Restricted Handling Daily Intel Brief

RH 1.26.26 | China: Drones Over Pratas, Generals Purged, Calm With Teeth


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China isn't shouting this week — it's moving. And that's what makes this episode of The Restricted Handling Podcast especially worth your time.

In RH 1.26.26 | China: Drones Over Pratas, Generals Purged, Calm With Teeth, we break down how Beijing quietly crossed a line in the Taiwan Strait, hollowed out its own military leadership, and continued projecting an image of calm competence abroad — all while pressure keeps building underneath the surface.

We start with the moment that mattered most: a PLA surveillance drone flying through Taiwan's territorial airspace over Pratas Island. Not the ADIZ. Not "near" Taiwan. Actual sovereign airspace. It's the kind of move that doesn't make headlines like a missile test but tells you far more about where things are heading. We unpack why Pratas was the chosen test case, what Taiwan did not do in response, and why that restraint is exactly what Beijing wanted to observe.

From there, we zoom out to the maritime picture, where hundreds of Chinese fishing vessels — widely assessed as part of the China Maritime Militia — assembled into coordinated formations in the East China Sea. This wasn't about fish. It was about showing how cluttered, deniable, and legally messy the battlespace could become if China ever decides to squeeze without declaring a blockade.

Then comes the part that surprised even seasoned China watchers: Xi Jinping's purge of his most senior general, along with the PLA's chief of joint staff. Allegations range from corruption and patronage networks to something far more explosive — a potential nuclear security breach. The result? China's top military command is effectively hollowed out, raising serious questions about readiness, continuity, and control at exactly the moment Beijing is rehearsing high-end military options.

We also dig into the contrast between Beijing and Washington. As China increases pressure around Taiwan, the Pentagon's new defense strategy emphasizes "strategic stability" and de-escalation, while U.S. warships quietly transit the Taiwan Strait and Congress continues funding Taiwan's defense. The signals aren't contradictory — but they are complicated.

Beyond Taiwan, this episode covers how China is consolidating influence where others are pulling back: backing Myanmar's staged election, restoring trade with North Korea while being conspicuously snubbed by Kim Jong Un, and quietly winning ground in the global AI race as Chinese open-source models gain traction inside U.S. companies.

This episode isn't about panic. It's about pattern recognition. China isn't rushing. It's normalizing. It's testing reactions, setting precedents, and letting others absorb the risk of escalation while it keeps its hands clean.

If you're trying to understand where U.S.–China competition is actually headed — not in theory, not in slogans, but in real-world moves — this episode is for you.

🎧 Listen now to The Restricted Handling Podcast and stay ahead of the curve.

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Restricted Handling Daily Intel BriefBy Restricted Handling