I absolutely do not trust China, but I don't think they care about internal US politics so long as it doesn't get in their way. I don't think they have a chance of doing anything other than becoming more powerful regionally. As for a broken and discarded US-led system, Trump just about delivered that to them.
Your description of "what Trump followers want" sounds a lot like fascism to me. As for defeating him with votes, his defeat was a very narrow one; a matter of 60k votes in a handful of swing states. He could easily have won. He very likely would have won re-election were it not for his naked incompetence in the handling of a pandemic. He could not even be bothered to do the one task that is a paramount responsibility of any political leader, he shrugged off the most elemental duty of a president, and that resulted in the unneeded deaths of hundreds of thousands of Americans, yet he still nearly won re-election. Yes, it was proven that he could be defeated by votes, however, it was also proven that nearly half the country is fine with widespread sickness and death so long as their hatred and vindictiveness are validated by the executive branch. China's ambitions are a minor concern by comparison.
"I don't think they have a chance of doing anything other than becoming more powerful regionally."
Your view that China doesn't even have a "
chance" of doing "
anything" other than becoming more powerful regionally, appears to be at odds with the view of the Biden White House: “This is a significant vulnerability
that could have far-reaching impacts. First and foremost,
this is an active threat.”
Your view also seems to be at odds with the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), which put out an
emergency directive and said the breach “
poses an unacceptable risk to Federal Civilian Executive Branch agencies.”
White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Friday that the Biden administration is closely following the breach of a Microsoft email application, reportedly carried out by Chinese hackers, calling …
thehill.com
Here's what Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency Emergency Directive 21-02 says:
>>>CISA has determined that this exploitation of Microsoft Exchange on-premises products
poses an unacceptable risk to Federal Civilian Executive Branch agencies and requires emergency action. This determination is based on the current exploitation of these vulnerabilities in the wild, the likelihood of the vulnerabilities being exploited, the prevalence of the affected software in the federal enterprise,
the high potential for a compromise of agency information systems, and the potential impact of a successful compromise.<<<
You said previously "China and Russia, among other states, are very much cybersecurity threats,
but there isn't much we can do to address that since we have a serious internal threat in the Republican party."
This also seems to be at odds with the Biden administration, which has said it will take action against Russia:
>>>The Washington Post
reported last month that the administration would impose sanctions on Russia for the breach. Psaki said on Feb. 23 that a response from the administration will come in
“weeks, not months.”<<< (from link above)
Biden seems to be taking other actions as well, but perhaps this is all just political theater:
>>>President
Biden on Friday called on the United States and other democratic nations to shape the “rules of the road” on cybersecurity and tech issues, particularly as part of efforts to confront China and Russia. . . .
Biden zeroed in on confronting China on these issues, in particular on ensuring greater transparency in terms of individuals and groups behind major Chinese companies. . . . Biden also noted that setting norms in cyberspace was essential to standing up to Russian aggression.
“This is also how we are going to be able to meet the threat from Russia,” Biden said. "The Kremlin attacks our democracies and weaponizes corruption to try to undermine our system of governance ... that’s why addressing Russian recklessness and hacking into computer networks in the United States and across Europe and the world has become critical to protecting our collective security.” . . .
Biden discussed the hack with Russian President
Vladimir Putin during their first conversation after Biden took office, and a top White House official said
earlier this week that Biden will soon roll out “executive action” to address “gaps” in U.S. federal cybersecurity once the review of the SolarWinds incident is complete.
“The challenges with Russia may be different than the ones with China, but they are just as real,” Biden emphasized. “It is not about pitting East against West, it’s not about wanting conflict, we want a future where all nations are able to freely determine their own path without a threat of violence or coercion.”
President Biden on Friday called on the United States and other democratic nations to shape the “rules of the road” on cybersecurity and tech issues, particularly as part of efforts to confront Chi…
thehill.com
Fortunately, the Biden administration does seem to view the recent hacks as a threat and they do seem to be taking action:
>>>The Biden administration is expected to put together a task force to deal with
major cyber intrusions that Microsoft said this week were linked to China, according to a US official. . . . "We are undertaking a whole of government response to assess and address the impact. The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) issued an emergency directive to agencies and we're now working with our partners and looking closely at the next steps we need to take. This is an active threat still developing and we urge network operators to take it very seriously," a White House official said. . . .
White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Friday that "everyone running these servers -- government, private sector, academia -- needs to act now to patch them."
Psaki's warnings followed a tweet by national security adviser Jake Sullivan Thursday evening that underscored how concerned the Biden administration is. He urged IT administrators nationwide to install software fixes immediately. Sullivan said the US government is monitoring reports that US think tanks may have been compromised by the attack, as well as "defense industrial base entities."<<<
The Biden administration is expected to put together a task force to deal with major cyber intrusions that Microsoft said this week were linked to China, according to a US official.
www.cnn.com