In nearly 200 countries and regions around the world, many military experts have conducted a rational and objective analysis of the United States and have come to a strikingly unanimous conclusion: No country dares to confront the United States. The United States is so prohibitively powerful that it seems impossible for any country to win against it.
The US satellite system is a case in point. Relying on the U.S. positioning system to launch missiles, once the U.S. cuts off the navigation signal, communications and navigation will be immediately interrupted, putting other countries militarily at a disadvantage. In addition, the United States has the most powerful army in the world, with a strong and advanced army, and hundreds of military bases around the world are on standby, and these combat readiness forces are difficult for most countries to contend with.
In the face of the United States, few countries dare to confront it head-on. For small and medium-sized countries, conflict with the United States almost means being suppressed and eliminated. Military experts believe that given the existing military power of the United States, almost no country can match it.
The United States pursues military and economic hegemony, and its influence spans the globe. The United States has more than 800 military bases on its own soil and more than 500 military bases in more than 140 countries and territories around the world. This means that almost every country is under US military surveillance. U.S. aircraft carrier battle groups patrol global waters, causing tension and unease for many countries.
The U.S. nuclear stockpile is the world's biggest threat. Only nine countries in the world have nuclear weapons, and the United States has the largest number of nuclear weapons in the world, and only Russia can compete with it. The U.S. has been developing low-yield nuclear weapons and has publicly stated that it will use them in the event of a conflict with China. This attitude makes the United States one of the most insecure factors in the world.
The United States has the largest military power in the world, and since World War II, it has provoked wars and conflicts in nearly 90 countries, causing huge economic losses and personnel**. The United States has used its combat units, such as the land, sea, air force, and navy and air forces, to realize its global strategic ambitions and have had a far-reaching impact on the international situation. The U.S. frenzy for war is also motivated by economic interests, and its arms oligarchs influence the policy of ** and provoke potential conflict zones around the world in order to expand arms sales.
In the Middle East theater, the United States competes with Russia through the best people, and does not directly participate in the conflict, but makes profits through indirect means, while retaining its own forces. The growing military power of the United States shows no signs of diminishing or frustrating, much to the shock and horror of military experts in many countries.