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The U.S. just sent a carrier strike group to confront China

IMO, it's a dilemma for US.

Backgrounds:

1. The 'Pivot to Asia' was proposed by Obama, the new policy or strategy to maitain the super power role and to confront China.
2. The disputes among China and other countries in SCS.
3. The chaos that is already created by US in SCS for 'free navigation'.
4. The allies of US need US to protect them for their own benefits and the opportunistic motives.
5. Bad economy background lead to that US need capital flow turn to US to support their economy.
6. Election season need US's tough voices or actions to confront rivals and act as a punisher or cop to comfort their people and maitain the super power image don't mention ally or not.
7. History or reality told us that US can't afford to attack China even with a limited war so that find agents to confront China is their top priority.

Realities:
1. The cost of 'free navigation' is higher than China, SCS is just in China's backyard. The cost is even higher to send carrier battle group but US has to pay the check for those conditions.
2. Send a carrier battle group to SCS that has to face the monitor/detection of radio/wave characteristics by PLAN's ships.
3. The battle group will be definitely tracked by sensor systems that will enhance the performance of DF21D and DF26.
4. The counter measures and resources from China will be various and with the islands building process development, there will be even more.
5. The 'free navigation' will force China to build more military facilities on islands of China in SCS and steadily conform the dominant situation.
6. Game in SCS has started by US and China has to attend in, but when and how to stop the game China has her own choice.
7. With speaking louder for 'free navigation', there's no signal that China will stop building islands and putting more military equipment on islands. There's just no room for China to fallback.
8. For the agents or cost issues, US will push their allies forward to challenge China, Australia, Phillipine, South Korea, Japan just don't matter.

US always fight for their own benefits and currently for their super power domination. China has to face US sooner or later and China has no choice but to turn the crisis to opportunity. IMO, it's not bad for China.

Let's wait and see the change of game when the new president of US comes out.
do you think more weapons make you safer?

do you think you can win the arms race, without scarifying economic and social benefits for common people?

you look all things too rosy too positive for China, while all negative for others. understandably because you are a chinese poster seeing with chinese eye, optimistic, thinking God is on your side, with unshakeable confidence. you are the winner, other are loser. I am tired to comment all of your bullshit, but just one. as many of Chinese posters here dream of launching ballistic missiles on US warships and military installations.

if you haven´t noticed, the US has a satellite network monitoring China day and night. if the US notices you launch ballistic missiles from China soil, you can brace for a massive counter strike on your missile site. on China.

If you launch a ballistic missile from China, how does the US know in advance if it is equipped by conventional or nuclear warhead?

the time for America for the reaction chain, beginning to detect, recognise, consider, calculate for a massive strike on China is less than 30 minutes. it is very short. mistake and miscalculation can happen..

giving you an example.

during the cold war, in the 1980s, when the tension reached new height, soviet satellites detected US incoming ballistic missiles. the commanding soviet officer in charge just had few minutes to decide whether or not to answer with a massive counter strike on the US. the rest is history.

think about it.

as part of the arms race, the US will invest $320 billion in the next 10 years to modernize the nuclear missile forces. for your photo collection, here is one: she just tested a ground based ICBM Minuteman III.

image-962128-breitwandaufmacher-rgqu-962128.jpg
 
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Your post qualifies for a good laugh. Keep 'em coming.

coming back to china to laugh, stop washing dishs in canada, kid. You dare not facing to US, though there is Japan in ECS, China just robbed islands and reefs of your smaller neighbors.
 
I was just there in Lanka about a month ago. I thought I landed in China mistakenly. The airport was completely filled with Chinese businessmen. I could hardly believe that this is Sri Lanka, lol...
Haha, last year alone the total number of the Chinese traveling overseas was more than 120 millions, more than the total number of Americans who hold passports (110 million out of 313 million). This is the FACT.
 
The US has sent an aircraft carrier and a number of other ships through disputed waters in the South China Sea, it announced yesterday - a move that will necessarily raise tensions with Beijing, which has been engaging in an increasingly militaristic power-play in the area over the past few years.

Jerry Hendrix, analyst at the Center for a New American Security in Washington D.C. and former Navy captain, told USA Today that carrier strike group is a clear demonstration. Associated units include USS Stennis with CVW-9 and Destroyer Squadron (DESRON) 21 embarked, guided-missile destroyers USS Stockdale, USS Chung-Hoon, and USS William P. Lawrence (DDG 110), and guided-missile cruiser USS Mobile Bay.

...

"We have Chinese ships around us that we normally didn't see in my past experience", said Capt. Greg Huffman, Stennis' commanding officer. :rofl:

"In my opinion China is clearly militarizing the South China Sea". The USS McCambell, a destroyer, and the USS Ashland, an amphibious dock landing ship, completed similar patrols last week.

The arrival of the ships came as Fu Ying, a spokeswoman for China's parliament, accused the United States of massively escalating its military level in the South China Sea, further raising tensions.

The control of the South China Sea is vital for both elements of this war strategy: it is adjacent to key military bases in southern China, including naval installations on Hainan Island; and at the same time, sits astride shipping routes through South East Asia to Africa and the Middle East.

United States warships patrol South China Sea; China keeps close watch
 
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How exactly do you 'surround' a USN CBG?

If you do manage to do it, its because they let you. Not because you can. Important to understand the difference.
Then what kind of tactic or strategic purpose does USN want to realize? Showing to the world that there is finally a country willing to cruise along with USN in SCS?? 
 
Being surrounded at close range means the multi-billion dollar American aircraft carrier is now within range of cheap naval artillery guns.

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How exactly does that put the US Navy in an advantageous position?

The Chinese ships are also in international waters. There's no law against sailing close to a USN ship.
 

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