What they're not telling you: # MOON BASES BECOME FLASHPOINT FOR U.S.-CHINA MILITARY STANDOFF Both superpowers are racing to establish armed lunar bases at the moon's south pole—a region the size of Virginia—raising the specter of extraterrestrial territorial conflict that mainstream media has largely ignored. The United States plans to land astronauts on the moon by 2028 and establish bases, while China targets a 2029-2030 lunar landing with identical infrastructure goals. What remains unstated in official NASA announcements is that both nations will simultaneously be developing "dual-use" technologies—equipment and systems ostensibly civilian but readily convertible to military purposes.
What the Documents Show
Rick Fisher, writing via The Epoch Times, details how this arrangement mirrors Cold War logic transposed to the lunar surface, where the absence of international enforcement mechanisms means deterrence becomes the only governing principle. China's approach reveals the military dimension most clearly. The country's Long March-10 rocket can only deliver 26 tons to the lunar surface, forcing the use of a two-stage system where a propulsion stage detaches and intentionally crashes into the moon. This seemingly inefficient design choice actually serves a dual purpose: it reduces weight while establishing precedent for controlled impacts on the lunar surface. Chinese state sources have disclosed that their Lanyue manned lander and pressurized lunar rover will employ this system, but what remains unspoken is whether deliberately crashed stages could serve as kinetic weapons or create debris fields blocking rival operations.
Follow the Money
The geopolitical stakes are elevated by China's terrestrial track record. Fisher notes that Beijing has demonstrated systematic unwillingness to recognize territorial boundaries of neighboring states—mounting militarized operations against Japan, Taiwan, the Philippines, and India. This pattern suggests China will likely reject transparency about lunar intentions and prioritize defending claimed lunar territory rather than pursuing deconfliction agreements with other nations. Where the mainstream narrative frames the moon race as a continuation of 1960s exploration competition, the actual precedent being established is more ominous: China's approach to disputed territory on Earth directly predicts its behavior in the lunar domain. The concentration of both nations' resources on a single region—the moon's south pole, where water ice deposits offer survival advantages—creates inevitable friction. NASA's own Moon Base Program Executive acknowledged this region spans only Virginia's dimensions, meaning both superpowers will inevitably operate in proximity.
What Else We Know
Without binding international agreements governing conduct, military escalation becomes probable rather than theoretical. For ordinary citizens, this development matters profoundly. Lunar bases will drive advanced materials, AI systems, and autonomous weapons technologies that inevitably proliferate to terrestrial militaries. The absence of meaningful international governance frameworks on the moon means the coming decade will likely establish precedents for weaponization that extend far beyond space. The race framed as scientific progress is fundamentally a competition to claim militarily advantageous positions beyond Earth—and establish who controls the high ground for the century ahead.
Primary Sources
- Source: ZeroHedge
- Category: Government Secrets
- Cross-reference independently — don't take our word for it.
Disclosure: NewsAnarchist aggregates from public records, API feeds (Federal Register, CourtListener, MuckRock, Hacker News), and independent media. AI-assisted synthesis. Always verify primary sources linked above.
