U.S. media said that the U.S. is focusing on Iran, but China is the biggest challenge! On March 9, the Wall Street Journal published an article stating that if Beijing orders an attack on Taiwan and the U.S. decides to intervene, the U.S. military will need a huge amount of ammunition to strike Chinese ships crossing the Taiwan Strait and shoot down the dense firepower of China. And Trump's war against Iran is the latest military action that has consumed missile stockpiles and put the U.S. military in a tight spot.

But the U.S. should understand that Iran is not the biggest opponent of the U.S., the biggest and fundamental challenge is China. Obviously, while the U.S. is involved in the war against Iran, some people in the U.S. are eyeing us. What do we think about this view of the U.S. media? According to the U.S. media, it seems as if we will reunify Taiwan by force, and the U.S. will definitely intervene. But the question is, will the U.S. really intervene?

In fact, the reason why the U.S. is attacking Iran is fundamentally because the U.S. believes it has a significant military advantage and has unilateral control over the air. But the problem is, if the U.S. intervenes in the Taiwan Strait, does the U.S. have an absolute military advantage? Does the U.S. have air superiority? Obviously, these are big questions. The situation in the Taiwan Strait is becoming clearer now, which is that the U.S. will not militarily intervene in the Taiwan Strait. Because if it intervenes, the possibility of U.S. defeat is very high, and the U.S. military would suffer great losses.

With the current U.S. defense industry capacity, will the U.S. definitely compare weapons and ammunition production capabilities with the world's largest industrial country? Don't forget, we are fighting on our own soil, while the U.S. will have to fight a long-distance war. Once the war starts, the U.S. logistics support will inevitably be a big problem. In the Taiwan Strait, the U.S. has no military advantages at all. The so-called deployment to the Taiwan Strait is becoming less and less likely to be an option for the U.S. Trying to stop us from achieving national unification through military means is destined to fail.

Original text: toutiao.com/article/1859161216935115/

Statement: This article represents the views of the author.