"Don't listen to this garbage about them being a near peer. They're a peer because they rival us in nearly every single measure of national influence," Sklenka said, according to a report from The War Zone. The general added that Chinese President Xi Jinping's "vision is to upend the international structure and supplant us as the global leaders."Sklenka previously served as the lead strategist and Deputy Commander of U.S. INDOPACOM. He said his time in that role gave him familiarity with Xiâs thinking and intentions. The Chinese leadership, he argued, sees the present era as Beijingâs opportunity to reclaim its perceived historical position as the âMiddle Kingdom.â [2]Chinaâs Military and Industrial CapabilitiesSklenka detailed Chinaâs quantitative and qualitative advantages. He said Chinaâs shipbuilding capacity is âreported to be 230 times the capacity that the United States has.â The Peopleâs Liberation Army has more than doubled its nuclear-powered submarine construction, he added, and its arsenal of ballistic and cruise missiles is undergoing a rapid expansion.Chinaâs nuclear stockpile is the fastest growing in the world, according to the general. The Pentagonâs annual report to Congress, released in January 2026, confirmed that Beijing aims to replace the U.S. as the preeminent global superpower and is accelerating its military buildup. [2] [4] Sklenka also highlighted Chinese investments in artificial intelligence, drone swarms, and what he called âintelligentized warfare tactics.âThe general said Chinaâs manufacturing base has been out-producing the United States for a decade. âXi is on a wartime footing,â Sklenka said. âItâs underpinned by an industrial base thatâs out producing the world in ships and steel, precious minerals and satellites, munitions.âLessons From the Iran ConflictSklenka drew direct comparisons between the ongoing U.S. military campaign against Iran â known as Operation Epic Fury â and a potential conflict with China. He described Iran as a âmid-tier powerâ that has been able to inflict significant damage on U.S. forces and allies through drone and ballistic missile strikes. Iranâs ability to close the Strait of Hormuz demonstrates how a lesser power can disrupt a superior force, he noted.âThink about the complexities and complications that weâre having with Iran, and then ask yourself, âhow are we going to respond and act when weâre going up against a nation thatâs number two in national GDP?ââ Sklenka said. Reports have indicated that Iran used a Chinese-built spy satellite to target U.S. bases during the conflict, illustrating the depth of Beijingâs support for adversaries. [3]Sklenka warned that a war with China would be far more severe. âIran doesnât have anywhere near Chinaâs economic might. They donât have their industrial base. They certainly donât have their military modernization trajectory,â he said.Vulnerability of U.S. InstallationsThe general emphasized that U.S. military bases are no longer sanctuaries but are now front-line terrain vulnerable to both kinetic and non-kinetic attacks. âOur bases, posts and stationsâ¦are the front lines of decisive terrain,â Sklenka said. He noted that non-kinetic attacks â including cyber strikes, disinformation campaigns, and drone swarms â are likely to be the opening salvo in any conflict with China. âTheyâre going to be a cyber attack against a power grid on our base, a disinformation campaign targeting military families or a drone swarm coming off one of our installations,â he said.Sklenka called for hardened infrastructure, resilient power, and integrated base defense. âWe need the best solutions for counter UAS,â he said. âWe got to quit talking about it, start delivering that.â The vulnerability of U.S. installations is underscored by reports that the U.S. military lags behind China and Russia in AI-enabled drone development. [1]Call for TransformationSklenka urged the military to treat installations as warfighting platforms. âWe need to start looking at our bases as warfighting formations, just as critical of a warfighting formation as our divisions, wings and MEUs,â he said. He acknowledged that no U.S. military leader in uniform has ever faced a peer adversary contesting all domains simultaneously.âNone of us in uniform today have ever had to operate in a world where a legitimate peer simultaneously contests us in every single domain,â Sklenka said. He stressed the need for industry partnerships to develop counter-UAS systems, hardened networks, and resilient communications. The general warned that transformation is overdue. âHistory is proven, and our current operations are confirmed, that the society that can project and sustain power and sustain their forces most effectively, ultimately, they prevail,â he stated.ReferencesU.S. Military Officials Report Lag in AI-Enabled Drone Development Compared to Russia, China. - NaturalNews.com. April 15, 2026.China eyes dethroning US as most powerful nation, DOD says, after old reports cheered Chinaâs rise. - Just the News. January 14, 2026.Iran Used Chinese Spy Satellite To Target US Bases During War, Outraged Beijing Denies. - ZeroHedge. April 15, 2026.Pentagon warns of Chinaâs rapidly expanding nuclear arsenal. - NaturalNews.com. December 30, 2025.
"Don't listen to this garbage about them being a near peer. They're a peer because they rival us in nearly every single measure of national influence," Sklenka said, according to a report from The War Zone. The general added that Chinese President Xi Jinping's "vision is to upend the international structure and supplant us as the global leaders."Sklenka previously served as the lead strategist and Deputy Commander of U.S. INDOPACOM. He said his time in that role gave him familiarity with Xiâs thinking and intentions. The Chinese leadership, he argued, sees the present era as Beijingâs opportunity to reclaim its perceived historical position as the âMiddle Kingdom.â [2]Chinaâs Military and Industrial CapabilitiesSklenka detailed Chinaâs quantitative and qualitative advantages. He said Chinaâs shipbuilding capacity is âreported to be 230 times the capacity that the United States has.â The Peopleâs Liberation Army has more than doubled its nuclear-powered submarine construction, he added, and its arsenal of ballistic and cruise missiles is undergoing a rapid expansion.Chinaâs nuclear stockpile is the fastest growing in the world, according to the general. The Pentagonâs annual report to Congress, released in January 2026, confirmed that Beijing aims to replace the U.S. as the preeminent global superpower and is accelerating its military buildup. [2] [4] Sklenka also highlighted Chinese investments in artificial intelligence, drone swarms, and what he called âintelligentized warfare tactics.âThe general said Chinaâs manufacturing base has been out-producing the United States for a decade. âXi is on a wartime footing,â Sklenka said. âItâs underpinned by an industrial base thatâs out producing the world in ships and steel, precious minerals and satellites, munitions.âLessons From the Iran ConflictSklenka drew direct comparisons between the ongoing U.S. military campaign against Iran â known as Operation Epic Fury â and a potential conflict with China. He described Iran as a âmid-tier powerâ that has been able to inflict significant damage on U.S. forces and allies through drone and ballistic missile strikes. Iranâs ability to close the Strait of Hormuz demonstrates how a lesser power can disrupt a superior force, he noted.âThink about the complexities and complications that weâre having with Iran, and then ask yourself, âhow are we going to respond and act when weâre going up against a nation thatâs number two in national GDP?ââ Sklenka said. Reports have indicated that Iran used a Chinese-built spy satellite to target U.S. bases during the conflict, illustrating the depth of Beijingâs support for adversaries. [3]Sklenka warned that a war with China would be far more severe. âIran doesnât have anywhere near Chinaâs economic might. They donât have their industrial base. They certainly donât have their military modernization trajectory,â he said.Vulnerability of U.S. InstallationsThe general emphasized that U.S. military bases are no longer sanctuaries but are now front-line terrain vulnerable to both kinetic and non-kinetic attacks. âOur bases, posts and stationsâ¦are the front lines of decisive terrain,â Sklenka said. He noted that non-kinetic attacks â including cyber strikes, disinformation campaigns, and drone swarms â are likely to be the opening salvo in any conflict with China. âTheyâre going to be a cyber attack against a power grid on our base, a disinformation campaign targeting military families or a drone swarm coming off one of our installations,â he said.Sklenka called for hardened infrastructure, resilient power, and integrated base defense. âWe need the best solutions for counter UAS,â he said. âWe got to quit talking about it, start delivering that.â The vulnerability of U.S. installations is underscored by reports that the U.S. military lags behind China and Russia in AI-enabled drone development. [1]Call for TransformationSklenka urged the military to treat installations as warfighting platforms. âWe need to start looking at our bases as warfighting formations, just as critical of a warfighting formation as our divisions, wings and MEUs,â he said. He acknowledged that no U.S. military leader in uniform has ever faced a peer adversary contesting all domains simultaneously.âNone of us in uniform today have ever had to operate in a world where a legitimate peer simultaneously contests us in every single domain,â Sklenka said. He stressed the need for industry partnerships to develop counter-UAS systems, hardened networks, and resilient communications. The general warned that transformation is overdue. âHistory is proven, and our current operations are confirmed, that the society that can project and sustain power and sustain their forces most effectively, ultimately, they prevail,â he stated.ReferencesU.S. Military Officials Report Lag in AI-Enabled Drone Development Compared to Russia, China. - NaturalNews.com. April 15, 2026.China eyes dethroning US as most powerful nation, DOD says, after old reports cheered Chinaâs rise. - Just the News. January 14, 2026.Iran Used Chinese Spy Satellite To Target US Bases During War, Outraged Beijing Denies. - ZeroHedge. April 15, 2026.Pentagon warns of Chinaâs rapidly expanding nuclear arsenal. - NaturalNews.com. December 30, 2025.
Sklenka previously served as the lead strategist and Deputy Commander of U.S. INDOPACOM. He said his time in that role gave him familiarity with Xiâs thinking and intentions. The Chinese leadership, he argued, sees the present era as Beijingâs opportunity to reclaim its perceived historical position as the âMiddle Kingdom.â [2]Chinaâs Military and Industrial CapabilitiesSklenka detailed Chinaâs quantitative and qualitative advantages. He said Chinaâs shipbuilding capacity is âreported to be 230 times the capacity that the United States has.â The Peopleâs Liberation Army has more than doubled its nuclear-powered submarine construction, he added, and its arsenal of ballistic and cruise missiles is undergoing a rapid expansion.Chinaâs nuclear stockpile is the fastest growing in the world, according to the general. The Pentagonâs annual report to Congress, released in January 2026, confirmed that Beijing aims to replace the U.S. as the preeminent global superpower and is accelerating its military buildup. [2] [4] Sklenka also highlighted Chinese investments in artificial intelligence, drone swarms, and what he called âintelligentized warfare tactics.âThe general said Chinaâs manufacturing base has been out-producing the United States for a decade. âXi is on a wartime footing,â Sklenka said. âItâs underpinned by an industrial base thatâs out producing the world in ships and steel, precious minerals and satellites, munitions.âLessons From the Iran ConflictSklenka drew direct comparisons between the ongoing U.S. military campaign against Iran â known as Operation Epic Fury â and a potential conflict with China. He described Iran as a âmid-tier powerâ that has been able to inflict significant damage on U.S. forces and allies through drone and ballistic missile strikes. Iranâs ability to close the Strait of Hormuz demonstrates how a lesser power can disrupt a superior force, he noted.âThink about the complexities and complications that weâre having with Iran, and then ask yourself, âhow are we going to respond and act when weâre going up against a nation thatâs number two in national GDP?ââ Sklenka said. Reports have indicated that Iran used a Chinese-built spy satellite to target U.S. bases during the conflict, illustrating the depth of Beijingâs support for adversaries. [3]Sklenka warned that a war with China would be far more severe. âIran doesnât have anywhere near Chinaâs economic might. They donât have their industrial base. They certainly donât have their military modernization trajectory,â he said.Vulnerability of U.S. InstallationsThe general emphasized that U.S. military bases are no longer sanctuaries but are now front-line terrain vulnerable to both kinetic and non-kinetic attacks. âOur bases, posts and stationsâ¦are the front lines of decisive terrain,â Sklenka said. He noted that non-kinetic attacks â including cyber strikes, disinformation campaigns, and drone swarms â are likely to be the opening salvo in any conflict with China. âTheyâre going to be a cyber attack against a power grid on our base, a disinformation campaign targeting military families or a drone swarm coming off one of our installations,â he said.Sklenka called for hardened infrastructure, resilient power, and integrated base defense. âWe need the best solutions for counter UAS,â he said. âWe got to quit talking about it, start delivering that.â The vulnerability of U.S. installations is underscored by reports that the U.S. military lags behind China and Russia in AI-enabled drone development. [1]Call for TransformationSklenka urged the military to treat installations as warfighting platforms. âWe need to start looking at our bases as warfighting formations, just as critical of a warfighting formation as our divisions, wings and MEUs,â he said. He acknowledged that no U.S. military leader in uniform has ever faced a peer adversary contesting all domains simultaneously.âNone of us in uniform today have ever had to operate in a world where a legitimate peer simultaneously contests us in every single domain,â Sklenka said. He stressed the need for industry partnerships to develop counter-UAS systems, hardened networks, and resilient communications. The general warned that transformation is overdue. âHistory is proven, and our current operations are confirmed, that the society that can project and sustain power and sustain their forces most effectively, ultimately, they prevail,â he stated.ReferencesU.S. Military Officials Report Lag in AI-Enabled Drone Development Compared to Russia, China. - NaturalNews.com. April 15, 2026.China eyes dethroning US as most powerful nation, DOD says, after old reports cheered Chinaâs rise. - Just the News. January 14, 2026.Iran Used Chinese Spy Satellite To Target US Bases During War, Outraged Beijing Denies. - ZeroHedge. April 15, 2026.Pentagon warns of Chinaâs rapidly expanding nuclear arsenal. - NaturalNews.com. December 30, 2025.
Sklenka previously served as the lead strategist and Deputy Commander of U.S. INDOPACOM. He said his time in that role gave him familiarity with Xiâs thinking and intentions. The Chinese leadership, he argued, sees the present era as Beijingâs opportunity to reclaim its perceived historical position as the âMiddle Kingdom.â [2]Chinaâs Military and Industrial CapabilitiesSklenka detailed Chinaâs quantitative and qualitative advantages. He said Chinaâs shipbuilding capacity is âreported to be 230 times the capacity that the United States has.â The Peopleâs Liberation Army has more than doubled its nuclear-powered submarine construction, he added, and its arsenal of ballistic and cruise missiles is undergoing a rapid expansion.Chinaâs nuclear stockpile is the fastest growing in the world, according to the general. The Pentagonâs annual report to Congress, released in January 2026, confirmed that Beijing aims to replace the U.S. as the preeminent global superpower and is accelerating its military buildup. [2] [4] Sklenka also highlighted Chinese investments in artificial intelligence, drone swarms, and what he called âintelligentized warfare tactics.âThe general said Chinaâs manufacturing base has been out-producing the United States for a decade. âXi is on a wartime footing,â Sklenka said. âItâs underpinned by an industrial base thatâs out producing the world in ships and steel, precious minerals and satellites, munitions.âLessons From the Iran ConflictSklenka drew direct comparisons between the ongoing U.S. military campaign against Iran â known as Operation Epic Fury â and a potential conflict with China. He described Iran as a âmid-tier powerâ that has been able to inflict significant damage on U.S. forces and allies through drone and ballistic missile strikes. Iranâs ability to close the Strait of Hormuz demonstrates how a lesser power can disrupt a superior force, he noted.âThink about the complexities and complications that weâre having with Iran, and then ask yourself, âhow are we going to respond and act when weâre going up against a nation thatâs number two in national GDP?ââ Sklenka said. Reports have indicated that Iran used a Chinese-built spy satellite to target U.S. bases during the conflict, illustrating the depth of Beijingâs support for adversaries. [3]Sklenka warned that a war with China would be far more severe. âIran doesnât have anywhere near Chinaâs economic might. They donât have their industrial base. They certainly donât have their military modernization trajectory,â he said.Vulnerability of U.S. InstallationsThe general emphasized that U.S. military bases are no longer sanctuaries but are now front-line terrain vulnerable to both kinetic and non-kinetic attacks. âOur bases, posts and stationsâ¦are the front lines of decisive terrain,â Sklenka said. He noted that non-kinetic attacks â including cyber strikes, disinformation campaigns, and drone swarms â are likely to be the opening salvo in any conflict with China. âTheyâre going to be a cyber attack against a power grid on our base, a disinformation campaign targeting military families or a drone swarm coming off one of our installations,â he said.Sklenka called for hardened infrastructure, resilient power, and integrated base defense. âWe need the best solutions for counter UAS,â he said. âWe got to quit talking about it, start delivering that.â The vulnerability of U.S. installations is underscored by reports that the U.S. military lags behind China and Russia in AI-enabled drone development. [1]Call for TransformationSklenka urged the military to treat installations as warfighting platforms. âWe need to start looking at our bases as warfighting formations, just as critical of a warfighting formation as our divisions, wings and MEUs,â he said. He acknowledged that no U.S. military leader in uniform has ever faced a peer adversary contesting all domains simultaneously.âNone of us in uniform today have ever had to operate in a world where a legitimate peer simultaneously contests us in every single domain,â Sklenka said. He stressed the need for industry partnerships to develop counter-UAS systems, hardened networks, and resilient communications. The general warned that transformation is overdue. âHistory is proven, and our current operations are confirmed, that the society that can project and sustain power and sustain their forces most effectively, ultimately, they prevail,â he stated.ReferencesU.S. Military Officials Report Lag in AI-Enabled Drone Development Compared to Russia, China. - NaturalNews.com. April 15, 2026.China eyes dethroning US as most powerful nation, DOD says, after old reports cheered Chinaâs rise. - Just the News. January 14, 2026.Iran Used Chinese Spy Satellite To Target US Bases During War, Outraged Beijing Denies. - ZeroHedge. April 15, 2026.Pentagon warns of Chinaâs rapidly expanding nuclear arsenal. - NaturalNews.com. December 30, 2025.
Chinaâs Military and Industrial CapabilitiesSklenka detailed Chinaâs quantitative and qualitative advantages. He said Chinaâs shipbuilding capacity is âreported to be 230 times the capacity that the United States has.â The Peopleâs Liberation Army has more than doubled its nuclear-powered submarine construction, he added, and its arsenal of ballistic and cruise missiles is undergoing a rapid expansion.Chinaâs nuclear stockpile is the fastest growing in the world, according to the general. The Pentagonâs annual report to Congress, released in January 2026, confirmed that Beijing aims to replace the U.S. as the preeminent global superpower and is accelerating its military buildup. [2] [4] Sklenka also highlighted Chinese investments in artificial intelligence, drone swarms, and what he called âintelligentized warfare tactics.âThe general said Chinaâs manufacturing base has been out-producing the United States for a decade. âXi is on a wartime footing,â Sklenka said. âItâs underpinned by an industrial base thatâs out producing the world in ships and steel, precious minerals and satellites, munitions.âLessons From the Iran ConflictSklenka drew direct comparisons between the ongoing U.S. military campaign against Iran â known as Operation Epic Fury â and a potential conflict with China. He described Iran as a âmid-tier powerâ that has been able to inflict significant damage on U.S. forces and allies through drone and ballistic missile strikes. Iranâs ability to close the Strait of Hormuz demonstrates how a lesser power can disrupt a superior force, he noted.âThink about the complexities and complications that weâre having with Iran, and then ask yourself, âhow are we going to respond and act when weâre going up against a nation thatâs number two in national GDP?ââ Sklenka said. Reports have indicated that Iran used a Chinese-built spy satellite to target U.S. bases during the conflict, illustrating the depth of Beijingâs support for adversaries. [3]Sklenka warned that a war with China would be far more severe. âIran doesnât have anywhere near Chinaâs economic might. They donât have their industrial base. They certainly donât have their military modernization trajectory,â he said.Vulnerability of U.S. InstallationsThe general emphasized that U.S. military bases are no longer sanctuaries but are now front-line terrain vulnerable to both kinetic and non-kinetic attacks. âOur bases, posts and stationsâ¦are the front lines of decisive terrain,â Sklenka said. He noted that non-kinetic attacks â including cyber strikes, disinformation campaigns, and drone swarms â are likely to be the opening salvo in any conflict with China. âTheyâre going to be a cyber attack against a power grid on our base, a disinformation campaign targeting military families or a drone swarm coming off one of our installations,â he said.Sklenka called for hardened infrastructure, resilient power, and integrated base defense. âWe need the best solutions for counter UAS,â he said. âWe got to quit talking about it, start delivering that.â The vulnerability of U.S. installations is underscored by reports that the U.S. military lags behind China and Russia in AI-enabled drone development. [1]Call for TransformationSklenka urged the military to treat installations as warfighting platforms. âWe need to start looking at our bases as warfighting formations, just as critical of a warfighting formation as our divisions, wings and MEUs,â he said. He acknowledged that no U.S. military leader in uniform has ever faced a peer adversary contesting all domains simultaneously.âNone of us in uniform today have ever had to operate in a world where a legitimate peer simultaneously contests us in every single domain,â Sklenka said. He stressed the need for industry partnerships to develop counter-UAS systems, hardened networks, and resilient communications. The general warned that transformation is overdue. âHistory is proven, and our current operations are confirmed, that the society that can project and sustain power and sustain their forces most effectively, ultimately, they prevail,â he stated.ReferencesU.S. Military Officials Report Lag in AI-Enabled Drone Development Compared to Russia, China. - NaturalNews.com. April 15, 2026.China eyes dethroning US as most powerful nation, DOD says, after old reports cheered Chinaâs rise. - Just the News. January 14, 2026.Iran Used Chinese Spy Satellite To Target US Bases During War, Outraged Beijing Denies. - ZeroHedge. April 15, 2026.Pentagon warns of Chinaâs rapidly expanding nuclear arsenal. - NaturalNews.com. December 30, 2025.
Sklenka detailed Chinaâs quantitative and qualitative advantages. He said Chinaâs shipbuilding capacity is âreported to be 230 times the capacity that the United States has.â The Peopleâs Liberation Army has more than doubled its nuclear-powered submarine construction, he added, and its arsenal of ballistic and cruise missiles is undergoing a rapid expansion.Chinaâs nuclear stockpile is the fastest growing in the world, according to the general. The Pentagonâs annual report to Congress, released in January 2026, confirmed that Beijing aims to replace the U.S. as the preeminent global superpower and is accelerating its military buildup. [2] [4] Sklenka also highlighted Chinese investments in artificial intelligence, drone swarms, and what he called âintelligentized warfare tactics.âThe general said Chinaâs manufacturing base has been out-producing the United States for a decade. âXi is on a wartime footing,â Sklenka said. âItâs underpinned by an industrial base thatâs out producing the world in ships and steel, precious minerals and satellites, munitions.âLessons From the Iran ConflictSklenka drew direct comparisons between the ongoing U.S. military campaign against Iran â known as Operation Epic Fury â and a potential conflict with China. He described Iran as a âmid-tier powerâ that has been able to inflict significant damage on U.S. forces and allies through drone and ballistic missile strikes. Iranâs ability to close the Strait of Hormuz demonstrates how a lesser power can disrupt a superior force, he noted.âThink about the complexities and complications that weâre having with Iran, and then ask yourself, âhow are we going to respond and act when weâre going up against a nation thatâs number two in national GDP?ââ Sklenka said. Reports have indicated that Iran used a Chinese-built spy satellite to target U.S. bases during the conflict, illustrating the depth of Beijingâs support for adversaries. [3]Sklenka warned that a war with China would be far more severe. âIran doesnât have anywhere near Chinaâs economic might. They donât have their industrial base. They certainly donât have their military modernization trajectory,â he said.Vulnerability of U.S. InstallationsThe general emphasized that U.S. military bases are no longer sanctuaries but are now front-line terrain vulnerable to both kinetic and non-kinetic attacks. âOur bases, posts and stationsâ¦are the front lines of decisive terrain,â Sklenka said. He noted that non-kinetic attacks â including cyber strikes, disinformation campaigns, and drone swarms â are likely to be the opening salvo in any conflict with China. âTheyâre going to be a cyber attack against a power grid on our base, a disinformation campaign targeting military families or a drone swarm coming off one of our installations,â he said.Sklenka called for hardened infrastructure, resilient power, and integrated base defense. âWe need the best solutions for counter UAS,â he said. âWe got to quit talking about it, start delivering that.â The vulnerability of U.S. installations is underscored by reports that the U.S. military lags behind China and Russia in AI-enabled drone development. [1]Call for TransformationSklenka urged the military to treat installations as warfighting platforms. âWe need to start looking at our bases as warfighting formations, just as critical of a warfighting formation as our divisions, wings and MEUs,â he said. He acknowledged that no U.S. military leader in uniform has ever faced a peer adversary contesting all domains simultaneously.âNone of us in uniform today have ever had to operate in a world where a legitimate peer simultaneously contests us in every single domain,â Sklenka said. He stressed the need for industry partnerships to develop counter-UAS systems, hardened networks, and resilient communications. The general warned that transformation is overdue. âHistory is proven, and our current operations are confirmed, that the society that can project and sustain power and sustain their forces most effectively, ultimately, they prevail,â he stated.ReferencesU.S. Military Officials Report Lag in AI-Enabled Drone Development Compared to Russia, China. - NaturalNews.com. April 15, 2026.China eyes dethroning US as most powerful nation, DOD says, after old reports cheered Chinaâs rise. - Just the News. January 14, 2026.Iran Used Chinese Spy Satellite To Target US Bases During War, Outraged Beijing Denies. - ZeroHedge. April 15, 2026.Pentagon warns of Chinaâs rapidly expanding nuclear arsenal. - NaturalNews.com. December 30, 2025.
Chinaâs nuclear stockpile is the fastest growing in the world, according to the general. The Pentagonâs annual report to Congress, released in January 2026, confirmed that Beijing aims to replace the U.S. as the preeminent global superpower and is accelerating its military buildup. [2] [4] Sklenka also highlighted Chinese investments in artificial intelligence, drone swarms, and what he called âintelligentized warfare tactics.âThe general said Chinaâs manufacturing base has been out-producing the United States for a decade. âXi is on a wartime footing,â Sklenka said. âItâs underpinned by an industrial base thatâs out producing the world in ships and steel, precious minerals and satellites, munitions.âLessons From the Iran ConflictSklenka drew direct comparisons between the ongoing U.S. military campaign against Iran â known as Operation Epic Fury â and a potential conflict with China. He described Iran as a âmid-tier powerâ that has been able to inflict significant damage on U.S. forces and allies through drone and ballistic missile strikes. Iranâs ability to close the Strait of Hormuz demonstrates how a lesser power can disrupt a superior force, he noted.âThink about the complexities and complications that weâre having with Iran, and then ask yourself, âhow are we going to respond and act when weâre going up against a nation thatâs number two in national GDP?ââ Sklenka said. Reports have indicated that Iran used a Chinese-built spy satellite to target U.S. bases during the conflict, illustrating the depth of Beijingâs support for adversaries. [3]Sklenka warned that a war with China would be far more severe. âIran doesnât have anywhere near Chinaâs economic might. They donât have their industrial base. They certainly donât have their military modernization trajectory,â he said.Vulnerability of U.S. InstallationsThe general emphasized that U.S. military bases are no longer sanctuaries but are now front-line terrain vulnerable to both kinetic and non-kinetic attacks. âOur bases, posts and stationsâ¦are the front lines of decisive terrain,â Sklenka said. He noted that non-kinetic attacks â including cyber strikes, disinformation campaigns, and drone swarms â are likely to be the opening salvo in any conflict with China. âTheyâre going to be a cyber attack against a power grid on our base, a disinformation campaign targeting military families or a drone swarm coming off one of our installations,â he said.Sklenka called for hardened infrastructure, resilient power, and integrated base defense. âWe need the best solutions for counter UAS,â he said. âWe got to quit talking about it, start delivering that.â The vulnerability of U.S. installations is underscored by reports that the U.S. military lags behind China and Russia in AI-enabled drone development. [1]Call for TransformationSklenka urged the military to treat installations as warfighting platforms. âWe need to start looking at our bases as warfighting formations, just as critical of a warfighting formation as our divisions, wings and MEUs,â he said. He acknowledged that no U.S. military leader in uniform has ever faced a peer adversary contesting all domains simultaneously.âNone of us in uniform today have ever had to operate in a world where a legitimate peer simultaneously contests us in every single domain,â Sklenka said. He stressed the need for industry partnerships to develop counter-UAS systems, hardened networks, and resilient communications. The general warned that transformation is overdue. âHistory is proven, and our current operations are confirmed, that the society that can project and sustain power and sustain their forces most effectively, ultimately, they prevail,â he stated.ReferencesU.S. Military Officials Report Lag in AI-Enabled Drone Development Compared to Russia, China. - NaturalNews.com. April 15, 2026.China eyes dethroning US as most powerful nation, DOD says, after old reports cheered Chinaâs rise. - Just the News. January 14, 2026.Iran Used Chinese Spy Satellite To Target US Bases During War, Outraged Beijing Denies. - ZeroHedge. April 15, 2026.Pentagon warns of Chinaâs rapidly expanding nuclear arsenal. - NaturalNews.com. December 30, 2025.
Chinaâs nuclear stockpile is the fastest growing in the world, according to the general. The Pentagonâs annual report to Congress, released in January 2026, confirmed that Beijing aims to replace the U.S. as the preeminent global superpower and is accelerating its military buildup. [2] [4] Sklenka also highlighted Chinese investments in artificial intelligence, drone swarms, and what he called âintelligentized warfare tactics.âThe general said Chinaâs manufacturing base has been out-producing the United States for a decade. âXi is on a wartime footing,â Sklenka said. âItâs underpinned by an industrial base thatâs out producing the world in ships and steel, precious minerals and satellites, munitions.âLessons From the Iran ConflictSklenka drew direct comparisons between the ongoing U.S. military campaign against Iran â known as Operation Epic Fury â and a potential conflict with China. He described Iran as a âmid-tier powerâ that has been able to inflict significant damage on U.S. forces and allies through drone and ballistic missile strikes. Iranâs ability to close the Strait of Hormuz demonstrates how a lesser power can disrupt a superior force, he noted.âThink about the complexities and complications that weâre having with Iran, and then ask yourself, âhow are we going to respond and act when weâre going up against a nation thatâs number two in national GDP?ââ Sklenka said. Reports have indicated that Iran used a Chinese-built spy satellite to target U.S. bases during the conflict, illustrating the depth of Beijingâs support for adversaries. [3]Sklenka warned that a war with China would be far more severe. âIran doesnât have anywhere near Chinaâs economic might. They donât have their industrial base. They certainly donât have their military modernization trajectory,â he said.Vulnerability of U.S. InstallationsThe general emphasized that U.S. military bases are no longer sanctuaries but are now front-line terrain vulnerable to both kinetic and non-kinetic attacks. âOur bases, posts and stationsâ¦are the front lines of decisive terrain,â Sklenka said. He noted that non-kinetic attacks â including cyber strikes, disinformation campaigns, and drone swarms â are likely to be the opening salvo in any conflict with China. âTheyâre going to be a cyber attack against a power grid on our base, a disinformation campaign targeting military families or a drone swarm coming off one of our installations,â he said.Sklenka called for hardened infrastructure, resilient power, and integrated base defense. âWe need the best solutions for counter UAS,â he said. âWe got to quit talking about it, start delivering that.â The vulnerability of U.S. installations is underscored by reports that the U.S. military lags behind China and Russia in AI-enabled drone development. [1]Call for TransformationSklenka urged the military to treat installations as warfighting platforms. âWe need to start looking at our bases as warfighting formations, just as critical of a warfighting formation as our divisions, wings and MEUs,â he said. He acknowledged that no U.S. military leader in uniform has ever faced a peer adversary contesting all domains simultaneously.âNone of us in uniform today have ever had to operate in a world where a legitimate peer simultaneously contests us in every single domain,â Sklenka said. He stressed the need for industry partnerships to develop counter-UAS systems, hardened networks, and resilient communications. The general warned that transformation is overdue. âHistory is proven, and our current operations are confirmed, that the society that can project and sustain power and sustain their forces most effectively, ultimately, they prevail,â he stated.ReferencesU.S. Military Officials Report Lag in AI-Enabled Drone Development Compared to Russia, China. - NaturalNews.com. April 15, 2026.China eyes dethroning US as most powerful nation, DOD says, after old reports cheered Chinaâs rise. - Just the News. January 14, 2026.Iran Used Chinese Spy Satellite To Target US Bases During War, Outraged Beijing Denies. - ZeroHedge. April 15, 2026.Pentagon warns of Chinaâs rapidly expanding nuclear arsenal. - NaturalNews.com. December 30, 2025.
The general said Chinaâs manufacturing base has been out-producing the United States for a decade. âXi is on a wartime footing,â Sklenka said. âItâs underpinned by an industrial base thatâs out producing the world in ships and steel, precious minerals and satellites, munitions.âLessons From the Iran ConflictSklenka drew direct comparisons between the ongoing U.S. military campaign against Iran â known as Operation Epic Fury â and a potential conflict with China. He described Iran as a âmid-tier powerâ that has been able to inflict significant damage on U.S. forces and allies through drone and ballistic missile strikes. Iranâs ability to close the Strait of Hormuz demonstrates how a lesser power can disrupt a superior force, he noted.âThink about the complexities and complications that weâre having with Iran, and then ask yourself, âhow are we going to respond and act when weâre going up against a nation thatâs number two in national GDP?ââ Sklenka said. Reports have indicated that Iran used a Chinese-built spy satellite to target U.S. bases during the conflict, illustrating the depth of Beijingâs support for adversaries. [3]Sklenka warned that a war with China would be far more severe. âIran doesnât have anywhere near Chinaâs economic might. They donât have their industrial base. They certainly donât have their military modernization trajectory,â he said.Vulnerability of U.S. InstallationsThe general emphasized that U.S. military bases are no longer sanctuaries but are now front-line terrain vulnerable to both kinetic and non-kinetic attacks. âOur bases, posts and stationsâ¦are the front lines of decisive terrain,â Sklenka said. He noted that non-kinetic attacks â including cyber strikes, disinformation campaigns, and drone swarms â are likely to be the opening salvo in any conflict with China. âTheyâre going to be a cyber attack against a power grid on our base, a disinformation campaign targeting military families or a drone swarm coming off one of our installations,â he said.Sklenka called for hardened infrastructure, resilient power, and integrated base defense. âWe need the best solutions for counter UAS,â he said. âWe got to quit talking about it, start delivering that.â The vulnerability of U.S. installations is underscored by reports that the U.S. military lags behind China and Russia in AI-enabled drone development. [1]Call for TransformationSklenka urged the military to treat installations as warfighting platforms. âWe need to start looking at our bases as warfighting formations, just as critical of a warfighting formation as our divisions, wings and MEUs,â he said. He acknowledged that no U.S. military leader in uniform has ever faced a peer adversary contesting all domains simultaneously.âNone of us in uniform today have ever had to operate in a world where a legitimate peer simultaneously contests us in every single domain,â Sklenka said. He stressed the need for industry partnerships to develop counter-UAS systems, hardened networks, and resilient communications. The general warned that transformation is overdue. âHistory is proven, and our current operations are confirmed, that the society that can project and sustain power and sustain their forces most effectively, ultimately, they prevail,â he stated.ReferencesU.S. Military Officials Report Lag in AI-Enabled Drone Development Compared to Russia, China. - NaturalNews.com. April 15, 2026.China eyes dethroning US as most powerful nation, DOD says, after old reports cheered Chinaâs rise. - Just the News. January 14, 2026.Iran Used Chinese Spy Satellite To Target US Bases During War, Outraged Beijing Denies. - ZeroHedge. April 15, 2026.Pentagon warns of Chinaâs rapidly expanding nuclear arsenal. - NaturalNews.com. December 30, 2025.
The general said Chinaâs manufacturing base has been out-producing the United States for a decade. âXi is on a wartime footing,â Sklenka said. âItâs underpinned by an industrial base thatâs out producing the world in ships and steel, precious minerals and satellites, munitions.âLessons From the Iran ConflictSklenka drew direct comparisons between the ongoing U.S. military campaign against Iran â known as Operation Epic Fury â and a potential conflict with China. He described Iran as a âmid-tier powerâ that has been able to inflict significant damage on U.S. forces and allies through drone and ballistic missile strikes. Iranâs ability to close the Strait of Hormuz demonstrates how a lesser power can disrupt a superior force, he noted.âThink about the complexities and complications that weâre having with Iran, and then ask yourself, âhow are we going to respond and act when weâre going up against a nation thatâs number two in national GDP?ââ Sklenka said. Reports have indicated that Iran used a Chinese-built spy satellite to target U.S. bases during the conflict, illustrating the depth of Beijingâs support for adversaries. [3]Sklenka warned that a war with China would be far more severe. âIran doesnât have anywhere near Chinaâs economic might. They donât have their industrial base. They certainly donât have their military modernization trajectory,â he said.Vulnerability of U.S. InstallationsThe general emphasized that U.S. military bases are no longer sanctuaries but are now front-line terrain vulnerable to both kinetic and non-kinetic attacks. âOur bases, posts and stationsâ¦are the front lines of decisive terrain,â Sklenka said. He noted that non-kinetic attacks â including cyber strikes, disinformation campaigns, and drone swarms â are likely to be the opening salvo in any conflict with China. âTheyâre going to be a cyber attack against a power grid on our base, a disinformation campaign targeting military families or a drone swarm coming off one of our installations,â he said.Sklenka called for hardened infrastructure, resilient power, and integrated base defense. âWe need the best solutions for counter UAS,â he said. âWe got to quit talking about it, start delivering that.â The vulnerability of U.S. installations is underscored by reports that the U.S. military lags behind China and Russia in AI-enabled drone development. [1]Call for TransformationSklenka urged the military to treat installations as warfighting platforms. âWe need to start looking at our bases as warfighting formations, just as critical of a warfighting formation as our divisions, wings and MEUs,â he said. He acknowledged that no U.S. military leader in uniform has ever faced a peer adversary contesting all domains simultaneously.âNone of us in uniform today have ever had to operate in a world where a legitimate peer simultaneously contests us in every single domain,â Sklenka said. He stressed the need for industry partnerships to develop counter-UAS systems, hardened networks, and resilient communications. The general warned that transformation is overdue. âHistory is proven, and our current operations are confirmed, that the society that can project and sustain power and sustain their forces most effectively, ultimately, they prevail,â he stated.ReferencesU.S. Military Officials Report Lag in AI-Enabled Drone Development Compared to Russia, China. - NaturalNews.com. April 15, 2026.China eyes dethroning US as most powerful nation, DOD says, after old reports cheered Chinaâs rise. - Just the News. January 14, 2026.Iran Used Chinese Spy Satellite To Target US Bases During War, Outraged Beijing Denies. - ZeroHedge. April 15, 2026.Pentagon warns of Chinaâs rapidly expanding nuclear arsenal. - NaturalNews.com. December 30, 2025.
Source: NaturalNews.com