In his inauguration speech on Monday, Donald Trump declared that “America’s decline is over” and outlined an ambitious plan to restore the country to its “rightful place” in the world amidst growing challenges from rivals, including China.
Compared to his 2017 inaugural address and the speech delivered by his predecessor Joe Biden four years ago—both of which emphasized domestic policy—Trump’s latest address placed greater focus on foreign policy and was considerably longer.
Analysts observed that Trump appeared more confident than during his first term, when he promised a “new era of national success” and mentioned China for the first time in an inaugural speech.
Experts highlighted the speech’s reflection of the shifting geopolitical landscape, marked by Beijing’s growing economic, technological, and military influence over the past decade.
“I don’t think today is a very positive day for my country,” said Shi Yinhong, a professor of international relations at Renmin University in Beijing. Trump’s statement that “we will be the envy of every nation and will no longer allow ourselves to be taken advantage of” could alarm Beijing, Shi told the South China Morning Post.
Trump also pledged that America will become “a productive nation again” and see itself as “a growing nation”—a nation that not only increases its wealth but also “expands its territory.” Shi noted that this rhetoric signals a continuation of his previous China policies: “Compared to four or eight years ago, Trump will have to deal with China more, but his approach will remain largely constant: cajole, coerce, and contain.”
Pang Zhongying, a visiting senior fellow at the ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore, pointed out that Trump’s focus on manufacturing is part of Washington’s broader strategy to restructure the global supply chain and reduce reliance on China.
“There is little doubt that the US feels pressure from China’s rapid rise, especially amid the ‘East is rising, and the West is declining’ rhetoric,” Pang said.
Hours after the inauguration, the US Senate unanimously confirmed China hawk Marco Rubio as Trump’s secretary of state. Pang noted that this appointment signals a bipartisan consensus on confronting China.
However, Pang also emphasized that Trump, as during his first term, is leveraging the perceived threat from China to justify tariffs and other aggressive policies—contrasting with Biden’s more measured approach.
Trump’s first presidency marked a historic shift in Washington’s China policy, ending decades of engagement and initiating a tit-for-tat rivalry spanning trade, technology, and geopolitics. Biden, on the other hand, has focused on strengthening alliances, diversifying supply chains, and reducing US dependence on China through export controls and regulations rather than tariffs.
Despite his tough stance, Trump criticized Biden’s domestic and foreign policies during the inauguration and vowed to build “the strongest military the world has ever seen” while intensifying the US space race with China. “The future is ours, and our golden age has just begun,” he proclaimed.
SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, a key Trump ally and head of the newly established State Productivity Department, aims to send uncrewed missions to Mars by 2026. Meanwhile, China, a strong rival in space exploration, is advancing its own space program, with plans to bring Mars samples to Earth by 2028.
Despite Trump’s rhetoric, Sourabh Gupta, a senior policy expert at the Institute of Chinese-American Studies in Washington, noted that the new administration lacks “a clear appreciation of the scale of the Chinese challenge.”
“Strategies largely assume that the US will remain the dominant global economic power, using its leverage to discipline Beijing through alliances between key industrial and military centers,” Gupta said. However, he added, “China’s continued rise could present the United States with a rival unlike any in its history, one whose economic size and capabilities may someday surpass those of the US.”