Yes, thats the whole idea.USA is afraid as its overcharging attitude will come to an end and equity will be established in labour cost with China. USA wants its people to have high wages and high standard of living unfairly over others and that is why alarmed over China. India stands to benefit by rationalising cost of high end goods from Chinese manufacturing. USA needs to be cut down in Indian interests. For example, USA overcharges semiconductors like intel chips by charging 200-300 dollars for one single chipset! These chipset are tiny pieces of silicon and does not cost much raw material. Most of the expense comes from fat paycheck of engineers and designers who are paid $200000 per annum in the silicon industry. If the salary is cut down to $25000 per annum by making the chips in India, the cost will come down to less than $50 per chipset.
Fact is that the poor in India/china and US are same but dollar is the differentiating factor. By dollar being more value they can buy more goods and services for the effort they put in. If you look at the whole scenario its that 10-20% of the US industry which is competitive wrt to the world but rest of the industry is not so competitive. Now there is also problem with countries like china and India. They are not smart but utterly stupid when they sell their goods & services at a very low value. We are not realizing the fact that we are actually contributing to strengthening of US dominance and transfer of work/wealth by using dollar.
Every time we see US railing against venezuela, cuba, iran..etc is not just enmity but also bcos those countries are closed to them as markets for them. Its neo-colonialism at its best after all US is successor to the british. One good thing is that globalization over period of time will equalize the difference , its just like in sports where a new comer who does not the tactics but picks it up due course of time. The point is that will US allow any country to settle down? Absolutely not creating chaos and keep countries occupied is one way of doing it.
If you look at US vs Soviets it was not some ideological battle but more for supremacy on who will gain the economic dividends by global domination.


cultural projection and diplomacy) and hard skills ( economic and military) I would say economic is the most important by far. The west was never going to lose the cold war in hindsight, however, just say the Soviets managed to cling on longer, would India's development have been affected massively different? Probably not. Compare what's to gain and lose from China's rise.