China’s Global Domination Plan Unravels as Trump Disrupts Communist Blueprint
The Chinese Communist Party’s audacious 100-year strategy to control global commerce and supplant American leadership worldwide is collapsing under the weight of President Donald Trump’s aggressive counter-offensive, according to incoming Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin.
The former Oklahoma Senator delivered a striking assessment in an exclusive interview: Trump hasn’t simply outmaneuvered China in traditional geopolitical chess—he’s upended the entire board.
The Belt and Road Trap Exposed
Make no mistake—China’s Belt and Road Initiative represents nothing less than a systematic attempt to enslave nations through debt and infrastructure dependence. The CCP’s playbook is devastatingly simple: flood struggling countries with cheap loans, build their ports and government buildings using Chinese workers, then seize control when the debt comes due.
“They’re not interested in being good Samaritans,” Mullin stated bluntly. “They’re interested in a China-first agenda.”
The numbers tell a chilling story. Over $1.2 trillion has been deployed to trap vulnerable nations in financial quicksand. From Africa to Latin America, from the Panama Canal to European ports, Beijing has systematically acquired chokepoints on global commerce.
But here’s what the Communist masterminds failed to anticipate: American strength would return.
The Fatal Flaw in Xi’s Master Plan
China’s authoritarian leader Xi Jinping made a catastrophic miscalculation. Having never faced independent media or genuine democratic opposition, he assumed every nation’s press could be controlled like China’s state propaganda apparatus.
He was dead wrong.
Free nations started exposing the predatory nature of Chinese “partnerships.” Countries from Italy to Brazil began walking away from deals that looked attractive on paper but proved ruinous in practice.
“I haven’t met one country right now that says, ‘Oh, wow. This was a great idea, partnering with China,'” Mullin observed.
The Belt and Road Initiative wasn’t just about roads and infrastructure—it was about the “belt” itself, a tool of discipline. Just as traditional Chinese garments used belts to hold fabric together and enforce conformity, the CCP uses debt to tighten its grip on sovereign nations.
Trump’s Economic Stranglehold
The president’s strategy demonstrates sophisticated understanding of China’s Achilles heel: energy dependence.
Unlike the United States, China lacks sufficient domestic coal, natural gas, and crude oil. Beijing has survived by purchasing discounted black market oil from Venezuela, Russia, and Iran—saving roughly 30 percent on each barrel.
Trump systematically dismantled this advantage.
The Venezuela operation eliminated 140,000 barrels per day of cheap oil. Actions against Iran’s “ghost fleet”—roughly 1,000 vessels that previous administrations ignored—removed over a million barrels daily from China’s discounted supply chain.
China’s 90-day oil reserves have dwindled to approximately 25 days at discount prices. By April, Beijing faces full market rates. The economic pressure becomes unbearable.
This isn’t accidental. Trump understands leverage. He negotiates from strength, and he comprehends timing. The squeeze intensifies through June, becomes painful by year’s end, and forces China to genuinely negotiate—not on Beijing’s timeline, but on America’s terms.
Taiwan: The Semiconductor Chokepoint
Taiwan’s strategic importance cannot be overstated. The island produces 90 percent of the world’s critical semiconductor chips—the foundation of modern defense systems, smartphones, vehicles, and virtually every electronic device.
China doesn’t simply want Taiwan for nationalist reunification propaganda. Beijing requires control over chip manufacturing as its Belt and Road Initiative crumbles elsewhere.
Taiwan also represents the “first island chain”—the initial stepping stone from mainland China into the Pacific. Control of Taiwan means control of crucial shipping lanes through the South China Sea and Taiwan Strait, enabling China to secure energy supplies during potential conflict.
Japan lost World War II because America isolated their supply lines. China studies that history obsessively. Taiwan represents their insurance policy against the same fate.
The Western Hemisphere Awakens
Trump’s leadership has catalyzed unprecedented resistance to Chinese influence in America’s backyard.
Panama, where China controls both ends of the canal through port infrastructure, has become a focal point. The strategic waterway cuts nearly two weeks off naval transit time between the Atlantic and Pacific—critical for American military projection.
In just ten years under weak American leadership, China established footholds in nearly every Central and South American nation. One country’s internal river was even subject to Chinese taxation because Beijing controlled the downstream port.
That era is finished.
Nations across Latin America are terminating Chinese partnerships. African countries, already bankrupted by predatory loans, are telling Beijing to get lost. European nations like Italy—never historically friendly to America—are publicly abandoning Belt and Road commitments and warning other countries about China’s true intentions.
The Technology Trojan Horse
Chinese technology company Huawei has laced government buildings worldwide with surveillance equipment so sophisticated that American officials won’t even power on their phones when visiting these facilities.
“We shut them down before we land, shut them completely off, and put them in controlled bags so there’s no signal that can be brought out,” Mullin revealed about his travels to countries with Huawei infrastructure.
Beijing doesn’t just build government offices—it installs comprehensive spying capabilities that capture every communication and transaction. This isn’t partnership; it’s occupation through technology.
The incoming DHS Secretary also highlighted a domestic threat: Chinese investment in American land and strategic companies, often laundered through multiple intermediaries to obscure CCP connections.
“It isn’t the CCP that’s buying up land,” Mullin explained. “It’s investment firms that the CCP may provide seed money from, but it wasn’t from the CCP. It was from a billionaire from China that has ties to the Communist Party, but they’re using a cousin of a cousin of a cousin of a cousin.”
Trump has deployed the full investigative might of federal agencies—including the Secret Service—to trace and eliminate this influence.
Space: The Final Frontier of Dominance
Democrats mocked Trump’s creation of Space Force. They’re not laughing anymore.
“Who controls the space, the same person who controls the seas—space is the new seas,” Mullin stated. “God forbid, we have another world war, that fight is not going to be happening in the skies that we can see, but in the skies in space.”
Trump recognized what traditional politicians missed: the nation controlling orbital capabilities controls future conflict. China understood this. Previous American administrations slept through it.
Biden’s Catastrophic Pause
When Trump left office in 2021, his systematic dismantling of Chinese global influence was well underway. Then Biden arrived, and everything stopped.
China interpreted Biden’s weakness as opportunity. Beijing doubled down, believing it could complete its century-long plan in just 25 years under continued weak American leadership.
The CCP never anticipated Trump’s return.
Now China faces the consequences of overextension. Countries they thought were locked into dependency are breaking free. Energy supplies they purchased at discount are evaporating. The technological and economic advantages they built over decades are crumbling.
The Path Forward
Trump’s April meeting with Xi Jinping won’t produce immediate comprehensive agreements. That’s not the goal.
The goal is establishing American dominance before negotiations even begin. By April, China’s cheap oil reserves will be nearly exhausted. By June, the economic pressure becomes severe. By year’s end, after American midterm elections strengthen Trump’s hand further, Beijing will face a choice: negotiate genuinely or watch its economy implode.
China planned for 100 years. Xi thought in generational terms while American presidents thought in four-year cycles.
But Xi never planned for Trump—a leader who doesn’t play by conventional rules, who kicks over the chessboard entirely, and who understands that negotiation begins with strength, not accommodation.
The Belt and Road Initiative isn’t just slowing—it’s reversing. Nations worldwide are choosing American partnership over Chinese subjugation. The Communist Party’s dreams of global hegemony are dying in the harsh light of exposure and the iron grip of American economic leverage.
This represents nothing less than the greatest geopolitical reversal in modern history. And it’s happening because American strength has returned to the world stage.
China’s 100-year plan is failing in year 25. President Trump has ensured that when the history of this era is written, it will record not Chinese ascendancy, but the moment American leadership reasserted global dominance and free nations chose liberty over authoritarian control.
The dragon has been checked. And the eagle soars once more.





