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Xi Jinping may be closer to a Taiwan invasion than most analysts realize — and the internal cracks inside China’s system make this moment far more dangerous than previous Taiwan Strait crises. In this video, we break down the December 2025 PLA “Justice Mission 2025” military drills surrounding Taiwan, the largest coordinated blockade rehearsal of the year. Over 130 aircraft sorties, 14 warships, long-range rocket fire simulations, and amphibious assault drills off Taiwan’s eastern coast. But the real story is not just the military exercise. It is the purge that followed. Within weeks of the drills, Xi Jinping removed General Zhang Youxia, the second-highest ranking officer in the People’s Liberation Army and one of the only combat-experienced commanders capable of advising against a premature Taiwan invasion. That purge changes the strategic equation. This analysis connects: China’s military restructuring and PLA purges • The Pentagon’s 2025 China Military Power Report • Taiwan blockade and invasion scenarios • US, Japan, and Israel defense coordination • CSIS war game simulations of a Taiwan conflict • China’s property crisis and real estate collapse • Youth unemployment and economic slowdown in China • TSMC semiconductor dominance and Arizona expansion • The 2027 political timeline vs 2035 military readiness China’s economy is under structural pressure. Property markets are still declining. Local government debt has surged. Youth unemployment remains elevated despite statistical revisions. Producer price deflation continues. At the same time, Taiwan’s semiconductor dominance is slowly decentralizing as TSMC builds fabs in the United States, Japan, and Germany. That creates a narrowing strategic window. The central question is no longer “Could China invade Taiwan?” It is “Would Xi risk war before the window closes?” If Beijing believes waiting weakens leverage, and internal legitimacy continues eroding, the incentives shift toward action — even if the operational risks are catastrophic. A Taiwan war would not be limited to Taiwan. It would involve US intervention, Japanese bases, Guam strike ranges, semiconductor supply chain disruption, global trade shock, oil supply chokepoints, and potential SWIFT sanctions. Economists estimate trillions in disrupted trade within weeks of conflict escalation. This video examines whether Xi Jinping is accelerating toward a military decision under political pressure — and whether removing experienced commanders increases the risk of miscalculation. Topics covered: China Taiwan conflict 2026 Xi Jinping Taiwan strategy PLA military purge China economy crisis 2025 TSMC Arizona fab expansion China semiconductor strategy US China war analysis Taiwan Strait military exercises China blockade scenario China property crisis If you’re looking for serious geopolitical analysis on China’s military strategy, Taiwan invasion risk, global economic consequences, and great power competition, this breakdown connects the operational, economic, and political layers shaping the most dangerous flashpoint in the world right now. Subscribe for in-depth analysis on global power shifts, economic risk, and strategic conflict dynamics. Disclaimer: This video is for informational and analytical purposes only. It does not promote violence, advocate conflict, or provide military advice. All assessments are based on publicly available reports, official documents, and policy analysis.