years,” said Andreas Schaefer, senior analyst at AutoTech Insight.

“Europe tried to secure the logo, but China kept the lifeblood,” observed Liang Hua, semiconductor policy researcher at Tsinghua University.

To put it another way, China controls the unseen layers of the supply chain. These are the stages no one talks about until they collapse.


Europe’s Strategic Illusion

For years, European policymakers have repeated the mantra of “de-risking from China.”
But what happens when the risk runs both ways?

The Netherlands learned that sovereignty on paper doesn’t translate into control on the production floor.
You can seize a company. You cannot seize a supply chain.

The Nexperia episode has turned into a quiet cautionary tale across European capitals. It serves as a reminder that the lines between independence and interdependence are thinner than politicians admit.


A Lesson in Interdependence

This is not just a story about chips. It offers a glimpse into a new world order. In this order, economic power depends less on who invents the product. It depends more on who controls the production choke points.

The West’s era of technological dominance was built on the assumption that design meant control.
China has rewritten that rule.

Power, in this century, does not necessarily come from armies or sanctions. It may come from the ability to stop a single line of microcontrollers. Such an action can freeze the world’s assembly lines.


Open Question

Can Europe truly achieve technological independence without China?
Or has the age of controlled globalization already ended?

How the Media Sells Wars: From Vietnam to Gaza

Each generation swears it will not be fooled again. And yet, time and again, the public is sold on new wars with old tactics. From Vietnam to Iraq, Libya to Ukraine, and now Gaza and Iran, the mechanisms are familiar. The messengers, often recycled. The media, too often complicit.

Wars are not just fought with bombs and boots. They are prepared through headlines, shaped by studio debates, and sold via fear-laced soundbites. This post examines how media coverage has played a central role in enabling wars. It does this by constructing compelling but often misleading narratives. These narratives override skepticism and drown out dissent.

Vietnam: The First Televised War

The Vietnam War marked the first time American households watched war unfold on their evening news. Initially, networks largely echoed the government line, portraying U.S. involvement as a necessary stand against communism.

Walter Cronkite’s famous 1968 broadcast, in which he said the war would end in stalemate, marked a turning point. Yet, until then, images of burning villages and casualty reports were presented with little context or critique. The Gulf of Tonkin incident—which led to a major escalation—was later revealed to be grossly misrepresented, if not fabricated.

Iraq 2003: Weapons of Mass Deception

The 2003 invasion of Iraq is perhaps the most infamous case of media-enabled warfare. It was sold on the claim that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction. Cable networks aired breathless coverage of mobile weapons labs, mushroom clouds, and Colin Powell’s now-discredited UN speech.

The New York Times later admitted it failed in its duty, publishing unverified claims from sources like Ahmed Chalabi. Meanwhile, dissenting voices such as Scott Ritter and Hans Blix were sidelined.

Journalist Chris Hedges noted:

“The media gives credibility to people who have no business being taken seriously.”

Libya 2011: The Forgotten Fallout

In 2011, the media overwhelmingly supported the NATO-led intervention in Libya. News outlets echoed the line that Muammar Gaddafi was about to commit genocide in Benghazi. The result? Gaddafi was overthrown and killed. However, the country plunged into chaos. Open-air slave markets appeared in the years that followed.

Mainstream outlets rarely revisited the post-war consequences.

Ukraine 2022: Good vs Evil Framing

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine rightly sparked global outrage. But media coverage quickly adopted a moral binary: Ukraine as entirely noble, Russia as cartoonishly evil. This black-and-white narrative left little room to discuss NATO expansion or the role of Western interests in the region.

Experts like John Mearsheimer and Noam Chomsky, who offered critical historical perspectives, were rarely featured in major Western outlets.

Gaza 2023–2024: Language as a Weapon

Perhaps no conflict illustrates the role of language in war narratives more clearly than Israel’s war in Gaza. Terms like “clashes” and “retaliation” are selectively used. Palestinian deaths are often passive: “X people died,” versus “Israel was attacked by Hamas.”

CNN, BBC, and others have been criticized for underreporting civilian casualties or relying heavily on Israeli government sources without verification. Social media has forced some reckoning, with independent journalists like Motaz Azaiza and platforms like Al Jazeera gaining unprecedented visibility.

The Mechanics: How It Works

  1. Pretext: A dramatic event (real or inflated) triggers fear. Gulf of Tonkin. 9/11. Chemical attacks.
  2. Experts: Think tanks and former officials dominate airwaves. They often have undisclosed ties to defense contractors.
  3. Moral framing: The war is a fight for freedom, democracy, human rights. Never about oil, arms sales, or strategic positioning.
  4. Erasure of dissent: Voices questioning the narrative are painted as naive, traitorous, or pro-enemy.
  5. Limited coverage of aftermath: The camera moves on. The consequences fade.

Conclusion: The Cost of Compliance

The price of media complicity is measured in lives lost, regions destabilized, and truths buried. When the press becomes a participant in the drumbeat to war rather than a check on power, democracy falters.

To resist the next war narrative, we must remember the last. Skepticism is not cynicism. It is civic responsibility.

As Hedges said:

“The credibility of these media figures lies not in their accuracy, but in their usefulness to power.”

Let us be less useful. Let us remember. Let us ask better questions.

Pakistan’s Strategic Gambit in Iran-Israel Tensions

Pakistan’s recent involvement in Iran-Israel tensions represents a dramatic shift from traditional non-alignment to active strategic partnership with Iran, driven by complex geopolitical calculations involving Chinese investments, Indian threats, and regional security imperatives. This unprecedented alignment occurred after both countries overcame their most serious military confrontation in decades.

From crisis to strategic alignment

Pakistan and Iran transformed their relationship from near-conflict to military partnership in just twelve months. In January 2024, the countries experienced their most serious confrontation since the 1980s when Iran struck Pakistani territory with missiles targeting Baloch militants, killing two civilians. Wikipedia Pakistan retaliated with Operation Marg Bar Sarmachar, deploying J-10C fighters in escort roles while JF-17 Thunder jets conducted precision strikes against Iranian territory, killing nine people including four children. Wikipedia +3

Rather than escalating, both countries chose rapid diplomatic de-escalation. By January 29, 2024, Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian visited Pakistan, establishing frameworks for expanded security cooperation. Wikipedia +2 This crisis-to-partnership transformation culminated in unprecedented military cooperation agreements by January 2025, including joint weapons production, regular naval exercises, and enhanced intelligence sharing. ArmyrecognitionThe Defense Post

The J-10C incident reveals operational integration

The J-10C fighters’ involvement in Operation Marg Bar Sarmachar marked their first operational deployment in Pakistani service, though in support rather than primary strike roles. These Chinese-made aircraft provided air cover and electronic warfare support while domestically-produced JF-17s conducted the actual strikes using extended-range precision munitions. Bulgarianmilitary

This deployment demonstrated Pakistan’s successful integration of Chinese military technology into complex cross-border operations. The 25 J-10CE aircraft ordered in December 2021 and delivered starting March 2022 represent a significant capability enhancement, featuring AESA radar, PL-15 long-range missiles, and advanced electronic warfare systems powered by Chinese WS-10B engines. Wikipedia

Strategic motivations drive unprecedented cooperation

Countering the Israel-India axis emerges as Pakistan’s primary strategic concern. The Israel-India partnership has evolved into one of the world’s most significant defense relationships, with Israel supplying 42.1% of its arms exports to India, totaling approximately $1.5 billion annually. The DiplomatWikipedia This relationship fundamentally alters South Asian strategic dynamics through:

  • Advanced military systems including Barak-8 missiles ($6+ billion), Phalcon AWACS, and extensive drone capabilities The Diplomat +2
  • Intelligence cooperation dating to 1968, intensifying after the 2008 Mumbai attacks The DiplomatWikipedia
  • Technology transfers supporting India’s $200 billion military modernization program The Diplomat
  • Joint manufacturing ventures under “Make in India” initiatives The Diplomat +2

Pakistani officials consistently describe this partnership as an existential threat. During the May 2025 India-Pakistan conflict, Israeli weapons systems played central roles in Indian operations, with 25+ Israeli-made Harop loitering munitions Dawn and multiple other systems deployed against Pakistani forces. The Times of Israel

Economic security drives China-Pakistan calculations

Protecting the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) from regional instability represents Pakistan’s core strategic imperative. The $25.4 billion Phase 1 investment, with $26.8 billion in ongoing projects, transforms Pakistan’s economic foundations. Mofa China now holds $26.6 billion of Pakistan’s debt, representing 72% of external bilateral obligations.

Regional tensions directly threaten these investments. Pakistan deploys 12,000 troops specifically for CPEC protection, responding to repeated attacks by Baloch Liberation Army and Pakistani Taliban targeting Chinese workers. Wikipedia The March 2024 attack on Chinese engineers and October 2024 convoy bombing demonstrate persistent security challenges that China considers when making future investment decisions.

China’s position as regional stability broker influences Pakistani calculations. Beijing mediated the Pakistan-Iran crisis resolution and advocates diplomatic solutions to Iran-Israel tensions. Diplomatic CourierWikipedia Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian condemned Israeli strikes on Iran as violations of sovereignty, positioning China as an alternative to US policies in the region. NewsweekAl Jazeera

Military cooperation reaches unprecedented levels

Pakistan-Iran military cooperation has achieved remarkable depth since the January 2024 crisis:

Joint military production agreements include Iranian orders for 25 MFI-17 Mushshak aircraft and collaborative weapons manufacturing initiatives. WikipediaThe Defense Post Naval cooperation expanded through joint exercises in the Strait of Hormuz, Persian Gulf, and Arabian Sea, with Iran participating in Pakistan’s AMAN-25 multinational exercises. Wikipedia +3

Intelligence sharing focuses on combating cross-border terrorism, particularly targeting Jaish al-Adl and Baloch separatist groups. Both countries established joint border security mechanisms and coordinated patrol operations along their 900-kilometer border. Bulgarianmilitary +2

Pakistan’s Iran support during Israeli strikes

Pakistan provided resolute solidarity with Iran during Israeli nuclear facility strikes in June 2025. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif condemned Israeli attacks as violations of sovereignty and international law, while Defense Minister Khawaja Asif stated Pakistan would “safeguard Iran’s interests.” DawnArab News

Pakistan closed all border crossings with Iran temporarily due to conflict intensity and established a 24/7 Crisis Management Unit for Pakistani nationals in Iran. Al JazeeraArab News Pakistani officials affirmed Iran’s right to self-defense under UN Charter Article 51, representing unprecedented diplomatic support. Arab NewsDawn

Financing Israel’s operations reveals Western commitment

The United States remains Israel’s primary supporter, providing $17.9 billion in security assistance since October 2023 – the highest annual total since US aid began in 1959. The Costs of WarThe Associated Press This includes over 100 military aid transfers, emergency congressional appropriations of $14.3 billion, and deployment of THAAD missile defense systems with 100 US troops. Cfr

European support varies significantly. Germany approved €485 million in military exports, representing a ten-fold increase from 2022. Wikipedia +2 However, several European countries imposed partial arms embargos or license suspensions due to humanitarian concerns. The UK suspended 30 out of 350 arms export licenses, while France and others limited weapons flows. ReutersBrussels Signal

Israel’s own defense spending reached $46.5 billion in 2024, representing a 65% increase and 8.8% of GDP – the second highest globally after Ukraine. The Times of IsraelSIPRI

Regional implications and future trajectory

Pakistan’s alignment with Iran fundamentally alters regional security architecture. The partnership creates a potential China-Pakistan-Iran axis countering the Israel-India-US alignment, with significant implications for regional stability and global power balances.

Saudi Arabia and UAE pursue balanced approaches, maintaining relationships with both Iran and Israel while focusing on economic diversification. Newsweek +2 Turkey supports Iranian positions while maintaining strategic autonomy. These dynamics suggest emerging multipolar regional order replacing traditional US-dominated arrangements.

The evolution demonstrates how economic security considerations increasingly drive foreign policy calculations. Pakistan’s CPEC-centered strategy requires regional stability, making support for Iran both ideologically and economically motivated. TheasiadialogueRadio China’s investment success depends on preventing regional conflicts that could threaten infrastructure projects spanning from Xinjiang to the Arabian Sea. Wikipedia +3

Pakistan’s strategic transformation from US-aligned state to China-partnered regional power appears irreversible, with Iran ties representing a crucial component of this broader realignment. Wikipedia The success of this strategy will depend on maintaining Chinese confidence while managing regional tensions that could threaten the economic foundations of Pakistan’s development model.

Smoke Over the Gulf: Pakistan’s J-10Cs Enter the Fight

A J-10C fighter jet bore Pakistani military insignia. It tore through the skies of Iranian airspace, amidst the smoke-filled battlefields of the Middle East. It wasn’t a drill, and it wasn’t symbolic.

On June 14, 2025, Iranian state media confirmed unexpected news. Analysts didn’t anticipate this: Pakistani warplanes had officially entered Iran’s skies. They were not there to strike. Instead, they aimed to intercept Israeli missiles and drones. Suddenly, the world realized that the South Asian nuclear power was no longer sitting this one out.

China’s Warplane, Pakistan’s Message

Pakistan’s weapon of choice for this intervention was the Chinese-made J-10C. It is equipped with the deadly PL-15 air-to-air missile. The missile is renowned for its extraordinary range. These weren’t just defensive maneuvers. It was a message: Pakistan was forming a shield for Iran.

Conspicuously absent? The American-made F-16s. The reason wasn’t tactical—it was political. The U.S. had previously restricted Pakistan’s use of F-16s in conflicts with India. Additionally, they reportedly embedded backdoor software allowing remote engine lockouts. Sending an F-16 into combat against Israel would have been suicidal. The J-10C, by contrast, offered both firepower and political independence.

Settling Old Scores, Preventing New Disasters

Why did Pakistan do it?

On one level, it’s history. Pakistan views Israel’s military support to India during recent standoffs as a “hostile act”—a betrayal etched in memory. This intervention is payback, delivered at altitude.

But beyond vengeance lies a grim strategic calculus. If Iran’s defenses collapse, Pakistan could face:

  • A flood of over 870,000 refugees across its border within a month (World Bank estimate)
  • Terrorist infiltration through the porous Balochistan region
  • Economic and civil chaos in already fragile border provinces

So when Israeli jets used Iraqi airspace to strike Iranian targets, Pakistan saw not just aggression—but an opening. An undeclared war gave Islamabad the justification it needed.

From Tension to Alliance: The Role of China

Ironically, just months ago, Pakistan and Iran were on the verge of open conflict.

In January, Iran launched cross-border strikes on Jaish al-Adl targets in Pakistan. Islamabad retaliated by sending in its Rainbow-4 drones and “Kingpin” jets into Iran’s Sistan-Baluchestan. It could’ve spiraled.

But Beijing intervened.

China’s Vice Foreign Minister convened emergency talks. A hotline between Beijing and Tehran crackled to life. Within ten days, the foreign ministers of Pakistan and Iran were in Islamabad. They shook hands and formed a joint counterterrorism mechanism.

That moment of de-escalation laid the groundwork for today’s coordinated defense.

A Shaky Ally and a New Vanguard

Iran’s air force is crippled. Only 20 F-14s remain operational, cannibalized from spare parts. Russia’s promised Su-35s never arrived—sabotaged by diplomacy and production bottlenecks.

Enter Pakistan.

With over 300 modern aircraft—J-10Cs, Block III JF-17s, and yes, even F-16s—Pakistan holds an edge. The KLJ-7A radar and PL-15 missile combo fills the over-the-horizon gap Iran so desperately needs.

Meanwhile, the Israeli Air Force has been annihilating Iranian targets with zero losses. This success is due to a patchwork of Iranian air defenses built on incompatible U.S. and Russian systems.

The J-10C is more than a stopgap—it’s a game-changer.

The Bigger Game: Oil, Ports, and Precedents

Why is this more than a military skirmish?

Because geography. Because money. Because memory.

  • Gwadar and Chabahar, two ports just 72 nautical miles apart, represent the dueling dreams of China and India for Central Asia.
  • If Iran collapses, China’s $15 billion investment in Gwadar could become a sitting duck.
  • And half a century ago, it was Iran’s Shah who sent 30 F-4 Phantoms to rescue Pakistan in the 1971 war. History, it seems, has flipped.

Pakistan isn’t just defending Iran—it’s defending its economic future, its strategic depth, and a ghost of gratitude.

Behind the Radar Dome: A New Command Structure

U.S. intelligence believes Pakistani pilots are now flying from a forward command post in Isfahan. With the ZDK-03 early warning aircraft scanning a 450km radius and linking to Iranian radar stations, Pakistan has set up an integrated kill chain.

  • J-10Cs intercept before Israeli missiles can hit
  • “Bavar-373” batteries form the last line of defense
  • Together, they forced Israel to pull back launch points to the Mediterranean

This isn’t ad hoc. It’s layered. It’s lethal. It’s working.

Red Lines, Drawn in Smoke

When India’s Modi visited Tel Aviv right after the strikes—inking deals for Barak-8 missiles and Heron drones—the writing was on the wall.

New Delhi and Jerusalem are now military partners.

For Islamabad, the front line in Iran is a prelude to the one in Kashmir. If Israel arms India, Pakistan needs to prove it can project power—and draw blood—far beyond its own borders.

A Final Image: Steel Wings, Shifting Powers

As the J-10C’s engine roars above the Persian Gulf, it doesn’t just scream deterrence—it whispers warning.

A warning to Tel Aviv.
A signal to Washington.
A promise to Beijing.

And maybe most importantly, a reminder to Tehran: you are not alone.

Underneath the sleek wings of this silver-gray warbird flies the will of a country reclaiming its say in the future of the Middle East.

And when the dawn comes again over the Gulf, history will note—on this night, the multipolar world took flight.

When Beijing Holds the World’s Tech Industry Hostage

How China’s Rare Earth Stranglehold Exposes the Fatal Flaw in Western Industrial Strategy

“Without reliable access to these elements, automotive suppliers will be unable to produce critical automotive components, including automatic transmissions, throttle bodies, alternators, various motors, sensors, seat belts, speakers, lights, motors, power steering, and cameras.” — Alliance for Automotive Innovation, May 2025

Mercedes-Benz executives met in emergency meetings this spring. They discussed supply chain protection strategies. They weren’t worried about semiconductor shortages or shipping delays. They faced a more fundamental threat. China could choke off the supply of materials so basic to modern manufacturing. Most consumers have never heard of them. Without these materials, their cars simply cannot be built.

This isn’t just another trade spat. It’s a masterclass. It shows how a determined adversary can exploit decades of Western complacency. They can hold entire industries hostage with the stroke of a bureaucratic pen.

The Stranglehold Tightens

On April 4, 2025, Donald Trump’s tariffs reached a staggering 145% on Chinese products. Beijing’s retaliation was swift and surgical. China imposed export restrictions on seven rare earth elements—samarium, gadolinium, terbium, dysprosium, lutetium, scandium, and yttrium. These aren’t household names. However, they are the DNA of every smartphone, electric vehicle, wind turbine, and F-35 fighter jet on the planet.

The mechanism is elegantly simple: a licensing system requiring government approval for each shipment. No outright ban—just bureaucratic friction that can throttle supply at will. Within weeks, European auto parts plants began shutting down. American defense contractors watched lead times stretch from 60 to 120 days. German automakers warned of production collapses that would “rattle their local economies.”

What makes this particularly devastating is the scope of China’s dominance. Beijing controls 90% of global rare earth production. It controls 87% of processing. It also controls an astonishing 99% of heavy rare earth elements like dysprosium. To put this in perspective: if China’s rare earth industry were a person, it could shut down Tesla. It could also shut down General Motors, Siemens, and Lockheed Martin. This person would achieve that simultaneously by simply deciding not to answer the phone.

Europe Caught in the Crossfire

The most telling aspect of this crisis isn’t American vulnerability—that was predictable given the escalating trade war. Europe, despite its careful diplomatic positioning, finds itself as collateral damage. It is in a conflict it didn’t start and cannot control.

European Commission trade chief Maros Sefcovic held urgent meetings with Chinese officials in Paris. These interactions revealed an uncomfortable truth. Europe has no leverage. The EU’s preference for “systematic solutions” like annual licensing agreements sounds reasonable. However, they’re essentially begging for the privilege of continued dependence. When your counterpart controls the tap, requests for “more efficient water flow” aren’t negotiations—they’re pleas.

The numbers tell the story starkly. Of hundreds of export license applications submitted by European auto suppliers since April, only one-quarter have been approved. Mercedes-Benz suppliers receive “a limited number” of licenses. BMW reports supply network disruptions. Volkswagen—Europe’s automotive crown jewel—depends on Chinese approvals for the magnets that power its electric future.

This is what strategic vulnerability looks like in practice. Entire industrial ecosystems are reduced to waiting for bureaucratic approvals. These approvals come from a country that views trade as warfare by other means.

The Japanese Exception That Proves the Rule

There’s one notable exception to this widespread panic: Japan. In 2010, Chinese fishing vessels sparked a territorial dispute. Beijing’s rare earth embargo taught Tokyo a significant lesson. This is a lesson the West is only now learning. Japan’s response wasn’t to file WTO complaints or form study groups—it was to build alternative supply chains.

Today, Japan’s rare earth dependency on China has dropped from 90% to 60%. The secret? Strategic patience and genuine partnership. Japan didn’t just invest in mining. It held hands with suppliers through price crashes. Japan provided patient capital during development phases. It treated supply chain resilience as a national security imperative rather than a corporate procurement issue.

The result is instructive. When China’s latest restrictions hit, Japan’s officials could credibly claim that national stockpiles would “cushion some of the short-term impact.” Meanwhile, German executives warn of genuine automotive supply chain problems within months.

America’s Paper Tiger Response

The American response reveals the profound disconnect between political rhetoric and industrial reality. The Department of Defense has committed $439 million toward domestic rare earth capabilities since 2020. This sum sounds impressive. However, it’s barely enough to fund a single advanced weapons program.

MP Materials, America’s sole rare earth producer, plans to manufacture 1,000 tons of critical magnets by end of 2025. China produces 138,000 tons annually. The math is brutally simple: even when fully operational, American domestic production will represent less than 1% of Chinese output.

This isn’t a supply chain diversification strategy. It’s industrial theater. It is designed to obscure the fact that America spent decades prioritizing financial engineering over actual engineering. Wall Street celebrated the efficiency of global supply chains. Meanwhile, Beijing quietly cornered markets in materials. These materials would become the foundation of 21st-century technology.

The Myanmar Wild Card

The civil war in Myanmar adds another layer of complexity. It has disrupted over 70% of heavy rare earth feedstock flowing to China since October 2023. This creates a perverse situation. Conflict in one of the world’s poorest countries directly impacts the production timelines of premium German automobiles. It also affects American military equipment production.

Rather than exposing Chinese vulnerability, Myanmar’s chaos has made Beijing more protective of its remaining supplies. When your primary backup supplier is embroiled in civil war, hoarding becomes rational policy. For Western manufacturers, this means China’s restrictions aren’t just about trade leverage—they’re about resource conservation in an increasingly unstable world.

Beyond the Immediate Crisis

The rare earth crisis illuminates a broader strategic failure. For three decades, Western policymakers treated interdependence as inherently stabilizing, believing that economic integration would constrain aggressive behavior. The rare earth weapon reveals this assumption as dangerously naive.

China’s willingness to weaponize supply chains isn’t new. They’ve done it with rare earths before. They have also targeted gallium and germanium, and graphite. What’s new is the scale and sophistication. Beijing has learned to calibrate pressure precisely: enough disruption to impose costs, not enough to trigger complete decoupling.

This creates a insidious dynamic where Western companies face chronic uncertainty without clear resolution. Emergency meetings become routine. Supply chain stress becomes the new normal. Investment decisions get delayed while executives wait for political solutions that may never come.

The defense implications are particularly sobering. American weapons systems from fighter jets to missile guidance systems depend on Chinese-controlled materials. The Pentagon’s goal of supply chain independence by 2027 seems increasingly unrealistic. Current domestic production is just a rounding error compared to Chinese capacity.

The Path Forward: Painful Truths and Necessary Choices

The rare earth crisis forces uncomfortable questions about the price of technological sovereignty. Building alternative supply chains isn’t just expensive. It requires accepting lower efficiency. There are higher costs. Technological compromises are necessary for the sake of strategic independence.

Japan’s experience offers a roadmap, but not a panacea. Even after fifteen years of deliberate diversification, Japan still sources over half its rare earths from China. Complete independence may be impossible; reduced vulnerability is achievable.

For Europe, the choice is stark: accept permanent strategic subordination or pay the enormous cost of industrial redundancy. For America, the question is whether a country that struggles to maintain basic infrastructure can muster the patience. Can it generate the capital required for a decades-long supply chain reconstruction project?

The deeper issue is temporal mismatch. Democratic governments think in electoral cycles; supply chain resilience requires generational thinking. China’s rare earth dominance wasn’t built in four years. It was constructed over decades through patient investment. Environmental externalization and strategic planning played key roles.

The uncomfortable truth is this: China’s rare earth weapon works precisely because it exploits Western economic orthodoxy against itself. The same market efficiency that financialized American industry and optimized European supply chains has created systematic vulnerabilities. Beijing can now exploit these vulnerabilities at will.

Recovery requires abandoning the comfortable fiction that economics and geopolitics operate in separate spheres. The rare earth crisis isn’t a supply chain problem. It cannot be solved with better procurement strategies. It’s a power problem that requires political solutions.

Western leaders must accept that strategic independence has a price. They need to realize that efficiency isn’t always optimal. Otherwise, they’ll continue to find themselves hostage to powers. These powers view their economic dependencies as exploitable weaknesses.

The question facing policymakers from Berlin to Washington is simple. Are they willing to pay the cost of freedom from Chinese rare earth control? Or will they continue to hope that somehow, Beijing will choose restraint over leverage?

Recent events suggest Beijing has already answered that question. The only mystery is how long it will take Western capitals to do the same.