Mao’s Third Front, Chongqing’s 8D Vertical Fortress, and China’s Enduring Survival Rationality
How a Secret Cold War Mobilization of 205 Billion Yuan, 15 Million People, and Mountain-Carved Infrastructure Forged a Synthetic Superpower That Dominates Clean Tech, Military Applications, and Digital Sovereignty While Forcing the West into a Bewildering Policy Pivot In the tense atmosphere of the mid-1960s, as American forces escalated their presence in Vietnam following the Gulf of Tonkin incident and the Sino-Soviet split risked open conflict—including border skirmishes like the 1969 Zhenbao Island incident—Mao Zedong authorized one of history’s most ambitious and secretive state projects: the Third Front construction campaign (Sanxian Jianshe). Launched in 1964 and continuing in various forms until around 1980, this massive program redirected enormous resources into China’s rugged southwestern and northwestern interior to build a self-sufficient, hardened military-industrial base. Between 1964 and 1980, China invested 205 billion yuan in the Third Front region, accounting for ...