What is Beijing’s ultimate strategic objective in the Indo-Pacific? Join our discussion as we examine the PLA Navy’s long-term maritime timeline for the Island Chains and explore the emerging “One Theater” concept. Video Summary: [00:00:00] Formulated by former People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Navy leadership, Beijing’s three-phase maritime strategy seeks to systematically control the First and Second Island Chains, with the ultimate objective of displacing US naval supremacy in the Indo-Pacific by 2040. [00:01:03] This rapid military expansion operates under the PLA doctrine of “active defense,” a strategic framework that characterizes operationally aggressive actions—such as a potential cross-strait invasion of Taiwan—as strictly defensive maneuvers to secure territorial integrity. [00:02:26] Anchoring the geographical center of the First Island Chain, Taiwan serves as an indispensable security hub, requiring expanded defense budgets to actively monitor critical maritime chokepoints including the Miyako Strait and the Luzon Strait. [00:03:14] Concurrently, Beijing’s attempts to deploy cognitive warfare and historical narratives to fracture regional alliances have failed, as ASEAN leaders increasingly endorse Japan’s expanded security role. [00:04:48] In direct response to the PLA’s regional coercion, the United States, Japan, and the Philippines are executing the “One Theater” joint defense concept, leveraging multilateral operations like the Balikatan exercises to forge a synchronized deterrence architecture across the First Island Chain.
Source: China’s Ultimate Strategy To Dominate the Island Chains | Taiwan Talks
