Tsien Hsue-shen’s Real Legacy: China’s Enduring Tech Strategy

Tsien Hsue-shen (Qian Xuesen) was more than a scientist—he played a pivotal role in shaping China’s modern scientific and engineering strategy. Tsien Hsue-shen and the Architecture of China’s Scientific Power Tsien Hsue-shen’s historical significance does not rest on the resolution of a single technical challenge or the invention of a particular device. His true contribution … Read more

Ren Zhengfei: Strategic Architect of Corporate Resilience

Ren Zhengfei’s stewardship of Huawei reflects an uncommon combination of long-term vision, holistic thinking, and flexible resilience. More than a technologist or executive leader, he operates as a master strategist, designing robust organizational systems that allow Huawei to endure and evolve amid geopolitical constraints and technological disruption. His leadership choices have not only defined Huawei’s … Read more

Could the USSR Reform Without Collapsing? Insights from China

The collapse of the Soviet Union raises a central question: could reform have preserved it? Interpreted on China’s terms, the contrast is clear. China survived prolonged upheaval by undertaking systemic transformations that built not only industrial capacity but a resilient industrial ecosystem, balanced authority with internal checks, and fostered strategic autonomy. These foundations allowed later … Read more

How China Runs Strategic Sectors Under State-Led Capitalism

China’s state-led capitalism operates through a dual-track system that distinguishes market-driven enterprises from state-function entities. Firms overseen by the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (SASAC) compete, generate profits, and undergo market-oriented restructuring, while a parallel set of state-owned enterprises (SOEs) under the Ministry of Finance function as instruments of national policy, safeguarding fiscal stability, … Read more

How the U.S. Missed Its Chance at National Water Security

One of the most consequential strategic mistakes the United States made in the last century was its failure to pursue large-scale, long-distance water diversion projects during its period of peak national strength from the 1950s to the 1970s. By missing this critical window, the nation forfeited the opportunity to address water scarcity in its central … Read more

How HarmonyOS Next Forces Developers to Adapt or Lose Users

Huawei’s HarmonyOS, particularly HarmonyOS Next, is reshaping how overseas developers engage with its ecosystem—not through persuasion, but by making non-participation economically unviable in select regions. Rather than seeking Western approval, Huawei is focused on establishing a parallel ecosystem in which Chinese and regional apps become the default, especially across the Global South. Developers are compelled … Read more

China-West Tensions: Fear, History, and Cognitive Bias

At its core, the tension between China and the West is not primarily ideological, military, or economic—it is psychological. The underlying driver is fear, shaped by the West’s historical experience of rising to power through conquest, colonization, and external domination. Accustomed to interpreting global influence through this lens, Western powers often assume that any ascending … Read more

Why China and the West Think Differently: Roots of the Divide

The vast, commanding landscape of the Guanzhong Plain, nestled between the Qinling Mountains, offers a striking contrast to the intimate, enclosed regions of southern China, shaped by rivers, hills, and coastlines. This geographic divide not only defines the diverse internal landscapes of China but also lays the foundation for fundamentally different ways of living and … Read more

Can China Still Build Another Huawei in Today’s World?

China will still generate major, highly successful companies, but they are more likely to arise from capital-driven growth and platform expansion—such as ByteDance or Tencent—rather than from the kind of organically built industrial powerhouse represented by Huawei. The specific historical, political, and economic conditions that enabled Huawei’s rise are unlikely to occur again, meaning future … Read more

The Big Idea Famine: How the U.S. Undermined Its Own Power

Over the past several decades, the West—especially the United States—has drifted into what anthropologist David Graeber termed a “big idea famine,” marked by a decline in transformative innovation despite abundant capital and talent. Military and strategic technological progress has slowed as ethical hesitation, bureaucratic inertia, and weak prioritization constrain experimentation, while the civilian tech sector … Read more