The Republican chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee said Sunday he agreed with a statement that suggested the U.S. could be at war with China in 2025 — but the top Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee pushed back.
"I hope he's wrong as well. I think he's right, though, unfortunately," Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas) said Sunday on "Fox News Sunday," in reference to a U.S. Air Force general who reportedly predicted war with China.
The question was brought up in reference to reporting from NBC News, which said an Air Force general told troops he thought the U.S. would be at war with China in 2025. "My gut tells me will fight in 2025," Gen. Mike Minihan was quoted as saying in a memo obtained by NBC.
A Democrat who chaired the House Armed Services Committee for four years was nowhere near as fatalistic.
"Anything is possible. I'm really worried when anyone starts talking about war with China being inevitable," Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.) said, also on "Fox News Sunday."
War with China is "highly unlikely," and "generals need to be very cautious about saying we're going to war," he added.
Pushed by host Shannon Bream, McCaul cited China's interest in possibly invading the island nation of Taiwan — which it considers part of its territory — as a catalyst for war, and he accused President Joe Biden's administration of "projecting weakness."
But Smith and McCaul agreed that the United States' military supplies are insufficient in the face of possible conflict, in China or elsewhere.
"This is a huge problem," Smith said. "We don't have the industrial base, and we don't have the ability to ramp up that industrial base."