The “End of America” Myth: Why China’s Treasury Moves Won’t Break U.S. Power
- Anil Anwar

- May 4
- 2 min read
The globalist narrative machine is back—loudly declaring the “end of U.S. economic hegemony.” According to critics, China is dumping U.S. debt, America’s allies are fleeing, and the dollar is on the verge of collapse.
Let’s cut through the noise: this is exaggerated, politically loaded, and economically misleading.
Yes, reports confirm Chinese regulators have encouraged banks to reduce exposure to U.S. Treasuries. But even mainstream reporting admits this is about risk diversification—not a coordinated attack on America. And despite the headlines, markets barely reacted. U.S. Treasury yields remained stable, signaling continued global confidence in American debt.
Even more inconvenient for the doom crowd:
Foreign demand for U.S. debt is still strong, and in some cases rising. Private investors and global institutions continue buying Treasuries because there is simply no real alternative to the U.S. dollar system.
The claim that China is launching a “financial strike” is pure fantasy.
In reality, China has been gradually adjusting its holdings for years, often for internal reasons—currency stability, economic slowdown, and managing risk—not to “destroy America.”
In fact, analysts point out that China isn’t truly abandoning the dollar at all—much of its financial system still depends on it.
Here’s the truth the anti-American crowd won’t admit: If China dumped U.S. Treasuries aggressively, it would crash the value of its own reserves and destabilize its own economy. Even academic analysis shows such a move would create global instability, not just hurt the U.S.
That’s not strategy—that’s economic suicide.
Now let’s address the political spin. Blaming President Donald Trump for weakening alliances is another distortion. Trump’s policies forced countries like Japan and South Korea to stop free-riding and start acting like real partners. That’s not abandonment—it’s accountability.
As for BRICS and the so-called “Global South replacing America”?That alliance is fragmented, divided, and nowhere near capable of replacing the financial depth, stability, and trust behind the U.S. system.
Meanwhile, the United States still holds the ultimate advantage:
The world’s reserve currency
The deepest capital markets
The strongest military backing its economic power
And despite all the panic headlines, even recent data shows foreign “selling” of Treasuries is modest and often overstated, with continued inflows in 2026.
The idea that America is collapsing isn’t new—it’s been predicted for decades. And every time, it’s been wrong.
What we’re seeing today isn’t the end of U.S. dominance.
It’s a shifting global landscape where rivals test America—but still depend on it.
The real danger isn’t China selling bonds.
It’s Americans believing the lie that their country is already finished.
Because once that mindset takes hold—that’s when decline actually begins.
And that’s exactly what America’s adversaries want.





