I believe that at least for now, the US is still the world's strongest country in terms of technological innovation. From my experience with my children's basic education in China (I have two kids, one in middle school, one in primary school), I have ample reason to draw this conclusion—schools do not encourage children to innovate, and rote learning is still the primary focus. It's not that the government, schools, or parents don't want to encourage innovation, but they still lack effective methods and are in the exploratory stage.
As China's birth rate declines and the number of students in school decreases, it may be better able to implement teaching methods tailored to individual students and provide personalized training.
However, I do not agree with the use of the term "technology war" in the problem statement. Why does the development of technology have to be associated with "war"? The West should abandon the idea of containing China and engaging in various "wars" (trade war, financial war, tech war, NE war) with China. Aren't there already enough wars in the world? Under the extreme suppression of the US government and businesses, Huawei's founder Ren Zhengfei said: "The US has never been our enemy. Although they still don't acknowledge our technology, the US will always be our partner." Ren's broad-mindedness is because "win-win cooperation" is rooted in China's thousands of years of cultural tradition. China has put forward the concept of a global community with a shared future—the whole world is partners for progress, not predators and prey.
When Steve Jobs founded Apple and Bill Gates founded Microsoft, their goal was not to defeat anyone, but to use technology to change the world and improve people's lives. This is also the vision of China's high-tech companies. "The people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones who do," as Steve Jobs said, has inspired countless Chinese entrepreneurs to start their tech companies. So, technology should connect us instead of alienating us.
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Thanks for comment.