The Peter Zeihan Podcast Series - Is Now a Good Time for China to Invade Taiwan? || Peter Zeihan

Episode Date: May 21, 2026

With the U.S. distracted (and depleted) by the Iran War, should China seize this opportunity to invade Taiwan?Join the Patreon here: https://www.patreon.com/PeterZeihanFull Newsletter: https://bit.ly/...4uLwQ9x

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Everybody, Peter Zion here coming to you from Colorado, where the snow is back. Today, we're taking a question from the Patreon crowd. Specifically, do I think now would be a great time for China to attack Taiwan? What would the United States distracted in Iran? On the surface, it sounds like it would be a great time, doesn't it? The United States is basically completely all in in the Iran War and is not doing well. The strait has been closed for weeks, and we're not. now starting to see these cavitating and cumulative failures in global energy markets, which as we get
Starting point is 00:00:35 into June and especially July are just going to be catastrophic for any number of countries. And at some level, the United States is going to have to address that without solving the military question in the Persian Gulf. In addition, the United States, for safety reasons, chose to fight this war not in the Persian Gulf. Most of the sea craft that were involved were either over in the Red Sea or deep in the Arabian firing things that are on from beyond any theoretical retaliation. And in doing so, the United States used up half roughly of its deployable long-range munitions. It's going to take five to ten years to reset those stocks, even assuming we don't launch any attacks during the entire time.
Starting point is 00:01:16 So the United States is really out of the game when it comes to this type of long-range strike capability that would be necessary to deal with China in a way that wouldn't have horrendous casualties and a lot of ship failures. So on the surface, it seems like, yeah, now's the time. But the United States has the greatest concentration of naval forces it has had in the Middle Eastern region right now just off the Persian Gulf, and with a few ships now going in and out as part of convoy efforts, which aren't working very well, but that's a different topic. In addition, the United States has kind of riled up and has more ships coming to and from the region. And guess where China gets most of its crude oil?
Starting point is 00:01:55 China imports about 80% of the crude that it uses, and about 75% of that comes from the Persian Gulf, and now the U.S. Navy is right there. So if we got into a scenario where the Chinese decided to make a move on Taiwan, maybe from a tactical, local military point of view, the Chinese would find it a lot easier to do. The U.S. is out of position, and a lot of the preferred weapons that we have designed specifically for that scenario just aren't available in the numbers they would need to be. But then the United States would shut off energy flows to China, and within a year, China would fall into a post-apocalyptic wasteland complete with famine that kills half of their population.
Starting point is 00:02:32 So, on the surface, short term, yeah, that was a good time. But none of this has changed anything about China's overall vulnerabilities, and actually the United States is standing on the energy flow right now in a way that would guarantee the end of the People's Republic, should there be a war. The only scenario where it might work is if the United States decides, you know what, we didn't really need Taiwan anyway and decides to not get involved at all. That would be strategically idiotic for the United States, but it wouldn't be the first time this year that we've done something like that, so I can't roll it out.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.