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Can the US Afford the Asia Pivot?

Does shooting down US satellites considered part of tactical nuclear strike or conventional? That could been an option to defer the US from attacking our coast. Let not forget, the US Guam base is within range of our missiles. It will not be an easy cakewalk for the US to attack our coast defense without getting some serious wound when their pilots flying back to base, that is if they have a base to land or know their way back because we will destroy their satellite network. If the US brought their troop over to our mainland, that will be a suicide mission for US force.

And your over-simplification of Iraq War in connection with us is laughable. Iraq didn't have offensive capability to counter US's missile onslaught. I remembered the day when Bush's countdown to war with Iraq very clearly. Three, two, one... Baghdad was lit up in fire the moment the countdown got to zero.

Guam base is only one of the base in Asia, there are plenty of those, and if bad comes to worse, they can refuel mid air and went to bases in Australia and even can make it to Hawai'i. Also, B2 and B-52 strike can come directly from Mainland US and attack anywhere in the world without refuel. And finally damaged airfield can be repaired, You cannot put an airfield out of commission permanently with just bombs and missile. The American did the same during Vietnam war when they try to put North Vietnamese power plant, steel works and airfield out of commission, but every time when the American put those facilities out of commission, they were back online in a few hours to a few days, and in the end, US wasted valuable sortie on repeatedly hit those target

As for the ASAT. you cannot expect you will get all GPS or any LEO satellite, ASAT can only hit a specific range of target, you cannot expect an ASAT launch from China to hit a satellite currently orbit above America or Europe. for that to happen, you will need the Satellite to run in your Trajectory. And you are talking about 12-15 hours depend on where the satellite currently were. Would you think US will not hit back in that 12-15 hours and simply wait for the remaining Satellite to roam into the Chinese ASAT range??

As for the Iraqi war, I do not think you get the whole picture except the stuff that you saw in the TV, judging from what you said, you have no idea what actually did happen in both war. So I am not going to talk to you about it
 
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What is my reasoning? China is in the middle of Asian land mass where there is billions of people. The economic center of gravity of the world is slowly shifting away from the West to East Asia. The US is a far away power and the isolation gives them some level of security, but being faraway from the Eurasian landmass is also one of her greatest weakness. So in vain the US tries to create division and conflict among nations in the Eurasian landmass, to divide and rule. But with China's rise, that is no longer possible. With the exception to EU, most other nations in Eurasian landmass will eventually submit to a China led order, because of:
- China's proximity to large population bases and growing markets in Asia
- China's mostly homogeneous population, with 1.2 billion ethnic Han majority
- China's population size which is 4 times that of the US
- China's ability to transform their society at a fast pace similar to Japan, South Korea and Taiwan, the earlier Asian Tigers

Even the EU will have to submit to China's power.

In 20-30 years, you are looking at a rich, technologically advanced country of 1.5 billion. There is little chance of anyone standing up to this kind of colossus.
 
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I disagree with your line of thinking. Here are my views on the subject.

The train has already left the station. The US/West could hope to contain China if they never engaged China economically, but once they did decades back, it is now much too late to contain China at this stage. Chinese rise to the top is a freight train that is barreling down the tracks and no one will be able to stop them.

So this idiotic "Pivot" will amount to nothing but wasted time and effort for everyone who are banking on it. It would be better for them to accept the inevitable future and not waste resource and time on futile efforts.

What is my reasoning? China is in the middle of Asian land mass where there is billions of people. The economic center of gravity of the world is slowly shifting away from the West to East Asia. The US is a far away power and the isolation gives them some level of security, but being faraway from the Eurasian landmass is also one of her greatest weakness. So in vain the US tries to create division and conflict among nations in the Eurasian landmass, to divide and rule. But with China's rise, that is no longer possible. With the exception to EU, most other nations in Eurasian landmass will eventually submit to a China led order, because of:
- China's proximity to large population bases and growing markets in Asia
- China's mostly homogeneous population, with 1.2 billion ethnic Han majority
- China's population size which is 4 times that of the US
- China's ability to transform their society at a fast pace similar to Japan, South Korea and Taiwan, the earlier Asian Tigers

With economic rise China needs to step up with diplomacy and a more muscular interventionist foreign policy in nations that are allies and potential allies. That is what I would like to hear more about from Chinese posters. Nonintervention I believe is becoming an outdated and obsolete policy for China. Geopolitics abhors vacuum, left alone gaps are always filled by someone else, specially by undesirable and unwanted elements. And China can no longer afford to believe in nonintervention. The world belongs to those who reshapes it according to their ability and will.

What you are saying is simply because Chinese is big so nobody can afford to ignore them?

Problem is, China is big, and it will prosper if and only if they have a clear system and an ongoing market. There are 2 major factors controlling how China is going to be developed

1.) How to pacify the region. if china want to come out of Asia on top, they cannot be challenged in Asia first, so, Chinese rise have to be unopposed, if you look at geographical situation now and the future, for now, the opposing force is the Already developed Asiatic country, namely Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and Singapore. And in the future, India. US can enjoy an undisrupted dominance to its region and to the world, part of the reason is its immediate neighbor all bow to US supremacy. Which on this occasion, we cannot say the same with China.

2.) Chinese ability to transform from secondary economy (Manufacturing Economy) to tertiary economy (Service economy) is also a factor regarding how Chinese is going to be in the future. The key is actually how far India and other catches up with Chinese before they can totally transform to Tertiary sector. Chinese need to have enough infrastructure build up as well as a stable political environment to invest in, also to a degree, the living standard of it's average citizen. Which all 3 requirement is still too far off to realize.

In short, indeed, China is a big market, but it is not unavoidable, currently, because it's easy and good so the world choose China, as there are money to be made, and businessmen only focus on money. But things can change, once investing in China does not earn as much as they can earning elsewhere, China would be abandon, China is too small to the world to not be ignore.
 
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Guam base is only one of the base in Asia, there are plenty of those, and if bad comes to worse, they can refuel mid air and went to bases in Australia and even can make it to Hawai'i. Also, B2 and B-52 strike can come directly from Mainland US and attack anywhere in the world without refuel. And finally damaged airfield can be repaired, You cannot put an airfield out of commission permanently with just bombs and missile. The American did the same during Vietnam war when they try to put North Vietnamese power plant, steel works and airfield out of commission, but every time when the American put those facilities out of commission, they were back online in a few hours to a few days, and in the end, US wasted valuable sortie on repeatedly hit those target

As for the ASAT. you cannot expect you will get all GPS or any LEO satellite, ASAT can only hit a specific range of target, you cannot expect an ASAT launch from China to hit a satellite currently orbit above America or Europe. for that to happen, you will need the Satellite to run in your Trajectory. And you are talking about 12-15 hours depend on where the satellite currently were. Would you think US will not hit back in that 12-15 hours and simply wait for the remaining Satellite to roam into the Chinese ASAT range??

As for the Iraqi war, I do not think you get the whole picture except the stuff that you saw in the TV, judging from what you said, you have no idea what actually did happen in both war. So I am not going to talk to you about it
Guam is the US's largest base and most vital to US attack. You can assure all US's bases are under our target. Refuel in air will eventually need to land. The refueling craft is not an all-day flying monster. B-2 range is around 8,000 miles and distance between our Eastern Coast to Western USA coast is 6,0000. So it is a one way strike suicide or what? Perhaps, you calculate drop bomb and land in Japan. But like I said, all Japan airspace will be target, including Australia if you involve. Do you have enough personnel to repair? In the meantime that you repair, we will produce more missile by days to launch at it night and day. The Vietnamese got our help to fix their damage facility by your bombers. That's why.

You are making too simple assumption. the US will have to evade our air defense system. Only F-22 can do that but that is a big risk as F-22 never proven in war situation and would need to land as well. It's a short distance attack aircraft.

We have already master satellite jam in space. I do believe we can take out all US's vital satellites within attack range. No need to attack civilian satellites orbiting the US. They are not needed. The One orbiting over pacific is essential for US navigation. The key is to disrupt US's overly reliant on Satellite for target navigation and we will accomplish that. We are not relying on satellite as the USA does so your counter won't affect us that much.

You beat Iraq defense mostly because of vastly air and naval superiority against a non-resistant threat. Iraq cannot counter a single things you did. The fact that Iraq lack missiles really undermine their ability to defend from US and allies onslaught. They just fly in, drop bombs, and leave like it's nothing in the gulf war. You cannot do that in Iraq against us without having a brutal eyes or a few of your limps cut apart.

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Here's What a Shooting War in the East China Sea Might Look Like
Tensions are escalating as China tries to claim a new zone of airspace authority—which the U.S. promptly ignores. Here's what to expect if this cold war involving Japan, China, the U.S., and other East Asian nations heats up.

By Joe Pappalardo


east-china-sea-1113-mdn.jpg

A Taiwan navy Kidd-class destroyer launches a SM-2 surface to air missile during a livefire drill at sea near the east coast of Taiwan on September 26, 2013.

Sam Yeh/AFP/Getty Images

November 27, 2013 1:30 PMTEXT SIZE: with no response from China. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel has said the flight, which took off from Guam, was part of a prescheduled exercise. But it seems clear that the U.S. is also sending a message that it won't respect such a claim. "We view this development as a destabilizing attempt to alter the status quo in the region," U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said this weekend. "This unilateral action increases the risk of misunderstanding and miscalculations."

Tensions were high already in this part of the East China Sea, as Japan and Taiwan both claim ownership of islands inside the Chinese zone (and South Korea is not thrilled that some of its airspace overlaps with the Air Defense ID Zone). The islands—called the Senkaku by the Japanese and the Diaoyudao by the Chinese—are valuable as fishing grounds and oil and natural gas fields. Recent incidents have seen Chinese fishermen arrested by the Japanese Coast Guard, and Japanese jets scrambling in response to impending Chinese incursions. (The Japanese have also rejected the Chinese zone.)

The war of words and maritime move–countermove has been under way for years, but this latest escalation could be the fuse to ignite a war that can't easily be stopped. Here's how a hypothetical scenario might unfold.

One: Drone Incursion

Drones are great tools of escalation. National leaders will fly them in areas where it might be too dangerous for a pilot. Other national leaders are not as hesitant to attack them. After all, it's only a robot.

Our hypothetical incident starts in the air, at 45,000 feet. An unarmed Chinese W-50 drone is dispatched to keep an eye on the waterways and airspace of the Air Defense ID Zone. In September 2012 the Xinhua news agency reported that China's State Oceanic Administration would step up the use of drones to "strengthen marine surveillance" in disputed areas of the South China Sea, and a string of bases have appeared on the shoreline in 2013.

The Japanese Air Self-Defense Force (JASDF) operates Boeing E-767s, 160-foot airplanes stuffed with radar and electronics that enable them to detect aircraft from 200 miles away. They confirm that the Chinese drone is wheeling above the Senkakus, and Japan dispatches F-15Js to intercept it—and shoot it down—obviously ignoring China's Air Defense ID Zone. Chinese long-range, back-scatter radar spots the F-15Js in the air, and China dispatches quad-prop Y-8X maritime patrol for a better-resolution look. They also alert their best fighters—Sukhoi Flankers (Su 30) and Chengdu J-10s—to prepare to take off. Everyone will later say that these flights were meant for "verification and monitoring." But the F-15Js and Chinese jets are both armed.

Japanese pilots, trying to stay hidden, approach without radar on, instead using the data from the E-767s to get close to the Chinese forces. But the electronically steered array radar of the J-10s spot them. When the F-15Js' radar-warning receiver goes off, even though the chime indicates that it's not the guidance radar of an inbound missile, the Japanese pilot panics.

Action in the air is fast-paced. Snap judgments with lethal consequences come with the territory. When the Chinese fighters arrive to hem in the F-15Js, a Japanese pilot's evasive maneuvers cause a midair collision with a J-10. Then the air-to-air missiles fly—Japanese-built AAM-3s versus Chinese PL-11s. At the end of several minutes of fighting, pilots on both sides have died, but the skirmish ends there—for now. The battle started with enough ambiguity that both sides claim to be victims.

Two: Quiet Escalation

Don't let the name fool you—Japan's Self Defense Forces are pretty advanced war fighters. Over the decades the island nation has built up the most formidable military in Asia. China has been pouring money into its military to match some of Japan's U.S.-made equipment, but the Japanese have better ships and airplanes. The United States is bound by treaty to protect Japan if it is attacked, but pundits debate whether the events in the East China Sea meet that standard. And both Japan and the U.S. are already war-weary and hoping the situation cools down.

The lull after the air battle is deceptive. While China is itching to prove itself as a regional hegemon, its military does not want to launch headlong into a fight for airspace it will lose. So it turns to other tactics, even as diplomats discuss ways to ease tensions. Chinese submarines—quiet diesel–electric models that are hard to spot in the shallows—begin to lay mines. This would be easier to do by air, but the Chinese don't have air superiority, and want to block Japanese ships from nearing the contested islands. This move will keep Japanese and American warships from getting close to the islands, a necessary condition in case China wants to land troops. It also hampers Japanese and American air operations by keeping naval radar out of the area. (Not to mention the inability to rescue pilots downed in any future air battle. And the pilots would become diplomatic bargaining chips upon capture.)

China has no shortage of mines. A 2012 paper by the U.S. Naval War College cited a Chinese article claiming the nation has more than 50,000 mines, including "over 30 varieties of contact, magnetic, acoustic, water pressure and mixed reaction sea mines, remote control sea mines, rocket-rising and mobile mines." The smartest mines in the inventory would be the most useful to the Chinese. They can be programmed to rise and strike ships with particular acoustic and magnetic signatures. The mines can also be remotely activated. China could lace the sea lanes with these and wait for the order to be given—a public warning to all in the East China Sea to keep out.

The United States is good at sniffing out submarines. When Americans find Chinese subs deploying mines in areas where U.S. carrier groups will be operating, they try to force them to the surface. Under the water, U.S. submarines outgun the Chinese. They try to run, try to hide, and ultimately scuttle their ships with all hands lost.

China activates the mines in anger and to save face—a retreat right now would humiliate the army and central government. A death spiral of war ensues. Ships explode. Sailors burn to death and drown. There is a call from Taiwan and Japan to degrade the Chinese navy, to strip them of their assets with air strikes and cruise missiles. Leaks in Washington, D.C., hint at a forceful plan. Knowing what the U.S. and Japanese militaries can do if given time to prepare, and knowing they are underdogs in the fight, the Chinese military have good reason to consider a preemptive strike.

Three: Missiles

The crux of the war is still centered on these virtually uninhabited islands, but the fighting is spreading. And missiles, not airplanes, will determine who dominates the airspace over the disputed islands.

It starts with a wave of unmanned aerial vehicle attacks from the Chinese mainland. The Harpy drones take off from trucks and boats, fly as far as 300 miles, and hone in on radar emissions of surface-to-air defenses. The Harpy, made in Israel and sold to China in 2004, ends its flight with a death dive into the radar, detonating 4.5 pounds of explosives on impact.

The American/Japanese alliance is ready to own the air over the Sendakus. The attack on Chinese radar and air-defense installations comes shortly thereafter. Submarine-launched Tomahawks, B-2 stealth bomber runs, and long-range "standoff" missiles fired from B-52s hit targets. The Chinese have moved mobile radar systems and switched them off to keep them hidden. F-22s take to the sky, ready to fight and win dogfights. But these never happen.

Instead, China deals its last card—a barrage of theater missiles. These are conventional ballistic and cruise missiles fired from land, as far as 3500 miles away. These target fixed locations—Japanese air bases, naval stations, and American Air Force and Marine Corps bases. Hundreds of warheads drop on targets, beating missile defense systems, wrecking runways, and blasting barracks. At sea the Navy is also targeted. Hypersonic missiles fired from land or submarines target U.S. warships and Japanese vessels. The lesson is clear: The closer to the Chinese coast U.S. forces operate, the more trouble Chinese forces can bring to bear.

The U.S. naval forces back off and use more standoff weapons. Our scenario ends with a stalemated game of barrage and counterbarrage. But the central claim—who owns the islands—has been answered. They are no longer safe for anyone.
 
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Guam is the US's largest base and most vital to US attack. You can assure all US's bases are under our target. Refuel in air will eventually need to land. The refueling craft is not an all-day flying monster. B-2 range is around 8,000 miles and distance between our Eastern Coast to Western USA coast is 6,0000. So it is a one way strike suicide or what? Perhaps, you calculate drop bomb and land in Japan. But like I said, all Japan airspace will be target, including Australia if you involve. Do you have enough personnel to repair? In the meantime that you repair, we will produce more missile by days to launch at it night and day. The Vietnamese got our help to fix their damage facility by your bombers. That's why.

You are making too simple assumption. the US will have to evade our air defense system. Only F-22 can do that but that is a big risk as F-22 never proven in war situation and would need to land as well. It's a short distance attack aircraft.

We have already master satellite jam in space. I do believe we can take out all US's vital satellites within attack range. No need to attack civilian satellites orbiting the US. They are not needed. The One orbiting over pacific is essential for US navigation. The key is to disrupt US's overly reliant on Satellite for target navigation and we will accomplish that. We are not relying on satellite as the USA does so your counter won't affect us that much.

You beat Iraq defense mostly because of vastly air and naval superiority against a non-resistant threat. Iraq cannot counter a single things you did. The fact that Iraq lack missiles really undermine their ability to defend from US and allies onslaught. They just fly in, drop bombs, and leave like it's nothing in the gulf war. You cannot do that in Iraq against us without having a brutal eyes or a few of your limps cut apart.

---------------------------

Here's What a Shooting War in the East China Sea Might Look Like
Tensions are escalating as China tries to claim a new zone of airspace authority—which the U.S. promptly ignores. Here's what to expect if this cold war involving Japan, China, the U.S., and other East Asian nations heats up.

By Joe Pappalardo


east-china-sea-1113-mdn.jpg

A Taiwan navy Kidd-class destroyer launches a SM-2 surface to air missile during a livefire drill at sea near the east coast of Taiwan on September 26, 2013.

Sam Yeh/AFP/Getty Images

November 27, 2013 1:30 PMTEXT SIZE: with no response from China. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel has said the flight, which took off from Guam, was part of a prescheduled exercise. But it seems clear that the U.S. is also sending a message that it won't respect such a claim. "We view this development as a destabilizing attempt to alter the status quo in the region," U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said this weekend. "This unilateral action increases the risk of misunderstanding and miscalculations."

Tensions were high already in this part of the East China Sea, as Japan and Taiwan both claim ownership of islands inside the Chinese zone (and South Korea is not thrilled that some of its airspace overlaps with the Air Defense ID Zone). The islands—called the Senkaku by the Japanese and the Diaoyudao by the Chinese—are valuable as fishing grounds and oil and natural gas fields. Recent incidents have seen Chinese fishermen arrested by the Japanese Coast Guard, and Japanese jets scrambling in response to impending Chinese incursions. (The Japanese have also rejected the Chinese zone.)

The war of words and maritime move–countermove has been under way for years, but this latest escalation could be the fuse to ignite a war that can't easily be stopped. Here's how a hypothetical scenario might unfold.

One: Drone Incursion

Drones are great tools of escalation. National leaders will fly them in areas where it might be too dangerous for a pilot. Other national leaders are not as hesitant to attack them. After all, it's only a robot.

Our hypothetical incident starts in the air, at 45,000 feet. An unarmed Chinese W-50 drone is dispatched to keep an eye on the waterways and airspace of the Air Defense ID Zone. In September 2012 the Xinhua news agency reported that China's State Oceanic Administration would step up the use of drones to "strengthen marine surveillance" in disputed areas of the South China Sea, and a string of bases have appeared on the shoreline in 2013.

The Japanese Air Self-Defense Force (JASDF) operates Boeing E-767s, 160-foot airplanes stuffed with radar and electronics that enable them to detect aircraft from 200 miles away. They confirm that the Chinese drone is wheeling above the Senkakus, and Japan dispatches F-15Js to intercept it—and shoot it down—obviously ignoring China's Air Defense ID Zone. Chinese long-range, back-scatter radar spots the F-15Js in the air, and China dispatches quad-prop Y-8X maritime patrol for a better-resolution look. They also alert their best fighters—Sukhoi Flankers (Su 30) and Chengdu J-10s—to prepare to take off. Everyone will later say that these flights were meant for "verification and monitoring." But the F-15Js and Chinese jets are both armed.

Japanese pilots, trying to stay hidden, approach without radar on, instead using the data from the E-767s to get close to the Chinese forces. But the electronically steered array radar of the J-10s spot them. When the F-15Js' radar-warning receiver goes off, even though the chime indicates that it's not the guidance radar of an inbound missile, the Japanese pilot panics.

Action in the air is fast-paced. Snap judgments with lethal consequences come with the territory. When the Chinese fighters arrive to hem in the F-15Js, a Japanese pilot's evasive maneuvers cause a midair collision with a J-10. Then the air-to-air missiles fly—Japanese-built AAM-3s versus Chinese PL-11s. At the end of several minutes of fighting, pilots on both sides have died, but the skirmish ends there—for now. The battle started with enough ambiguity that both sides claim to be victims.

Two: Quiet Escalation

Don't let the name fool you—Japan's Self Defense Forces are pretty advanced war fighters. Over the decades the island nation has built up the most formidable military in Asia. China has been pouring money into its military to match some of Japan's U.S.-made equipment, but the Japanese have better ships and airplanes. The United States is bound by treaty to protect Japan if it is attacked, but pundits debate whether the events in the East China Sea meet that standard. And both Japan and the U.S. are already war-weary and hoping the situation cools down.

The lull after the air battle is deceptive. While China is itching to prove itself as a regional hegemon, its military does not want to launch headlong into a fight for airspace it will lose. So it turns to other tactics, even as diplomats discuss ways to ease tensions. Chinese submarines—quiet diesel–electric models that are hard to spot in the shallows—begin to lay mines. This would be easier to do by air, but the Chinese don't have air superiority, and want to block Japanese ships from nearing the contested islands. This move will keep Japanese and American warships from getting close to the islands, a necessary condition in case China wants to land troops. It also hampers Japanese and American air operations by keeping naval radar out of the area. (Not to mention the inability to rescue pilots downed in any future air battle. And the pilots would become diplomatic bargaining chips upon capture.)

China has no shortage of mines. A 2012 paper by the U.S. Naval War College cited a Chinese article claiming the nation has more than 50,000 mines, including "over 30 varieties of contact, magnetic, acoustic, water pressure and mixed reaction sea mines, remote control sea mines, rocket-rising and mobile mines." The smartest mines in the inventory would be the most useful to the Chinese. They can be programmed to rise and strike ships with particular acoustic and magnetic signatures. The mines can also be remotely activated. China could lace the sea lanes with these and wait for the order to be given—a public warning to all in the East China Sea to keep out.

The United States is good at sniffing out submarines. When Americans find Chinese subs deploying mines in areas where U.S. carrier groups will be operating, they try to force them to the surface. Under the water, U.S. submarines outgun the Chinese. They try to run, try to hide, and ultimately scuttle their ships with all hands lost.

China activates the mines in anger and to save face—a retreat right now would humiliate the army and central government. A death spiral of war ensues. Ships explode. Sailors burn to death and drown. There is a call from Taiwan and Japan to degrade the Chinese navy, to strip them of their assets with air strikes and cruise missiles. Leaks in Washington, D.C., hint at a forceful plan. Knowing what the U.S. and Japanese militaries can do if given time to prepare, and knowing they are underdogs in the fight, the Chinese military have good reason to consider a preemptive strike.

Three: Missiles

The crux of the war is still centered on these virtually uninhabited islands, but the fighting is spreading. And missiles, not airplanes, will determine who dominates the airspace over the disputed islands.

It starts with a wave of unmanned aerial vehicle attacks from the Chinese mainland. The Harpy drones take off from trucks and boats, fly as far as 300 miles, and hone in on radar emissions of surface-to-air defenses. The Harpy, made in Israel and sold to China in 2004, ends its flight with a death dive into the radar, detonating 4.5 pounds of explosives on impact.

The American/Japanese alliance is ready to own the air over the Sendakus. The attack on Chinese radar and air-defense installations comes shortly thereafter. Submarine-launched Tomahawks, B-2 stealth bomber runs, and long-range "standoff" missiles fired from B-52s hit targets. The Chinese have moved mobile radar systems and switched them off to keep them hidden. F-22s take to the sky, ready to fight and win dogfights. But these never happen.

Instead, China deals its last card—a barrage of theater missiles. These are conventional ballistic and cruise missiles fired from land, as far as 3500 miles away. These target fixed locations—Japanese air bases, naval stations, and American Air Force and Marine Corps bases. Hundreds of warheads drop on targets, beating missile defense systems, wrecking runways, and blasting barracks. At sea the Navy is also targeted. Hypersonic missiles fired from land or submarines target U.S. warships and Japanese vessels. The lesson is clear: The closer to the Chinese coast U.S. forces operate, the more trouble Chinese forces can bring to bear.

The U.S. naval forces back off and use more standoff weapons. Our scenario ends with a stalemated game of barrage and counterbarrage. But the central claim—who owns the islands—has been answered. They are no longer safe for anyone.

Well, I cannot stop you from believing something you want to believe and ignore all possible situation. If war actually did happen exactly from what you said like a script, then of course you will win every time, but is it always the case? So I got exactly nothing to counter with what you believe may or might have happen. As this offer no logical argument.

By the way, the distance between Hawai'i to Beijing is about 5600 mile, while B-52 have a point to point range of 11,000 miles.
 
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China amass upward to 4 trillions dollars in their foreign reserve,

The Chinese 4 trillion USD reserve is one of the best insurance the US has that China will keep the USD as reserve currency.

As they say, if you owe a thousand dollars, you have a headache; if you owe a billion dollars, your banker has a headache.

P.S. Trend below shows smart move by China

p1-bf095_chinaf_g_20120301185703.jpg
 
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What you are saying is because Chinese is big so nobody can afford to ignore them?

Problem is, China is big, and it will prosper if and only if they have a clear system and an ongoing market. There are 2 major factors controlling how China is going to be developed

1.) How to pacify the region. if china want to come out of Asia on top, they cannot be challenged in Asia first, so, Chinese rise have to be unopposed, if you look at geographical situation now and the future, for now, the opposing force is the Already developed Asiatic country, namely Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and Singapore. And in the future, India. US can enjoy an undisrupted dominance to its region and to the world, part of the reason is its immediate neighbor all bow to US supremacy. Which on this occasion, we cannot say the same with China.

2.) Chinese ability to transform from secondary economy (Manufacturing Economy) to tertiary economy (Service economy) is also a factor regarding how Chinese is going to be in the future. The key is actually how far India and other catches up with Chinese before they can totally transform to Tertiary sector. Chinese need to have enough infrastructure build up as well as a stable political environment to invest in, also to a degree, the living standard of it's average citizen. Which all 3 requirement is still too far off to realize.

In short, indeed, China is a big market, but it is not unavoidable, currently, because it's easy and good so the world choose China, as there are money to be made, and businessmen only focus on money. But things can change, once investing in China does not earn as much as they can earning elsewhere, China would be abandon, China is too small to the world to not be ignore.


You are assuming that anyone apart from Japan and maybe India will pose any real threat to China.

Korea is situated on the Korean peninsula and the PLA can just drive into Seoul when it has reached it's full military modernisation circa 2030. I guess that Korea will reunite eventually and become neutral.

Taiwan is less than 100 miles from the Chinese coast and the Chinese will reunify with them in the next 10-15 years whether it is by peaceful or military means.

Singapore is so tiny that it is not even worth bothering about.

Now the greatest threat to China I see is Japan. Japan can build a formidable Navy if it wanted to but that would come at a heavy cost to it's civilian economy. Japan may decide when China rivals the US in military power to accept Chinese dominance in Asia.


As Chinese power increases relative to the US, then expect the loyalties of Asian countries to change.
 
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You are assuming that anyone apart from Japan and maybe India will pose any real threat to China.

Korea is situated on the Korean peninsula and the PLA can just drive into Seoul when it has reached it's full military modernisation circa 2030. I guess that Korea will reunite eventually and become neutral.

Taiwan is less than 100 miles from the Chinese coast and the Chinese will reunify with them in the next 10-15 years whether it is by peaceful or military means.

Singapore is so tiny that it is not even worth bothering about.

Now the greatest threat to China I see is Japan. Japan can build a formidable Navy if it wanted to but that would come at a heavy cost to it's civilian economy. Japan may decide when China rivals the US in military power to accept Chinese dominance in Asia.


As Chinese power increases relative to the US, then expect the loyalties of Asian countries to change.

Well, running at your logic, if Economic and Military power alone can roll over any nation of the world, then should the whole world bow down to American Supremacy now??

Iraq war and Afghanistan war have already shown the world, small country like that can still deal considerable damage to not just big country like US, but rather a coalition of a country, if both War in Iraq and Afghanistan cannot show you that no country is too small to send out creditable threat to any other nation, then I really suggested you to look at the case of North Korea.

You cannot expect something happened to US now will not happened to China in the future, all country made enemy when they grow and expand, and how to deal with it is up to each senses.

Well, I admire your thinking, but the way you say the stuff that's going to happen is nothing but a pipe dream that will simply just click or fall into places. There are no logical or academical reasoning behind your reason.

Do you even know if China have to deal with Japan, South Korea, India and Singapore individually, they would have to start 4 wars to deal with them separately. And even US with current resource cannot start 4 different war to take care of the nation. Or you are one of those people think Economy and Trade will take its place??
 
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Well, running at your logic, if Economic and Military power alone can roll over any nation of the world, then should the whole world bow down to American Supremacy now??

Iraq war and Afghanistan war have already shown the world, small country like that can still deal considerable damage to not just big country like US, but rather a coalition of a country, if both War in Iraq and Afghanistan cannot show you that no country is too small to send out creditable threat to any other nation, then I really suggested you to look at the case of North Korea.

You cannot expect something happened to US now will not happened to China in the future, all country made enemy when they grow and expand, and how to deal with it is up to each senses.

Well, I admire your thinking, but the way you say the stuff that's going to happen is nothing but a pipe dream that will simply just click or fall into places. There are no logical or academical reasoning behind your reason.

Do you even know if China have to deal with Japan, South Korea, India and Singapore individually, they would have to start 4 wars to deal with them separately. And even US with current resource cannot start 4 different war to take care of the nation. Or you are one of those people think Economy and Trade will take its place??

Dude - this shows that you are unable to debate my points and this statement is just your own opinion.

Let us wait till 2030 and then see what happens.
 
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Dude - this shows that you are unable to debate my points and this statement is just your own opinion.

Let us wait till 2030 and then see what happens.

What to argue?? You have no point....

Your point is, by the time of 2030, all the things would fall into place according to you, with no logical and academic support..

Now, either you are a god like creature, that I cannot argue with you, or you are simply making a random comment, and that I cannot argue with you either....

Now, tell me, what make you think what happened to the US will not happen to China in the year 2030??
 
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atleast 10 times better than CCP is paying you...
I agree with you.some posters simply mock US,NATO and their Asean members and its own neighbours.but they tend to forget that its their export which is keeping its country's economy booming.any fallout to China-US relations and they'll sure going to notice how their economy is going to change within a blink.

In your wet dreams. You clearly need to learn about economic and financial accounting. China also imports from Western scum, but the things they import from Westerners have huge profit margins. Not only that but the Western scum in China are making a ton of money off of gullible Chinese. Chinese exports to America are a huge FAVOR that the Americans take for granted. America declaring war on China would break the international trading system that is so stacked in America's favor, to which China agreed to take part in ONLY because it was the only option around. China barely makes any money off of trade with America, in fact they lose billions per year.

With economic rise China needs to step up with diplomacy and a more muscular interventionist foreign policy in nations that are allies and potential allies. That is what I would like to hear more about from Chinese posters. Nonintervention I believe is becoming an outdated and obsolete policy for China. Geopolitics abhors vacuum, left alone gaps are always filled by someone else, specially by undesirable and unwanted elements. And China can no longer afford to believe in nonintervention. The world belongs to those who reshapes it according to their ability and will.

America has given interventionism a bad name. China should help developing nations that are the victim of Western bankers help so they can break free of their chains. Then America's economy is finished.
 
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In your wet dreams. You clearly need to learn about economic and financial accounting. China also imports from Western scum, but the things they import from Westerners have huge profit margins. Not only that but the Western scum in China are making a ton of money off of gullible Chinese. Chinese exports to America are a huge FAVOR that the Americans take for granted. America declaring war on China would break the international trading system that is so stacked in America's favor, to which China agreed to take part in ONLY because it was the only option around. China barely makes any money off of trade with America, in fact they lose billions per year.


:rofl::rofl::rofl:

then China is truly Land of Fools.show me one country who does Trade just to loose Billions of dollars per year???I mean,are you a 7 years old kid??
 
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What to argue?? You have no point....

Your point is, by the time of 2030, all the things would fall into place according to you, with no logical and academic support..

Now, either you are a god like creature, that I cannot argue with you, or you are simply making a random comment, and that I cannot argue with you either....

Now, tell me, what make you think what happened to the US will not happen to China in the year 2030??

Dude, your statement that I have no point is your personal opinion.

That I have no logic is your own opinion again.

Goodbye.:wave:
 
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No. China should sweep through the Pacific. They can ask the Japanese for pointers.
 
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