US military supply chain dependency on China raises conflict concerns
Larry Johnson’s warning about U.S. military supply chain dependency on China has pushed traders to reassess conflict odds. The market on the U.S. striking two or more countries in 2026 sits at
Johnson described U.S. reliance on Chinese suppliers for key defense materials as a strategic vulnerability, with 78% of weapon systems potentially affected. His analogy of “playing strip poker” captures the exposure. Traders are pricing in the likelihood of military actions to reduce these dependencies, with Tomahawk launches, drone strikes, or special forces raids as possible responses.
The odds of Trump visiting China by April 30 are at 0.1% YES, suggesting traders see almost no chance of near-term diplomacy. The May 31 odds at
The U.S. military action 2026 market trades with zero reported volume, making it highly speculative. Substantial moves will likely require specific catalysts: new military funding approvals or confirmed airstrikes on new targets.
The supply chain dependency itself is well documented, but framing it as a direct strategic weakness tied to military readiness is a newer argument. A YES share at 22¢ pays $1 if the U.S. strikes occur, a
Watch for U.S. Department of Defense statements and policy announcements on supply chain restructuring. The Pentagon’s next briefing could signal shifts in strategy that move this market.
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