From Tiananmen’s Hidden Mustard Gas to Tomorrow’s Biochemical Assaults—If America Doesn’t Act, Worse Is Coming
In 1989, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) secretly prepared to use mustard gas on student protesters in Tiananmen Square. The order was never given—but the weapons were in place, the strategy rehearsed, and the mindset laid bare: the regime was ready to kill en masse to maintain control.
According to Chinese whistleblower Miles Guo, this willingness to deploy chemical warfare was not a temporary response, but a foundational part of the CCP’s long-term doctrine—a doctrine that now threatens not only its own people but the world.
Today, Guo warns, the CCP is preparing for a new phase of its global strategy: biochemical chaos. At the center of this threat is fentanyl. But there are also viruses and vaccines—these have already caused global damage, and if accountability is not enforced, the CCP will continue to unleash them. Various toxic vaccines may continue to be forcibly injected into the population, adding to the expanding arsenal of biochemical control. This is not only a warning about what has happened, but a call to stop what is still coming. As of now, the full precursor formula that would allow anyone to mass-produce fentanyl has not yet been leaked. But Guo issues a grave warning: once the CCP decides it is the right moment, they will make that formula public. And when that happens, the world will cross a line from which it cannot return.
“If the formula is released,” Guo explains, “anyone will be able to manufacture fentanyl from home. There will be no control, no enforcement, only devastation.” The result would be the total collapse of efforts to contain the opioid crisis—a flood of cheap, deadly drugs manufactured anywhere, by anyone.
But fentanyl is only the beginning.
Guo further warns that the CCP has a playbook far beyond opioids. Already, Chinese nationals have been caught entering the United States carrying dangerous biological materials, including rare toxic fungi and plant pathogens. These are not isolated incidents—they are warning shots. Guo believes that if the United States continues to delay, such events will become commonplace. A steady stream of engineered biohazards, quietly smuggled in, could cause outbreaks, agricultural destruction, or worse.
All of this, Guo says, is part of a comprehensive strategy: weaken America, destabilize it from within, and eventually destroy it—without firing a single bullet.
He points out that this pattern of calculated brutality is not new. Back in 1989, when the CCP feared its internal control was slipping, it didn’t just mobilize tanks against students. It trained specialized killing units in waves—some aligned with the CCP (troops who would faithfully carry out the Party’s orders), some defiant (those unwilling to suppress or kill students), and some caught in between. From March to early April that year, three different waves of troops were trained to execute civilians. And if they failed, the CCP had its backup plan: gas everyone.
Even more disturbing, Guo reveals that the CCP had meticulously planned not only the massacre itself, but also the public declaration that Tiananmen Square had already been overrun by violent rebels. This was no mere narrative—it was a staged operation already underway. According to Guo, the regime sent in loyal military personnel—possibly including internal enforcers—to execute soldiers who had refused to fire on students. Their bodies were then hung in the square, and the killings were blamed on the protesters. This fabricated atrocity served as “evidence” that the square had fallen to insurgents, giving the CCP both legal and psychological justification to proceed with mass slaughter. Guo stresses that the only reason chemical weapons weren’t deployed was because the regime chose more traditional methods. But the intent was unmistakable: to eliminate dissent, break the spirit of resistance, and manipulate public perception through a meticulously choreographed horror. The evil of the CCP, he warns, surpasses what most people can even imagine.
Miles Guo recalls a chilling moment years later, when former top leader Yang Shangkun drunkenly admitted to him, “Good thing we didn’t release the mustard gas.” For speaking out, Guo was detained for days.
That was then. This is now. And the stakes are global.
Guo warns that America is running out of time. Ten years ago, he says, the CCP’s internal military analysts estimated that the U.S. had an 80% chance of defeating China in any conflict. Today, they believe that chance has dropped to 50%.
The CCP is willing to sacrifice half its population to win. It will take risks America cannot. And it has no moral hesitation to release toxins, manipulate supply chains, or weaponize science to achieve global domination.
If America does not act decisively—not just through speeches or sanctions, but through structural, moral, and strategic resilience—it may soon face not just fentanyl, but a new era of silent, invisible, and catastrophic warfare.
This is not speculation. It is not just a warning—it is a final alarm.
And according to Miles Guo, it may be our last.
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