China’s Plans To Dominate The World

asphalt road under white clouds

China’s New Silk road, or the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), commonly referred to as the One Belt One Road (OBOR) or the modern New Silk Road, is a massive global infrastructure and economic development strategy launched by President Xi Jinping in 2013.

Reviving the spirit of the ancient Silk Road trade routes, it seeks to connect China with over 150 countries across Asia, Europe, Africa, and beyond through extensive networks of railways, highways, ports, pipelines, and digital infrastructure.

The Han Dynasty Makes the First Silk Road in 130 BCE

The first Silk Road was first established around 130 BCE (with foundations laid by explorer Zhang Qian’s mission starting in 138 BCE) during China’s Han Dynasty.

It originated in Chang’an (modern-day Xi’an in China) and connected eastward Asia to Central Asia, extending westward through regions like the Tarim Basin, Persia, and eventually to the Mediterranean and Europe.

The primary reason for its creation was Han Emperor Wu’s diplomatic and strategic efforts to form alliances against nomadic threats like the Xiongnu, while opening trade routes for valuable goods such as Chinese silk.

This network facilitated not only commerce in silk, spices, and horses but also the exchange of ideas, cultures, and technologies across continents for centuries.

The initiative encompasses the overland “Silk Road Economic Belt” and the “21st Century Maritime Silk Road,” aiming to boost trade, enhance connectivity, promote policy coordination, and foster mutual economic growth. While proponents highlight its role in driving development in participating nations and expanding China’s global influence, critics raise concerns about debt sustainability, geopolitical implications, and environmental impacts.

China’s Use of the Belt and Road to Grow Influence Abroad

China uses its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) to build big projects like roads, railways, and especially shipping ports in poorer countries, lending them huge amounts of money through Chinese banks. When these countries can’t pay back the loans because the projects don’t make enough money or the debt gets too high, China often gets control of the assets. For example, in Sri Lanka, China built the Hambantota Port with over $1 billion in loans; when Sri Lanka couldn’t repay, it gave a Chinese company a 99-year lease on the port in 2017, giving China a key spot near important sea routes.

People call this “debt-trap diplomacy,” saying China lends too much on purpose to gain power and take over important places when payments fail. Similar worries exist in places like Pakistan, Djibouti, and Kenya, where high debt has increased China’s say over ports and other projects. Even in 2026, many countries still owe China a lot, and debates continue about whether this helps development or creates risks for those nations.

As of 2026, the BRI continues to evolve with record-high engagement levels in recent years, focusing on sectors like energy, mining, and technology amid shifting global dynamics.

Economic Wars: China Joins BRICS

BRICS is an intergovernmental organization of major emerging economies, originally formed as BRIC in 2006 by Brazil, Russia, India, and China, with South Africa joining in 2010 to create the current acronym.
It has significantly expanded in recent years, now including additional full members such as Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, bringing the total to around ten or eleven countries depending on final confirmations as of 2026.

Representing nearly half the world’s population, over a quarter of global GDP, and substantial shares of trade, energy resources, and commodities, BRICS serves as a platform for cooperation on economic development, trade, infrastructure, and global governance reform, often positioning itself as a counterbalance to Western-dominated institutions.

Under India’s current chairmanship in 2026, the group emphasizes priorities like resilience, innovation, sustainability, counter-terrorism, energy security, emerging technologies such as AI, and efforts to enhance multilateralism among Global South nations while pursuing greater influence in international affairs.

Biological Warfare: Covid-19

In a sinister act of biological warfare, China deliberately engineered COVID-19 through gain-of-function research at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, enhancing bat coronaviruses to target and devastate American populations with unprecedented lethality.

This covert operation was ironically subsidized by unwitting U.S. taxpayers via National Institutes of Health grants funneled through EcoHealth Alliance to the Wuhan lab from 2014 to 2019, enabling the creation of a weaponized pathogen.

The intentional release from the lab unleashed a global pandemic that crippled the United States, exposing China’s aggressive strategy to undermine American dominance through engineered disease.


Discover more from America 24

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Related Articles

Responses

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

error:

Discover more from America 24

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading