Author Topic: US-China (& Japan, South China Sea-- Taiwan, Vietnam, Philippines, etc)  (Read 398286 times)

G M

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Re: Stratfor: The view from China
« Reply #1400 on: October 28, 2021, 04:36:33 PM »
Xi only respects the viable threat of force.

second post

I'm highly sympathetic to the thought, but if the following article from Stratfor is correct, that would constitute a red line for Xi.

Recent confirmation of a U.S. troop presence in Taiwan marks an escalation in U.S.-China and cross-strait tensions, but doesn't significantly change Beijing's calculations regarding whether to take military action against Taiwan. Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen confirmed in an interview with CNN on Oct. 27 that U.S. troops were present in Taiwan for a training mission, though Taiwan's defense minister soon clarified that U.S. troops are not garrisoned in Taiwan. In response, China's defense minister said that if U.S. efforts to "contain China" via Taiwan continued, China would "resolutely counter and fight back." Despite these strong words, rumors of U.S. troops in Taiwan have circulated for a year, and given China's wealth of intelligence assets in Taiwan, it is highly likely Beijing already knew about this development. If the U.S. training mission truly crossed a red line, China probably already would have taken military action.

In the short term, China's red lines on Taiwan will remain unchanged; they largely pertain to Taiwan's internal affairs and the formalization of international relationships. Beijing's decision making is often opaque to Western observers, to say the least, but senior officials have been quite clear about the kinds of events that could push China to take military action against Taiwan.

A formal declaration of independence by Taiwan is one such trigger, though legal hurdles in Taiwan make pulling one off very difficult.
The end of political negotiations regarding reunification with China by each of Taiwan's main political parties is another, a tall order given the opposition Kuomintang's friendly stance toward the mainland and its unwillingness to provoke economic retaliation from Beijing.
Formal defense agreements with Taiwan — signed by Japan, the United States or other Western allies — could trigger military action. Despite recent news, the United States does not have such an agreement with Taiwan.
The widespread acceptance of Taiwan as a country and/or equal partner in multiple international organizations, like the United Nations, could also push China toward a military contingency.
In the long term, China's decision to invade Taiwan will be highly influenced by internal politics, rather than military developments and public statements like Tsai's recent confirmation. For Beijing, reunification with Taiwan has always been primarily a political issue — though the strategic benefits of Taiwan for China's maritime strength are not lost on Beijing — driven by the internal motivations of the opaque and hierarchical Communist Party of China. Territorial consolidation has been a hallmark of Chinese political legitimacy for millennia, and the CPC is no exception, explaining why every Party leader has confirmed the need to reunify with Taiwan, eventually. But they have all been wary of the massive economic and diplomatic fallout that would accompany an invasion. A major erosion of CPC legitimacy could drive China to attack Taiwan. The most commonly suggested trigger for such erosion is a severe economic calamity, but internal Party documents suggest Beijing is confident in China's economic trajectory — despite 2021 supply chain issues. Similarly, President Xi Jinping could make a move on Taiwan if his own political legitimacy started to slip, but though there are real signs of internal dissent over some of Xi's recent policies, like the tech crackdown, Xi's hold on power — including military, bureaucratic and ideological power — is stronger than ever. Lastly, Xi believes himself to be a historic figure in China's history, on par with Mao Zedong, and has repeatedly asserted his personal desire to resolve the Taiwan issue in order to achieve China's so-called "great rejuvenation" as an economic superpower free from repression by foreign powers. Thus, the chances of a Taiwan invasion will grow toward the end of Xi's third term in 2027 and even more so by the end of his (likely) fourth term in 2032.

Crafty_Dog

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GPF: China- Taiwan
« Reply #1401 on: November 03, 2021, 10:38:29 AM »
Geopolitical Futures
China and Taiwan. China has reportedly been cracking down on a surge of online speculation about a possible cross-strait conflict with Taiwan. Like many authoritarian regimes, Beijing often tries to stoke nationalist sentiment among the public to boost the Chinese Communist Party’s legitimacy, but it also often gets nervous about public pressure forcing its hand on complicated foreign policy issues. The rumors were apparently sparked by fake People’s Liberation Army text messages asking reservists to prepare to mobilize, as well as Beijing's recent move urging families to stockpile food (a pandemic-related issue). This comes as the PLA on Wednesday launched a week of live-fire drills in the East China Sea. Taiwanese special operators, meanwhile, have reportedly been training with U.S. Marines in Guam.

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GPF: Potential Chinese Blockade of Taiwan
« Reply #1403 on: November 09, 2021, 02:22:02 PM »
Blockade risk. China’s military could impose a sea and air blockade on Taiwan, according to a new report from the self-ruled island's military. In addition, mainland forces have developed at least five other types of operational capabilities that could be used against Taiwan. A limited blockade is one of two scenarios that we see Beijing trying before attempting any sort of all-out attack on Taiwan. Of note, the report also said 618 U.S. military personnel visited Taiwan between mid-2019 and August.

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Re: US-China (& Japan, South China Sea-- Vietnam, Philippines, etc)
« Reply #1404 on: November 10, 2021, 06:39:27 PM »
Strait tensions. A delegation of U.S. lawmakers, including two senators, made an unannounced visit to Taipei on Tuesday. The group arrived on a U.S. Navy aircraft. In response, Beijing staged a hasty joint combat readiness drill in the Taiwan Strait.

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DougMacG

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Re: How War With China Begins
« Reply #1406 on: November 11, 2021, 10:27:13 AM »
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2021/11/us-china-war/620571/

Worthwhile read all the way through.
---------------------------------------
What Will Drive China to War?
A cold war is already under way. The question is whether Washington can deter Beijing from initiating a hot one.

By Michael Beckley and Hal Brands

NOVEMBER 1, 2021

About the authors: Michael Beckley is a Jeane Kirkpatrick Visiting Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, where his research focuses on U.S.-China competition, and is an associate professor at Tufts University. Hal Brands is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, where he studies US foreign policy and defense strategy, and is the Henry A. Kissinger Distinguished Professor of Global Affairs at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies.

President xi jinping declared in July that those who get in the way of China’s ascent will have their “heads bashed bloody against a Great Wall of steel.” The People’s Liberation Army Navy is churning out ships at a rate not seen since World War II, as Beijing issues threats against Taiwan and other neighbors. Top Pentagon officials have warned that China could start a military conflict in the Taiwan Strait or other geopolitical hot spots sometime this decade.

Analysts and officials in Washington are fretting over worsening tensions between the United States and China and the risks to the world of two superpowers once again clashing rather than cooperating. President Joe Biden has said that America “is not seeking a new cold war.” But that is the wrong way to look at U.S.-China relations. A cold war with Beijing is already under way. The right question, instead, is whether America can deter China from initiating a hot one.

Beijing is a remarkably ambitious revanchist power, one determined to make China whole again by “reuniting” Taiwan with the mainland, turning the East and South China Seas into Chinese lakes, and grabbing regional primacy as a stepping-stone to global power. It is also increasingly encircled, and faces growing resistance on many fronts—just the sort of scenario that has led it to lash out in the past.

The historical record since the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949 is clear: When confronted by a mounting threat to its geopolitical interests, Beijing does not wait to be attacked; it shoots first to gain the advantage of surprise.

In conflicts including the Korean War and clashes with Vietnam in 1979, China has often viewed the use of force as an educational exercise. It is willing to pick even a very costly fight with a single enemy to teach it, and others observing from the sidelines, a lesson.

Today, Beijing might be tempted to engage in this sort of aggression in multiple areas. And once the shooting starts, the pressures for escalation are likely to be severe.

Numerous scholars have analyzed when and why Beijing uses force. Most reach a similar conclusion: China attacks not when it feels confident about the future but when it worries its enemies are closing in. As Thomas Christensen, the director of the China and the World Program at Columbia University, writes, the Chinese Communist Party wages war when it perceives an opening window of vulnerability regarding its territory and immediate periphery, or a closing window of opportunity to consolidate control over disputed areas. This pattern holds regardless of the strength of China’s opponent. In fact, Beijing often has attacked far superior foes—including the U.S.—to cut them down to size and beat them back from Chinese-claimed or otherwise sensitive territory.

Examples of this are plentiful. In 1950, for instance, the fledgling PRC was less than a year old and destitute, after decades of civil war and Japanese brutality. Yet it nonetheless mauled advancing U.S. forces in Korea out of concern that the Americans would conquer North Korea and eventually use it as a base to attack China. In the expanded Korean War that resulted, China suffered almost 1 million casualties, risked nuclear retaliation, and was slammed with punishing economic sanctions that stayed in place for a generation. But to this day, Beijing celebrates the intervention as a glorious victory that warded off an existential threat to its homeland.

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In 1962, the PLA attacked Indian forces, ostensibly because they had built outposts in Chinese-claimed territory in the Himalayas. The deeper cause was that the CCP feared that it was being surrounded by the Indians, Americans, Soviets, and Chinese Nationalists, all of whom had increased their military presence near China in prior years. Later that decade, fearing that China was next on Moscow’s hit list as part of efforts to defeat “counterrevolution,” the Chinese military ambushed Soviet forces along the Ussuri River and set off a seven-month undeclared conflict that once again risked nuclear war.

In the late ’70s, Beijing picked a fight with Vietnam. The purpose, remarked Deng Xiaoping, then the leader of the CCP,  was to “teach Vietnam a lesson” after it started hosting Soviet forces on its territory and invaded Cambodia, one of China’s only allies. Deng feared that China was being surrounded and that its position would just get worse with time. And from the ’50s to the ’90s, China nearly started wars on three separate occasions by firing artillery or missiles at or near Taiwanese territory, in 1954–55, 1958, and 1995–96. In each case, the goal was—among other things—to deter Taiwan from forging a closer relationship with the U.S. or declaring its independence from China.

To be clear, every decision for war is complex, and factors including domestic politics and the personality quirks of individual leaders have also figured in China’s choices to fight. Yet the overarching pattern of behavior is consistent: Beijing turns violent when confronted with the prospect of permanently losing control of territory. It tends to attack one enemy to scare off others. And it rarely gives advance warning or waits to absorb the initial blow.

For the past few decades, this pattern of first strikes and surprise attacks has seemingly been on hold. Beijing’s military hasn’t fought a major war since 1979. It hasn’t shot at large numbers of foreigners since 1988, when Chinese frigates gunned down 64 Vietnamese sailors in a clash over the Spratly Islands. China’s leaders often claim that their country is a uniquely peaceful great power, and at first glance, the evidence backs them up.

But the China of the past few decades was a historical aberration, able to amass influence and wrest concessions from rivals merely by flaunting its booming economy. With 1.3 billion people, sky-high growth rates, and an authoritarian government that courted big business, China was simply too good to pass up as a consumer market and a low-wage production platform. So country after country curried favor with Beijing.

Britain handed back Hong Kong in 1997. Portugal gave up Macau in 1999. America fast-tracked China into major international institutions, such as the World Trade Organization. Half a dozen countries settled territorial disputes with China from 1991 to 2019, and more than 20 others cut diplomatic ties with Taiwan to secure relations with Beijing. China was advancing its interests without firing a shot and, as Deng remarked, “hiding its capabilities and biding its time.”

Those days are over. China’s economy, the engine of the CCP’s international clout, is starting to sputter. From 2007 to 2019, growth rates fell by more than half, productivity declined by more than 10 percent, and overall debt surged eightfold. The coronavirus pandemic has dragged down growth even further and plunged Beijing’s finances deeper into the red. On top of all this, China’s population is aging at a devastating pace: From 2020 to 2035 alone, it will lose 70 million working-age adults and gain 130 million senior citizens.

Countries have recently become less enthralled by China’s market and more worried about its coercive capabilities and aggressive actions. Fearful that Xi might attempt forced reunification, Taiwan is tightening its ties to the U.S. and revamping its defenses. For roughly a decade, Japan has been engaged in its largest military buildup since the Cold War; the ruling Liberal Democratic Party is now talking about doubling defense spending. India is massing forces near China’s borders and vital sea lanes. Vietnam and Indonesia are expanding their air, naval, and coast-guard forces. Australia is opening up its northern coast to U.S. forces and acquiring long-range missiles and nuclear-powered attack submarines. France, Germany, and the United Kingdom are sending warships into the Indo-Pacific region. Dozens of countries are looking to cut China out of their supply chains; anti-China coalitions, such as the Quad and AUKUS, are proliferating.

Globally, opinion polls show that fear and mistrust of China has reached a post–Cold War high. All of which raises a troubling question: If Beijing sees that its possibilities for easy expansion are narrowing, might it begin resorting to more violent methods?

China is already moving in that direction. It has been using its maritime militia (essentially a covert navy), coast guard, and other “gray zone” assets to coerce weaker rivals in the Western Pacific. Xi’s government provoked a bloody scrap with India along the disputed Sino-Indian frontier in 2020, reportedly out of fear that New Delhi was aligning more closely with Washington.

Beijing certainly has the means to go much further. The CCP has spent $3 trillion over the past three decades building a military that is designed to defeat Chinese neighbors while blunting American power. It also has the motive: In addition to slowing growth and creeping encirclement, China faces closing windows of opportunity in its most important territorial disputes.

China’s geopolitical aims are not a secret. Xi, like his predecessors, desires to make China the preponderant power in Asia and, eventually, the world. He wants to consolidate China’s control over important lands and waterways the country lost during the “century of humiliation” (1839–1949), when China was ripped apart by imperialist powers. These areas include Hong Kong, Taiwan, chunks of Indian-claimed territory, and some 80 percent of the East and South China Seas.

The Western Pacific flash points are particularly vital. Taiwan is the site of a rival, democratic Chinese government in the heart of Asia with strong connections to Washington. Most of China’s trade passes through the East and South China Seas. And China’s primary antagonists in the area—Japan, Taiwan, the Philippines—are part of a strategic chain of U.S. allies and partners whose territory blocks Beijing’s access to the Pacific’s deep waters.

The CCP has staked its legitimacy on reabsorbing these areas and has cultivated an intense, revanchist form of nationalism among the Chinese people. Schoolchildren study the century of humiliation. National holidays commemorate foreign theft of Chinese lands. For many citizens, making China whole again is as much an emotional as a strategic imperative. Compromise is out of the question. “We cannot lose even one inch of the territory left behind by our ancestors,” Xi told James Mattis, then the U.S. secretary of defense, in 2018.

Taiwan is the place where China’s time pressures are most severe. Peaceful reunification has become extremely unlikely: In August 2021, a record 68 percent of the Taiwanese public identified solely as Taiwanese and not as Chinese, and more than 95 percent wanted to maintain the island’s de facto sovereignty or declare independence. China retains viable military options because its missiles could incapacitate Taiwan’s air force and U.S. bases on Okinawa in a surprise attack, paving the way for a successful invasion. But Taiwan and the U.S. now recognize the threat.

President Biden recently stated that America would fight to defend Taiwan from an unprovoked Chinese attack. Washington is planning to harden, disperse, and expand its forces in the Asia-Pacific by the early 2030s. Taiwan is pursuing, on a similar timeline, a defense strategy that would use cheap, plentiful capabilities such as anti-ship missiles and mobile air defenses to make the island an incredibly hard nut to crack. This means that China will have its best chance from now to the end of the decade. Indeed, the military balance will temporarily shift further in Beijing’s favor in the late 2020s, when many aging U.S. ships, submarines, and planes will have to be retired.

This is when America will be in danger, as the former Pentagon official David Ochmanek has remarked, of getting “its ass handed to it” in a high-intensity conflict. If China does attack, Washington could face a choice between escalation or seeing Taiwan conquered.

More such dilemmas are emerging in the East China Sea. China has spent years building an armada, and the balance of naval tonnage currently favors Beijing. It regularly sends well-armed coast-guard vessels into the waters surrounding the disputed Senkaku Islands to weaken Japan’s control there. But Tokyo has plans to regain the strategic advantage by turning amphibious ships into aircraft carriers for stealth fighters armed with long-range anti-ship missiles. It is also using geography to its advantage by stringing missile launchers and submarines along the Ryukyu Islands, which stretch the length of the East China Sea.

Meanwhile, the U.S.-Japan alliance, once a barrier to Japanese remilitarization, is becoming a force multiplier. Tokyo has reinterpreted its constitution to fight more actively alongside the U.S. Japanese forces regularly operate with American naval vessels and aircraft; American F-35 fighters fly off of Japanese ships; U.S. and Japanese officials now confer routinely on how they would respond to Chinese aggression—and publicly advertise that cooperation.

For years, Chinese strategists have speculated about a short, sharp war that would humiliate Japan, rupture its alliance with Washington, and serve as an object lesson for other countries in the region. Beijing could, for instance, land or parachute special forces on the Senkakus, proclaim a large maritime exclusion zone in the area, and back up that declaration by deploying ships, submarines, warplanes, and drones—all supported by hundreds of conventionally armed ballistic missiles aimed at Japanese forces and even targets in Japan. Tokyo then would either have to accept China’s fait accompli or launch a difficult and bloody military operation to recapture the islands. America, too, would have to choose between retreat and honoring the pledges it made—in 2014 and in 2021—to help Japan defend the Senkakus. Retreat might destroy the credibility of the U.S.-Japan alliance. Resistance, war games held by prominent think tanks suggest, could easily lead to rapid escalation resulting in a major regional war.

What about the South China Sea? Here, China has grown accustomed to shoving around weak neighbors. Yet opposition is growing. Vietnam is stocking up on mobile missiles, submarines, fighter jets, and naval vessels that can make operations within 200 miles of its coast very difficult for Chinese forces. Indonesia is ramping up defense spending—a 20 percent hike in 2020 and another 16 percent in 2021—to buy dozens of fighters, surface ships, and submarines armed with lethal anti-ship missiles. Even the Philippines, which courted Beijing for most of President Rodrigo Duterte’s term, has been increasing air and naval patrols, conducting military exercises with the U.S., and planning to purchase cruise missiles from India. At the same time, a formidable coalition of external powers—the U.S., Japan, India, Australia, Britain, France, and Germany—are conducting freedom-of-navigation exercises to contest China’s claims.

From Beijing’s perspective, circumstances are looking ripe for a teachable moment. The best target might be the Philippines. In 2016, Manila challenged China’s claims to the South China Sea before the Permanent Court of Arbitration and won. Beijing might relish the opportunity to reassert its claims—and warn other Southeast Asian countries about the cost of angering China—by ejecting Filipino forces from their isolated, indefensible South China Sea outposts. Here again, Washington would have few good options: It could stand down, effectively allowing China to impose its will on the South China Sea and the countries around it, or it could risk a much bigger war to defend its ally.

Get ready for the “terrible 2020s”: a period in which China has strong incentives to grab “lost” land and break up coalitions seeking to check its advance. Beijing possesses grandiose territorial aims as well as a strategic culture that emphasizes hitting first and hitting hard when it perceives gathering dangers. It has a host of wasting assets in the form of military advantages that may not endure beyond this decade. Such dynamics have driven China to war in the past and could do so again today.

If conflict does break out, U.S. officials should not be sanguine about how it would end. Tamping or reversing Chinese aggression in the Western Pacific could require a massive use of force. An authoritarian CCP, always mindful of its precarious domestic legitimacy, would not want to concede defeat even if it failed to achieve its initial objectives. And historically, modern wars between great powers have more typically gone long than stayed short. All of this implies that a U.S.-China war could be incredibly dangerous, offering few plausible off-ramps and severe pressures for escalation.

The U.S. and its friends can take steps to deter the PRC, such as drastically speeding the acquisition of weaponry and prepositioning military assets in the Taiwan Strait and East and South China Seas, among other efforts, to showcase its hard power and ensure that China can’t easily knock out U.S. combat power in a surprise attack. At the same time, calmly firming up multilateral plans, involving Japan, Australia, and potentially India and Britain, for responding to Chinese aggression could make Beijing realize how costly such aggression might be. If Beijing understands that it cannot easily or cheaply win a conflict, it may be more cautious about starting one.

Most of these steps are not technologically difficult: They exploit capabilities that are available today. Yet they require an intellectual shift—a realization that the United States and its allies need to rapidly shut China’s windows of military opportunity, which means preparing for a war that could well start in 2025 rather than in 2035. And that, in turn, requires a degree of political will and urgency that has so far been lacking.

China’s historical warning signs are already flashing red. Indeed, taking the long view of why and under which circumstances China fights is the key to understanding just how short time has become for America and the other countries in Beijing’s path.

G M

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Re: How War With China Begins
« Reply #1407 on: November 11, 2021, 10:38:32 AM »
Very good article. If things go kinetic in Asia, the NorKs will jump in and at some point it will go
Nuclear if China is losing.

Plan accordingly.

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2021/11/us-china-war/620571/

Worthwhile read all the way through.
---------------------------------------
What Will Drive China to War?
A cold war is already under way. The question is whether Washington can deter Beijing from initiating a hot one.

By Michael Beckley and Hal Brands

NOVEMBER 1, 2021

About the authors: Michael Beckley is a Jeane Kirkpatrick Visiting Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, where his research focuses on U.S.-China competition, and is an associate professor at Tufts University. Hal Brands is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, where he studies US foreign policy and defense strategy, and is the Henry A. Kissinger Distinguished Professor of Global Affairs at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies.

President xi jinping declared in July that those who get in the way of China’s ascent will have their “heads bashed bloody against a Great Wall of steel.” The People’s Liberation Army Navy is churning out ships at a rate not seen since World War II, as Beijing issues threats against Taiwan and other neighbors. Top Pentagon officials have warned that China could start a military conflict in the Taiwan Strait or other geopolitical hot spots sometime this decade.

Analysts and officials in Washington are fretting over worsening tensions between the United States and China and the risks to the world of two superpowers once again clashing rather than cooperating. President Joe Biden has said that America “is not seeking a new cold war.” But that is the wrong way to look at U.S.-China relations. A cold war with Beijing is already under way. The right question, instead, is whether America can deter China from initiating a hot one.

Beijing is a remarkably ambitious revanchist power, one determined to make China whole again by “reuniting” Taiwan with the mainland, turning the East and South China Seas into Chinese lakes, and grabbing regional primacy as a stepping-stone to global power. It is also increasingly encircled, and faces growing resistance on many fronts—just the sort of scenario that has led it to lash out in the past.

The historical record since the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949 is clear: When confronted by a mounting threat to its geopolitical interests, Beijing does not wait to be attacked; it shoots first to gain the advantage of surprise.

In conflicts including the Korean War and clashes with Vietnam in 1979, China has often viewed the use of force as an educational exercise. It is willing to pick even a very costly fight with a single enemy to teach it, and others observing from the sidelines, a lesson.

Today, Beijing might be tempted to engage in this sort of aggression in multiple areas. And once the shooting starts, the pressures for escalation are likely to be severe.

Numerous scholars have analyzed when and why Beijing uses force. Most reach a similar conclusion: China attacks not when it feels confident about the future but when it worries its enemies are closing in. As Thomas Christensen, the director of the China and the World Program at Columbia University, writes, the Chinese Communist Party wages war when it perceives an opening window of vulnerability regarding its territory and immediate periphery, or a closing window of opportunity to consolidate control over disputed areas. This pattern holds regardless of the strength of China’s opponent. In fact, Beijing often has attacked far superior foes—including the U.S.—to cut them down to size and beat them back from Chinese-claimed or otherwise sensitive territory.

Examples of this are plentiful. In 1950, for instance, the fledgling PRC was less than a year old and destitute, after decades of civil war and Japanese brutality. Yet it nonetheless mauled advancing U.S. forces in Korea out of concern that the Americans would conquer North Korea and eventually use it as a base to attack China. In the expanded Korean War that resulted, China suffered almost 1 million casualties, risked nuclear retaliation, and was slammed with punishing economic sanctions that stayed in place for a generation. But to this day, Beijing celebrates the intervention as a glorious victory that warded off an existential threat to its homeland.

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In 1962, the PLA attacked Indian forces, ostensibly because they had built outposts in Chinese-claimed territory in the Himalayas. The deeper cause was that the CCP feared that it was being surrounded by the Indians, Americans, Soviets, and Chinese Nationalists, all of whom had increased their military presence near China in prior years. Later that decade, fearing that China was next on Moscow’s hit list as part of efforts to defeat “counterrevolution,” the Chinese military ambushed Soviet forces along the Ussuri River and set off a seven-month undeclared conflict that once again risked nuclear war.

In the late ’70s, Beijing picked a fight with Vietnam. The purpose, remarked Deng Xiaoping, then the leader of the CCP,  was to “teach Vietnam a lesson” after it started hosting Soviet forces on its territory and invaded Cambodia, one of China’s only allies. Deng feared that China was being surrounded and that its position would just get worse with time. And from the ’50s to the ’90s, China nearly started wars on three separate occasions by firing artillery or missiles at or near Taiwanese territory, in 1954–55, 1958, and 1995–96. In each case, the goal was—among other things—to deter Taiwan from forging a closer relationship with the U.S. or declaring its independence from China.

To be clear, every decision for war is complex, and factors including domestic politics and the personality quirks of individual leaders have also figured in China’s choices to fight. Yet the overarching pattern of behavior is consistent: Beijing turns violent when confronted with the prospect of permanently losing control of territory. It tends to attack one enemy to scare off others. And it rarely gives advance warning or waits to absorb the initial blow.

For the past few decades, this pattern of first strikes and surprise attacks has seemingly been on hold. Beijing’s military hasn’t fought a major war since 1979. It hasn’t shot at large numbers of foreigners since 1988, when Chinese frigates gunned down 64 Vietnamese sailors in a clash over the Spratly Islands. China’s leaders often claim that their country is a uniquely peaceful great power, and at first glance, the evidence backs them up.

But the China of the past few decades was a historical aberration, able to amass influence and wrest concessions from rivals merely by flaunting its booming economy. With 1.3 billion people, sky-high growth rates, and an authoritarian government that courted big business, China was simply too good to pass up as a consumer market and a low-wage production platform. So country after country curried favor with Beijing.

Britain handed back Hong Kong in 1997. Portugal gave up Macau in 1999. America fast-tracked China into major international institutions, such as the World Trade Organization. Half a dozen countries settled territorial disputes with China from 1991 to 2019, and more than 20 others cut diplomatic ties with Taiwan to secure relations with Beijing. China was advancing its interests without firing a shot and, as Deng remarked, “hiding its capabilities and biding its time.”

Those days are over. China’s economy, the engine of the CCP’s international clout, is starting to sputter. From 2007 to 2019, growth rates fell by more than half, productivity declined by more than 10 percent, and overall debt surged eightfold. The coronavirus pandemic has dragged down growth even further and plunged Beijing’s finances deeper into the red. On top of all this, China’s population is aging at a devastating pace: From 2020 to 2035 alone, it will lose 70 million working-age adults and gain 130 million senior citizens.

Countries have recently become less enthralled by China’s market and more worried about its coercive capabilities and aggressive actions. Fearful that Xi might attempt forced reunification, Taiwan is tightening its ties to the U.S. and revamping its defenses. For roughly a decade, Japan has been engaged in its largest military buildup since the Cold War; the ruling Liberal Democratic Party is now talking about doubling defense spending. India is massing forces near China’s borders and vital sea lanes. Vietnam and Indonesia are expanding their air, naval, and coast-guard forces. Australia is opening up its northern coast to U.S. forces and acquiring long-range missiles and nuclear-powered attack submarines. France, Germany, and the United Kingdom are sending warships into the Indo-Pacific region. Dozens of countries are looking to cut China out of their supply chains; anti-China coalitions, such as the Quad and AUKUS, are proliferating.

Globally, opinion polls show that fear and mistrust of China has reached a post–Cold War high. All of which raises a troubling question: If Beijing sees that its possibilities for easy expansion are narrowing, might it begin resorting to more violent methods?

China is already moving in that direction. It has been using its maritime militia (essentially a covert navy), coast guard, and other “gray zone” assets to coerce weaker rivals in the Western Pacific. Xi’s government provoked a bloody scrap with India along the disputed Sino-Indian frontier in 2020, reportedly out of fear that New Delhi was aligning more closely with Washington.

Beijing certainly has the means to go much further. The CCP has spent $3 trillion over the past three decades building a military that is designed to defeat Chinese neighbors while blunting American power. It also has the motive: In addition to slowing growth and creeping encirclement, China faces closing windows of opportunity in its most important territorial disputes.

China’s geopolitical aims are not a secret. Xi, like his predecessors, desires to make China the preponderant power in Asia and, eventually, the world. He wants to consolidate China’s control over important lands and waterways the country lost during the “century of humiliation” (1839–1949), when China was ripped apart by imperialist powers. These areas include Hong Kong, Taiwan, chunks of Indian-claimed territory, and some 80 percent of the East and South China Seas.

The Western Pacific flash points are particularly vital. Taiwan is the site of a rival, democratic Chinese government in the heart of Asia with strong connections to Washington. Most of China’s trade passes through the East and South China Seas. And China’s primary antagonists in the area—Japan, Taiwan, the Philippines—are part of a strategic chain of U.S. allies and partners whose territory blocks Beijing’s access to the Pacific’s deep waters.

The CCP has staked its legitimacy on reabsorbing these areas and has cultivated an intense, revanchist form of nationalism among the Chinese people. Schoolchildren study the century of humiliation. National holidays commemorate foreign theft of Chinese lands. For many citizens, making China whole again is as much an emotional as a strategic imperative. Compromise is out of the question. “We cannot lose even one inch of the territory left behind by our ancestors,” Xi told James Mattis, then the U.S. secretary of defense, in 2018.

Taiwan is the place where China’s time pressures are most severe. Peaceful reunification has become extremely unlikely: In August 2021, a record 68 percent of the Taiwanese public identified solely as Taiwanese and not as Chinese, and more than 95 percent wanted to maintain the island’s de facto sovereignty or declare independence. China retains viable military options because its missiles could incapacitate Taiwan’s air force and U.S. bases on Okinawa in a surprise attack, paving the way for a successful invasion. But Taiwan and the U.S. now recognize the threat.

President Biden recently stated that America would fight to defend Taiwan from an unprovoked Chinese attack. Washington is planning to harden, disperse, and expand its forces in the Asia-Pacific by the early 2030s. Taiwan is pursuing, on a similar timeline, a defense strategy that would use cheap, plentiful capabilities such as anti-ship missiles and mobile air defenses to make the island an incredibly hard nut to crack. This means that China will have its best chance from now to the end of the decade. Indeed, the military balance will temporarily shift further in Beijing’s favor in the late 2020s, when many aging U.S. ships, submarines, and planes will have to be retired.

This is when America will be in danger, as the former Pentagon official David Ochmanek has remarked, of getting “its ass handed to it” in a high-intensity conflict. If China does attack, Washington could face a choice between escalation or seeing Taiwan conquered.

More such dilemmas are emerging in the East China Sea. China has spent years building an armada, and the balance of naval tonnage currently favors Beijing. It regularly sends well-armed coast-guard vessels into the waters surrounding the disputed Senkaku Islands to weaken Japan’s control there. But Tokyo has plans to regain the strategic advantage by turning amphibious ships into aircraft carriers for stealth fighters armed with long-range anti-ship missiles. It is also using geography to its advantage by stringing missile launchers and submarines along the Ryukyu Islands, which stretch the length of the East China Sea.

Meanwhile, the U.S.-Japan alliance, once a barrier to Japanese remilitarization, is becoming a force multiplier. Tokyo has reinterpreted its constitution to fight more actively alongside the U.S. Japanese forces regularly operate with American naval vessels and aircraft; American F-35 fighters fly off of Japanese ships; U.S. and Japanese officials now confer routinely on how they would respond to Chinese aggression—and publicly advertise that cooperation.

For years, Chinese strategists have speculated about a short, sharp war that would humiliate Japan, rupture its alliance with Washington, and serve as an object lesson for other countries in the region. Beijing could, for instance, land or parachute special forces on the Senkakus, proclaim a large maritime exclusion zone in the area, and back up that declaration by deploying ships, submarines, warplanes, and drones—all supported by hundreds of conventionally armed ballistic missiles aimed at Japanese forces and even targets in Japan. Tokyo then would either have to accept China’s fait accompli or launch a difficult and bloody military operation to recapture the islands. America, too, would have to choose between retreat and honoring the pledges it made—in 2014 and in 2021—to help Japan defend the Senkakus. Retreat might destroy the credibility of the U.S.-Japan alliance. Resistance, war games held by prominent think tanks suggest, could easily lead to rapid escalation resulting in a major regional war.

What about the South China Sea? Here, China has grown accustomed to shoving around weak neighbors. Yet opposition is growing. Vietnam is stocking up on mobile missiles, submarines, fighter jets, and naval vessels that can make operations within 200 miles of its coast very difficult for Chinese forces. Indonesia is ramping up defense spending—a 20 percent hike in 2020 and another 16 percent in 2021—to buy dozens of fighters, surface ships, and submarines armed with lethal anti-ship missiles. Even the Philippines, which courted Beijing for most of President Rodrigo Duterte’s term, has been increasing air and naval patrols, conducting military exercises with the U.S., and planning to purchase cruise missiles from India. At the same time, a formidable coalition of external powers—the U.S., Japan, India, Australia, Britain, France, and Germany—are conducting freedom-of-navigation exercises to contest China’s claims.

From Beijing’s perspective, circumstances are looking ripe for a teachable moment. The best target might be the Philippines. In 2016, Manila challenged China’s claims to the South China Sea before the Permanent Court of Arbitration and won. Beijing might relish the opportunity to reassert its claims—and warn other Southeast Asian countries about the cost of angering China—by ejecting Filipino forces from their isolated, indefensible South China Sea outposts. Here again, Washington would have few good options: It could stand down, effectively allowing China to impose its will on the South China Sea and the countries around it, or it could risk a much bigger war to defend its ally.

Get ready for the “terrible 2020s”: a period in which China has strong incentives to grab “lost” land and break up coalitions seeking to check its advance. Beijing possesses grandiose territorial aims as well as a strategic culture that emphasizes hitting first and hitting hard when it perceives gathering dangers. It has a host of wasting assets in the form of military advantages that may not endure beyond this decade. Such dynamics have driven China to war in the past and could do so again today.

If conflict does break out, U.S. officials should not be sanguine about how it would end. Tamping or reversing Chinese aggression in the Western Pacific could require a massive use of force. An authoritarian CCP, always mindful of its precarious domestic legitimacy, would not want to concede defeat even if it failed to achieve its initial objectives. And historically, modern wars between great powers have more typically gone long than stayed short. All of this implies that a U.S.-China war could be incredibly dangerous, offering few plausible off-ramps and severe pressures for escalation.

The U.S. and its friends can take steps to deter the PRC, such as drastically speeding the acquisition of weaponry and prepositioning military assets in the Taiwan Strait and East and South China Seas, among other efforts, to showcase its hard power and ensure that China can’t easily knock out U.S. combat power in a surprise attack. At the same time, calmly firming up multilateral plans, involving Japan, Australia, and potentially India and Britain, for responding to Chinese aggression could make Beijing realize how costly such aggression might be. If Beijing understands that it cannot easily or cheaply win a conflict, it may be more cautious about starting one.

Most of these steps are not technologically difficult: They exploit capabilities that are available today. Yet they require an intellectual shift—a realization that the United States and its allies need to rapidly shut China’s windows of military opportunity, which means preparing for a war that could well start in 2025 rather than in 2035. And that, in turn, requires a degree of political will and urgency that has so far been lacking.

China’s historical warning signs are already flashing red. Indeed, taking the long view of why and under which circumstances China fights is the key to understanding just how short time has become for America and the other countries in Beijing’s path.

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Re: How War With China Begins/How we lose
« Reply #1408 on: November 11, 2021, 10:47:07 AM »
https://nypost.com/2021/11/10/pentagon-climate-and-china-are-equally-important-threats-to-us/

What’s the environmental impact of sunken US carrier groups at the bottom of the S. China sea?

Very good article. If things go kinetic in Asia, the NorKs will jump in and at some point it will go
Nuclear if China is losing.

Plan accordingly.

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2021/11/us-china-war/620571/

Worthwhile read all the way through.
---------------------------------------
What Will Drive China to War?
A cold war is already under way. The question is whether Washington can deter Beijing from initiating a hot one.

By Michael Beckley and Hal Brands

NOVEMBER 1, 2021

About the authors: Michael Beckley is a Jeane Kirkpatrick Visiting Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, where his research focuses on U.S.-China competition, and is an associate professor at Tufts University. Hal Brands is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, where he studies US foreign policy and defense strategy, and is the Henry A. Kissinger Distinguished Professor of Global Affairs at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies.

President xi jinping declared in July that those who get in the way of China’s ascent will have their “heads bashed bloody against a Great Wall of steel.” The People’s Liberation Army Navy is churning out ships at a rate not seen since World War II, as Beijing issues threats against Taiwan and other neighbors. Top Pentagon officials have warned that China could start a military conflict in the Taiwan Strait or other geopolitical hot spots sometime this decade.

Analysts and officials in Washington are fretting over worsening tensions between the United States and China and the risks to the world of two superpowers once again clashing rather than cooperating. President Joe Biden has said that America “is not seeking a new cold war.” But that is the wrong way to look at U.S.-China relations. A cold war with Beijing is already under way. The right question, instead, is whether America can deter China from initiating a hot one.

Beijing is a remarkably ambitious revanchist power, one determined to make China whole again by “reuniting” Taiwan with the mainland, turning the East and South China Seas into Chinese lakes, and grabbing regional primacy as a stepping-stone to global power. It is also increasingly encircled, and faces growing resistance on many fronts—just the sort of scenario that has led it to lash out in the past.

The historical record since the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949 is clear: When confronted by a mounting threat to its geopolitical interests, Beijing does not wait to be attacked; it shoots first to gain the advantage of surprise.

In conflicts including the Korean War and clashes with Vietnam in 1979, China has often viewed the use of force as an educational exercise. It is willing to pick even a very costly fight with a single enemy to teach it, and others observing from the sidelines, a lesson.

Today, Beijing might be tempted to engage in this sort of aggression in multiple areas. And once the shooting starts, the pressures for escalation are likely to be severe.

Numerous scholars have analyzed when and why Beijing uses force. Most reach a similar conclusion: China attacks not when it feels confident about the future but when it worries its enemies are closing in. As Thomas Christensen, the director of the China and the World Program at Columbia University, writes, the Chinese Communist Party wages war when it perceives an opening window of vulnerability regarding its territory and immediate periphery, or a closing window of opportunity to consolidate control over disputed areas. This pattern holds regardless of the strength of China’s opponent. In fact, Beijing often has attacked far superior foes—including the U.S.—to cut them down to size and beat them back from Chinese-claimed or otherwise sensitive territory.

Examples of this are plentiful. In 1950, for instance, the fledgling PRC was less than a year old and destitute, after decades of civil war and Japanese brutality. Yet it nonetheless mauled advancing U.S. forces in Korea out of concern that the Americans would conquer North Korea and eventually use it as a base to attack China. In the expanded Korean War that resulted, China suffered almost 1 million casualties, risked nuclear retaliation, and was slammed with punishing economic sanctions that stayed in place for a generation. But to this day, Beijing celebrates the intervention as a glorious victory that warded off an existential threat to its homeland.

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In 1962, the PLA attacked Indian forces, ostensibly because they had built outposts in Chinese-claimed territory in the Himalayas. The deeper cause was that the CCP feared that it was being surrounded by the Indians, Americans, Soviets, and Chinese Nationalists, all of whom had increased their military presence near China in prior years. Later that decade, fearing that China was next on Moscow’s hit list as part of efforts to defeat “counterrevolution,” the Chinese military ambushed Soviet forces along the Ussuri River and set off a seven-month undeclared conflict that once again risked nuclear war.

In the late ’70s, Beijing picked a fight with Vietnam. The purpose, remarked Deng Xiaoping, then the leader of the CCP,  was to “teach Vietnam a lesson” after it started hosting Soviet forces on its territory and invaded Cambodia, one of China’s only allies. Deng feared that China was being surrounded and that its position would just get worse with time. And from the ’50s to the ’90s, China nearly started wars on three separate occasions by firing artillery or missiles at or near Taiwanese territory, in 1954–55, 1958, and 1995–96. In each case, the goal was—among other things—to deter Taiwan from forging a closer relationship with the U.S. or declaring its independence from China.

To be clear, every decision for war is complex, and factors including domestic politics and the personality quirks of individual leaders have also figured in China’s choices to fight. Yet the overarching pattern of behavior is consistent: Beijing turns violent when confronted with the prospect of permanently losing control of territory. It tends to attack one enemy to scare off others. And it rarely gives advance warning or waits to absorb the initial blow.

For the past few decades, this pattern of first strikes and surprise attacks has seemingly been on hold. Beijing’s military hasn’t fought a major war since 1979. It hasn’t shot at large numbers of foreigners since 1988, when Chinese frigates gunned down 64 Vietnamese sailors in a clash over the Spratly Islands. China’s leaders often claim that their country is a uniquely peaceful great power, and at first glance, the evidence backs them up.

But the China of the past few decades was a historical aberration, able to amass influence and wrest concessions from rivals merely by flaunting its booming economy. With 1.3 billion people, sky-high growth rates, and an authoritarian government that courted big business, China was simply too good to pass up as a consumer market and a low-wage production platform. So country after country curried favor with Beijing.

Britain handed back Hong Kong in 1997. Portugal gave up Macau in 1999. America fast-tracked China into major international institutions, such as the World Trade Organization. Half a dozen countries settled territorial disputes with China from 1991 to 2019, and more than 20 others cut diplomatic ties with Taiwan to secure relations with Beijing. China was advancing its interests without firing a shot and, as Deng remarked, “hiding its capabilities and biding its time.”

Those days are over. China’s economy, the engine of the CCP’s international clout, is starting to sputter. From 2007 to 2019, growth rates fell by more than half, productivity declined by more than 10 percent, and overall debt surged eightfold. The coronavirus pandemic has dragged down growth even further and plunged Beijing’s finances deeper into the red. On top of all this, China’s population is aging at a devastating pace: From 2020 to 2035 alone, it will lose 70 million working-age adults and gain 130 million senior citizens.

Countries have recently become less enthralled by China’s market and more worried about its coercive capabilities and aggressive actions. Fearful that Xi might attempt forced reunification, Taiwan is tightening its ties to the U.S. and revamping its defenses. For roughly a decade, Japan has been engaged in its largest military buildup since the Cold War; the ruling Liberal Democratic Party is now talking about doubling defense spending. India is massing forces near China’s borders and vital sea lanes. Vietnam and Indonesia are expanding their air, naval, and coast-guard forces. Australia is opening up its northern coast to U.S. forces and acquiring long-range missiles and nuclear-powered attack submarines. France, Germany, and the United Kingdom are sending warships into the Indo-Pacific region. Dozens of countries are looking to cut China out of their supply chains; anti-China coalitions, such as the Quad and AUKUS, are proliferating.

Globally, opinion polls show that fear and mistrust of China has reached a post–Cold War high. All of which raises a troubling question: If Beijing sees that its possibilities for easy expansion are narrowing, might it begin resorting to more violent methods?

China is already moving in that direction. It has been using its maritime militia (essentially a covert navy), coast guard, and other “gray zone” assets to coerce weaker rivals in the Western Pacific. Xi’s government provoked a bloody scrap with India along the disputed Sino-Indian frontier in 2020, reportedly out of fear that New Delhi was aligning more closely with Washington.

Beijing certainly has the means to go much further. The CCP has spent $3 trillion over the past three decades building a military that is designed to defeat Chinese neighbors while blunting American power. It also has the motive: In addition to slowing growth and creeping encirclement, China faces closing windows of opportunity in its most important territorial disputes.

China’s geopolitical aims are not a secret. Xi, like his predecessors, desires to make China the preponderant power in Asia and, eventually, the world. He wants to consolidate China’s control over important lands and waterways the country lost during the “century of humiliation” (1839–1949), when China was ripped apart by imperialist powers. These areas include Hong Kong, Taiwan, chunks of Indian-claimed territory, and some 80 percent of the East and South China Seas.

The Western Pacific flash points are particularly vital. Taiwan is the site of a rival, democratic Chinese government in the heart of Asia with strong connections to Washington. Most of China’s trade passes through the East and South China Seas. And China’s primary antagonists in the area—Japan, Taiwan, the Philippines—are part of a strategic chain of U.S. allies and partners whose territory blocks Beijing’s access to the Pacific’s deep waters.

The CCP has staked its legitimacy on reabsorbing these areas and has cultivated an intense, revanchist form of nationalism among the Chinese people. Schoolchildren study the century of humiliation. National holidays commemorate foreign theft of Chinese lands. For many citizens, making China whole again is as much an emotional as a strategic imperative. Compromise is out of the question. “We cannot lose even one inch of the territory left behind by our ancestors,” Xi told James Mattis, then the U.S. secretary of defense, in 2018.

Taiwan is the place where China’s time pressures are most severe. Peaceful reunification has become extremely unlikely: In August 2021, a record 68 percent of the Taiwanese public identified solely as Taiwanese and not as Chinese, and more than 95 percent wanted to maintain the island’s de facto sovereignty or declare independence. China retains viable military options because its missiles could incapacitate Taiwan’s air force and U.S. bases on Okinawa in a surprise attack, paving the way for a successful invasion. But Taiwan and the U.S. now recognize the threat.

President Biden recently stated that America would fight to defend Taiwan from an unprovoked Chinese attack. Washington is planning to harden, disperse, and expand its forces in the Asia-Pacific by the early 2030s. Taiwan is pursuing, on a similar timeline, a defense strategy that would use cheap, plentiful capabilities such as anti-ship missiles and mobile air defenses to make the island an incredibly hard nut to crack. This means that China will have its best chance from now to the end of the decade. Indeed, the military balance will temporarily shift further in Beijing’s favor in the late 2020s, when many aging U.S. ships, submarines, and planes will have to be retired.

This is when America will be in danger, as the former Pentagon official David Ochmanek has remarked, of getting “its ass handed to it” in a high-intensity conflict. If China does attack, Washington could face a choice between escalation or seeing Taiwan conquered.

More such dilemmas are emerging in the East China Sea. China has spent years building an armada, and the balance of naval tonnage currently favors Beijing. It regularly sends well-armed coast-guard vessels into the waters surrounding the disputed Senkaku Islands to weaken Japan’s control there. But Tokyo has plans to regain the strategic advantage by turning amphibious ships into aircraft carriers for stealth fighters armed with long-range anti-ship missiles. It is also using geography to its advantage by stringing missile launchers and submarines along the Ryukyu Islands, which stretch the length of the East China Sea.

Meanwhile, the U.S.-Japan alliance, once a barrier to Japanese remilitarization, is becoming a force multiplier. Tokyo has reinterpreted its constitution to fight more actively alongside the U.S. Japanese forces regularly operate with American naval vessels and aircraft; American F-35 fighters fly off of Japanese ships; U.S. and Japanese officials now confer routinely on how they would respond to Chinese aggression—and publicly advertise that cooperation.

For years, Chinese strategists have speculated about a short, sharp war that would humiliate Japan, rupture its alliance with Washington, and serve as an object lesson for other countries in the region. Beijing could, for instance, land or parachute special forces on the Senkakus, proclaim a large maritime exclusion zone in the area, and back up that declaration by deploying ships, submarines, warplanes, and drones—all supported by hundreds of conventionally armed ballistic missiles aimed at Japanese forces and even targets in Japan. Tokyo then would either have to accept China’s fait accompli or launch a difficult and bloody military operation to recapture the islands. America, too, would have to choose between retreat and honoring the pledges it made—in 2014 and in 2021—to help Japan defend the Senkakus. Retreat might destroy the credibility of the U.S.-Japan alliance. Resistance, war games held by prominent think tanks suggest, could easily lead to rapid escalation resulting in a major regional war.

What about the South China Sea? Here, China has grown accustomed to shoving around weak neighbors. Yet opposition is growing. Vietnam is stocking up on mobile missiles, submarines, fighter jets, and naval vessels that can make operations within 200 miles of its coast very difficult for Chinese forces. Indonesia is ramping up defense spending—a 20 percent hike in 2020 and another 16 percent in 2021—to buy dozens of fighters, surface ships, and submarines armed with lethal anti-ship missiles. Even the Philippines, which courted Beijing for most of President Rodrigo Duterte’s term, has been increasing air and naval patrols, conducting military exercises with the U.S., and planning to purchase cruise missiles from India. At the same time, a formidable coalition of external powers—the U.S., Japan, India, Australia, Britain, France, and Germany—are conducting freedom-of-navigation exercises to contest China’s claims.

From Beijing’s perspective, circumstances are looking ripe for a teachable moment. The best target might be the Philippines. In 2016, Manila challenged China’s claims to the South China Sea before the Permanent Court of Arbitration and won. Beijing might relish the opportunity to reassert its claims—and warn other Southeast Asian countries about the cost of angering China—by ejecting Filipino forces from their isolated, indefensible South China Sea outposts. Here again, Washington would have few good options: It could stand down, effectively allowing China to impose its will on the South China Sea and the countries around it, or it could risk a much bigger war to defend its ally.

Get ready for the “terrible 2020s”: a period in which China has strong incentives to grab “lost” land and break up coalitions seeking to check its advance. Beijing possesses grandiose territorial aims as well as a strategic culture that emphasizes hitting first and hitting hard when it perceives gathering dangers. It has a host of wasting assets in the form of military advantages that may not endure beyond this decade. Such dynamics have driven China to war in the past and could do so again today.

If conflict does break out, U.S. officials should not be sanguine about how it would end. Tamping or reversing Chinese aggression in the Western Pacific could require a massive use of force. An authoritarian CCP, always mindful of its precarious domestic legitimacy, would not want to concede defeat even if it failed to achieve its initial objectives. And historically, modern wars between great powers have more typically gone long than stayed short. All of this implies that a U.S.-China war could be incredibly dangerous, offering few plausible off-ramps and severe pressures for escalation.

The U.S. and its friends can take steps to deter the PRC, such as drastically speeding the acquisition of weaponry and prepositioning military assets in the Taiwan Strait and East and South China Seas, among other efforts, to showcase its hard power and ensure that China can’t easily knock out U.S. combat power in a surprise attack. At the same time, calmly firming up multilateral plans, involving Japan, Australia, and potentially India and Britain, for responding to Chinese aggression could make Beijing realize how costly such aggression might be. If Beijing understands that it cannot easily or cheaply win a conflict, it may be more cautious about starting one.

Most of these steps are not technologically difficult: They exploit capabilities that are available today. Yet they require an intellectual shift—a realization that the United States and its allies need to rapidly shut China’s windows of military opportunity, which means preparing for a war that could well start in 2025 rather than in 2035. And that, in turn, requires a degree of political will and urgency that has so far been lacking.

China’s historical warning signs are already flashing red. Indeed, taking the long view of why and under which circumstances China fights is the key to understanding just how short time has become for America and the other countries in Beijing’s path.

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China v. Philippines-US military pact
« Reply #1409 on: November 19, 2021, 02:17:47 PM »
A South China Sea Flare-Up Renews Attention on the U.S.-Philippine Military Pact
5 MIN READNov 19, 2021 | 19:42 GMT





A Chinese coast guard ship prepares to anchor at the Manila port in the Philippines on Jan. 14, 2020.
A Chinese coast guard ship prepares to anchor at the Manila port in the Philippines on Jan. 14, 2020.

(STR/AFP via Getty Images)

The latest incident in the South China Sea is reinvigorating attention on the U.S.-Philippine Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT), which pledges U.S. assistance if the Philippines comes under attack, and Washington’s role in the Indo-Pacific. On Nov. 16, three Chinese coast guard ships blocked two Philippine resupply ships from reaching the Philippine-occupied but Chinese-claimed Ayungin Shoal, also known as the Second Thomas Shoal or Renai Jiao, in the South China Sea. The incident comes as the United States and the Philippines are shoring up relations, which have been periodically strained under Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte. It also comes shortly after the declaration of candidates for the Philippine presidential elections, which are scheduled for May 2022. In response to the blocking of the two ships, Philippine officials and politicians — including several of those candidates — asserted that any action against Philippine public vessels falls within the scope of the Mutual Defense Treaty, though most fell short of calling for a U.S. intervention at this time.

Manila protested the latest Chinese action, which Beijing declared was justified and legal after the Philippine vessels allegedly trespassed Chinese waters.

The Philippine military has occupied the Ayungin Shoal since intentionally grounding a ship on the reef in 1999 amid an earlier round of competition with China over reefs and islets in the South China Sea.

Philippine claims in the South China Sea (or what it calls the West Philippine Sea) were already a key issue ahead of next year’s elections, but this incident appears to ensure Manila’s return to a more assertive policy. During Duterte’s presidency, Manila took a more accommodative approach to China, with the president seeking Chinese investment in return for setting aside disputes in the South China Sea. Duterte also threatened to end the Visiting Forces Agreement with the United States, accusing Washington of failing to defend Philippine interests and of straining Philippine-Chinese relations without providing any benefits to Manila. But the promised China-funded economic development ultimately proved underwhelming, and Beijing never softened its assertive claims in disputed waters. As a result, Manila has started shifting back to a stronger stance against Chinese claims in the South China Sea. In recent months, there has also been a series of U.S.-Philippine dialogues, healing the rift between the treaty allies and reinforcing the value of defense cooperation.

In 2016, the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague ruled that Chinese claims to the so-called nine-dash line were invalid and that China’s occupation of reefs and islets in the South China Sea did not give Beijing territorial waters. The ruling was seen as a victory for the Philippines, which sought to reverse Chinese occupation and island-building and regain access to key reefs for Philippine fishing vessels.

Duterte promised to set aside the landmark South China Sea ruling, easing tensions with China. His policies were controversial, particularly as the president often admitted the Philippines had no power to secure its maritime claims in the region — something that appeared an admission of defeat.

In February, Duterte formally notified the United States of his government’s intention to terminate the Visiting Forces Agreement, which is the framework under which U.S. military personnel operate in the Philippines on a rotational basis, allowing for the implementation of other deals such as the Mutual Defense Treaty. The Philippine government delayed and ultimately rescinded the threat of termination.

With Philippine-U.S. defense relations revived, and Manila reaffirming the MDT, future incidents in the South China Sea could test Washington’s risk tolerance and willingness to confront China more directly in the contested waterway. Philippine officials have said they intend to send coast guard ships and fisheries vessels to escort further resupply runs to Ayungin Shoal. But if China continues to intervene, Manila may call on Washington to intercede. The United States has rarely intervened directly in a standoff between Chinese vessels and those of a U.S. ally or partner, which would be seen as escalating the broader U.S.-China defense competition. However, an activist Indo-Pacific policy, combined with lingering questions of U.S. commitment, may lead to more direct U.S. action in future stand-offs. Washington is likely to use the coast guard initially, as a way to reduce the potential for escalation. But more frequent confrontations will probably eventually force the United States to demonstrate its commitment to its allies, raising the likelihood of a more direct standoff between the U.S. and Chinese navies. This will intensify the need for dialogue with the Chinese to establish de-escalation protocols while increasing the potential for miscalculations or accidents in the near term.

Over the past three or four years, the United States has affirmed its commitment to backing its allies and partners when challenged, while still claiming it doesn’t pick sides over the disputed islets. This has included new assurances of U.S. support for both Japan over the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands, as well as for the Philippines over disputed reefs in the region.

Washington’s actions in the South China Sea have so far primarily been through statements and joint maritime training. The United States has also routinely conducted so-called Freedom of Navigation Operations (FONOPs) in the South China Sea over the past decade, with U.S. Navy vessels sailing through waters the United States asserts are international, despite Chinese claims to sovereignty.


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GPF
« Reply #1411 on: November 22, 2021, 09:40:04 AM »
Chinese passage. A Chinese naval ship sailed through Japanese waters for the first time in four years last week, according to the Japanese Defense Ministry. The passage took place off the southwestern prefecture of Kagoshima on Wednesday and Thursday. Exactly what type of warship was involved is not clear. Meanwhile, a report from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences warned that Japan may be on a political and military trajectory toward being willing and capable of intervening on Taiwan’s behalf in a conflict.

Cooperation. The U.S. and Taiwan are kicking off talks on economic integration on Monday, according to the U.S. State Department. This is the second such iteration of the talks. From chips to trade hurdles to Taiwan’s fears of economic dependency on China, there should be plenty to talk about.

Sailing through. The Philippines is set to resume resupply missions to troops stationed on a Philippine-controlled reef in the Spratly archipelago. Such missions were disrupted last week by the Chinese coast guard, prompting warnings from the U.S. that an attack on Philippine vessels would trigger the U.S.-Philippines Mutual Defense Treaty – and making for some awkward moments at this week’s China-Association of Southeast Asian Nations summit. Meanwhile, new details on China’s recent hypersonic missile tests have been released. Of note, at least one test was conducted in the South China Sea.

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WT: Philippine supply mission gets past Chinese Blockade
« Reply #1412 on: November 24, 2021, 03:28:20 AM »
PHILIPPINES

Philippine supply mission gets past Chinese blockade

No water cannons as boats reach disputed shoals

BY JIM GOMEZ ASSOCIATED PRESS MANILA, PHILIPPINES | The Philippine navy successfully transported food supplies to Filipino forces guarding a disputed shoal in the South China Sea on Tuesday, a week after China’s coast guard used water cannons to force the supply boats to turn back, sparking outrage and warnings from Manila, officials said.

Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana said the two wooden boats carrying navy personnel reached government forces stationed on a military ship at Second Thomas Shoal without any major incident. President Rodrigo Duterte strongly condemned last week’s Chinese blockade of the supply boats, in a regional summit led by Chinese President Xi Jinping on Monday.

However, Mr. Lorenzana said that while the Philippine navy personnel were unloading supplies from the boats, a Chinese coast guard ship deployed a rubber boat with three personnel who took pictures and video of the delivery. “I have communicated to the Chinese ambassador that we consider these acts as a form of intimidation and harassment,” Mr. Lorenzana said.

The supply boats reached the shoal without a Philippine military escort in accordance with a request by China’s ambassador to Manila, who assured Mr. Lorenzana over the weekend that the boats would not be blocked again, the defense chief said.

But a Philippine military plane flew over as the supply boats arrived around noon at the remote shoal, which has been surrounded by Chinese surveillance ships in a yearslong territorial standoff. A Philippine coast guard ship also patrolled the waters a few miles away and military offi cials in their headquarters in Manila closely monitored the 30-hour journey of the supply boats, officials said.

The Philippines says the shoal is in its internationally recognized exclusive economic zone, but China insists it has sovereignty over the waters and has the right to defend it.

Officials said the Philippine government conveyed its “outrage, condemnation and protest of the incident” to China after two Chinese coast guard ships blocked the two Filipino boats on Nov. 16 and a third coast guard ship sprayed highpressure streams of water on the boats, which were forced to abort their mission.

Philippine Foreign Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. warned China that the supply boats are covered by a mutual defense treaty with the United States. Washington later said it was standing by the Philippines “in the face of this escalation that directly threatens regional peace and stability,” and reiterated “that an armed attack on Philippine public vessels in the South China Sea would invoke U.S. mutual defense commitments” under the 1951 U.S.-Philippines Mutual Defense Treaty.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian responded to the Philippine protests by saying that China’s coast guard had upheld Chinese sovereignty after the Philippine ships entered Chinese waters at night without permission.

Mr. Duterte, who has at times expressed a desire for closer ties with China, did not comment on Beijing’s action until Monday, when he raised the issue at a meeting of leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and China.

“We abhor the recent event in the Ayungin Shoal and view with grave concern other similar developments,” Mr. Duterte said, using the Philippine name for the shoal. “This does not speak well of the relations between our nations and our partnership.”

Mr. Xi did not respond directly to Mr. Duterte’s remarks but gave an assurance that China will not bully its smaller neighbors or seek dominance over Southeast Asia, diplomats told The Associated Press.

China’s increasingly assertive acts in the disputed waters have been protested by coastal states, including by the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia and Indonesia.

It was the latest flare-up in long-simmering disputes in the strategic waterway, where China, the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan have overlapping claims. China has transformed seven shoals into missile-protected island bases to cement its assertions, ratcheting up tensions.

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us invites Taiwan
« Reply #1413 on: November 25, 2021, 09:23:35 AM »
Good!

DIPLOMACY

China critical of U.S. decision to invite Taiwan to summit

BY ALEXANDRA JAFFE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Biden administration has invited Taiwan to its Summit for Democracy next month, the State Department announced, prompting sharp criticism from China, which considers the self-ruled island as part of its sovereign territory.

The summit makes good on a pledge that then-candidate Joseph R. Biden made during his 2020 campaign, and it reflects his emphasis on returning the U.S. to a global leadership position among world democracies. The event is aimed at gathering government, civil society and private sector leaders to work together on fighting authoritarianism and global corruption and defending human rights.

The invitation list features 110 countries, including Taiwan, but does not include China or Russia. The inclusion of Taiwan comes as tensions between Washington and Beijing have ramped up over America’s approach to the island nation.

The United States’ “One China” policy recognizes Beijing as the government of China but allows informal relations and defense ties with Taipei.

But in late October, Mr. Biden set off alarm bells in Beijing by saying the U.S. has a firm commitment to help Taiwan defend itself in the event of a Chinese attack. White House officials were quick to deny that Mr. Biden’s remarks represented a change in longstanding U.S. policy, but the administration has also taken a number of steps in recent months to upgrade bilateral ties with Tiapei.

During a three-hour virtual meeting earlier this month between Mr. Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping, Mr. Biden reiterated U.S. support for the “One China” policy but also said he “strongly opposes unilateral efforts to change the status quo or undermine peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait,” according to the White House.

The democracy summit invite list set off a new round of criticism from Beijing.

“What the U.S. did proves that the so-called democracy is just a pretext and tool for it to pursue geopolitical goals, suppress other countries, divide the world, serve its own interest and maintain its hegemony in the world,” said Zhao Lijian, spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Zhu Fenglian, spokesperson for China’s Taiwan Affairs Office, said Wednesday “we firmly oppose any form of official contacts between the U.S. and the Chinese region of Taiwan.”

Taiwan’s Foreign Ministry said the government would be represented by Digital Minister Audrey Tang and Hsiao Bi-khim, Taiwan’s de facto ambassador in Washington, the Reuters news agency reported.

“Our country’s invitation to participate in the ‘Summit for Democracy’ is an affirmation of Taiwan’s efforts to promote the values of democracy and human rights over the years,” the ministry said in a statement.

Mr. Biden has repeatedly pitched the gathering as part of a larger competition with authoritarian nations such as China, which he said are using their recent economic gains and the domestic problems of the U.S. and other leading Western powers to argue that their systems are better. The invite list underscores the challenging geopolitics that Mr. Biden will have to navigate at the summit: While U.S. allies like Japan and South Korea were invited, still others, including Vietnam, Egypt and NATO member Turkey, were not.

The summit preparations had to negotiate another diplomatic minefield when the White House confirmed to the Voice of America that Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido and his representatives would be receiving an invitation to the summit. Both the Trump and Biden administrations have clashed with the socialist government of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.

The U.S. and many other nations have recognized Mr. Guaido’s claim to be the oil-rich South American country’s “interim president,” following national elections in 2019 won by Mr. Maduro’s supporters that were widely criticized as rigged.

Juan Gonzalez, the senior director on hemispheric affairs on the National Security Council, told VOA this week that the summit guest list will “incorporate in a robust way” representatives from democracy-challenged countries, including Cuba, Nicaragua and “above all Venezuela, because of everything that is going on there right now.”

Mr. Gonzalez said the final guest list was still being formulated, but members of Mr. Guaido’s opposition movement would participate, including on one panel on “democratic resilience” in the face of official repression





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Stratfor: Philippines clarifies its threshold for triggering US military suppor
« Reply #1418 on: December 08, 2021, 06:52:33 PM »
second

The Philippines Clarifies Its Threshold for Triggering U.S. Military Support in the South China Sea
3 MIN READDec 8, 2021 | 22:59 GMT





A helicopter takes off from a U.S. Navy vessel during joint U.S.-Philippines military exercises in waters facing the South China Sea on April 11, 2019.
A helicopter takes off from a U.S. Navy ship during joint military exercises with the Philippines in waters facing the South China Sea on April 11, 2019.

(TED ALJIBE/AFP via Getty Images)

The Philippines’ clarification of when maritime confrontations with China would trigger its defense pact with the United States reflect Manila’s bolder efforts to regain initiative in the South China Sea. In an interview with CNN Philippines over the weekend, the chief of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, Lt. Gen. Andres Centino, clarified Manila’s stance on the invocation of its Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT) with the United States, which pledges U.S. assistance if the Philippines comes under attack, following China’s Nov. 16 use of water cannons against Philippine supply ships. Specifically, Centino said that “the act of using the water cannon against our vessel [was] not considered an armed attack,” though it could be seen as “a hostile act.” Hostile acts do not trigger the MDT, which only pledges U.S. assistance if the Philippines comes under an armed attack. Centino’s clarification thus temporarily eases concerns that future clashes could draw the United States into more direct confrontations with China in the South China Sea. But his comments also send a warning to Beijing that escalation beyond water cannons could prompt Manila to call for U.S. support.

In November, Chinese vessels used water cannons to block Philippine supply ships from reaching Ayungin Shoal (also known as the Second Thomas Shoal or Renai Jiao), a reef occupied by Philippine marines as part of its claim to disputed islets in the South China Sea.

Manila’s initial response included both a protest to Beijing, as well as a commitment to continue with supply runs in the future escorted by the Philippine Coast Guard. Philippine Coast Guard Vice Admiral Oscar Endona, speaking at a Senate sub-committee meeting on Dec. 7, noted that coast guard vessels had their own water cannons and would use them in response to any similar acts by Chinese ships against resupply missions.

Moving forward, Manila’s policy toward its maritime claims will be more proactive. On Dec. 6, the Philippine House of Representatives also approved a Maritime Zones Act, a legal mechanism allowing Manila to build on the Baseline Act of 2009, define its claimed maritime territories, and set the legal framework for enforcement. The new act highlights Manila’s switch to a more activist approach instead of a more passive policy under outgoing President Rodrigo Duterte. This, along with the recent statements from the country’s top army and coast guard officials, clarifies the Philippine strategy to manage tensions around the Ayungin Shoal and other disputed areas. Manila is planning to step up the protection of its resupply efforts and match Chinese actions, which could push China to back down. But if Beijing instead decides to escalate beyond the use of water cannons, the Philippines has made it clear when they could escalate themselves by calling on the United States to intervene.

The Maritime Zones Act is pending in the Philippine Senate. The final law is expected to be passed before the end of the current legislative session.



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China fukking with Hainan too.
« Reply #1421 on: December 16, 2021, 11:31:20 AM »
Amphibious exercises. The Chinese People’s Liberation Army on Wednesday began a series of exercises in and around Hainan Island in the South China Sea. Hainan Island is only slightly smaller than Taiwan. The exercises, apparently directed at improving the joint combat readiness of Chinese forces during amphibious operations, end on Friday.

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WT: And now, an app for American military appeasement of China
« Reply #1422 on: December 22, 2021, 03:40:56 AM »
Pentagon app to track China’s ire toward U.S.

Beijing uses tactic for manipulation

BY BILL GERTZ THE WASHINGTON TIMES

The Pentagon’s Indo-Pacific Command recently unveiled a software application that military officials say will monitor Chinese military anger at U.S. activities in the region in a bid to reduce tensions.

Some analysts warn that the application represents a step back toward U.S. policies to appease China, whose communist leaders have used fears of upsetting Beijing to manipulate U.S. decision-makers.

The software tool is designed to systematically gauge Chinese military reactions to U.S. actions in the region, such as arms sales to Taiwan, naval and aerial maneuvers in disputed maritime zones, and congressional visits, defense officials and spokesmen said. The software measures U.S.-Chinese “strategic friction,” said a defense official who spoke to Reuters aboard a flight with Deputy Defense Secretary Kathleen Hicks last week.

The computer-based software evaluates information from early 2020 on significant activities that could trigger tensions in U.S.-Chinese relations. Military leaders and Pentagon policymakers will use it to predict how Beijing will respond to U.S. actions. The software is part of the Biden administration’s policy of seeking to curb Chinese aggression while preventing at all costs an open conflict between the world’s two most powerful countries and two biggest economies.

“With the spectrum of conflict and the challenge sets spanning down into the gray zone, what you see is the need to be looking at a far broader set of indicators, weaving that together and then understanding the threat interaction,” Ms. Hicks told Reuters in discussing the software.

An Indo-Pacific Command official said the tool will be used to avoid inadvertently provoking a conflict with China.

“U.S. Indo-Pacific Command ensures security and stability throughout the Indo-Pacific,” the official told The Washington Times. The command’s combined

military force “responsibly manages competition to prevent conflict in the region. One of the best methods to do just that is centered on looking at the complex and overlapping geopolitical, operational and strategic environment,” the official added.

The command “will continue to refine methods, including decision aids, to responsibly manage competition with our No. 1 pacing challenge while supporting national defense priorities.”

A Chinese Embassy spokesman did not respond to an email request for comment.

A Pentagon spokesman declined to comment. “This is an Indo-Pacom program,” he said.

Critics among U.S. China-watching experts expressed concern that the software will allow Beijing to manipulate U.S. policies and weaken U.S. responses to threats posed by China, with the U.S. bending over backward not to give offense to China or spark a crisis.

Kerry K. Gershaneck, a retired Marine and former Pentagon policymaker with extensive intelligence experience, said the “appeasement app” will hand China’s leaders a political warfare victory.

“China’s political warfare aims, in part, to condition naive opponents to do what the Chinese Communist Party wants them to do, on their own volition, without Beijing actually telling them to do it,” Mr. Gershaneck said. “With this ‘appeasement app,’ it appears the CCP has masterfully succeeded in its conditioning of senior U.S. defense officials.”

Such an approach will only invite further Chinese aggression and demoralize military personnel, he said.

“The app appears to be self-destructively unilateral: It tells the U.S. military — and only the U.S. military — to always back off, to stand down and to do nothing that might possibly ‘upset’ China,” Mr. Gershaneck said.

Retired Navy Capt. Jim Fanell, a former head of intelligence for the Pacific Fleet, said the software tool is designed to guide military commanders and diplomats and will systematically erode U.S. defense of its national interests in the region — a key goal of Beijing.

“This tool should be scrapped immediately, and American commanders and diplomats should be allowed to operate as the environment dictates, allowing for maximum flexibility and assertiveness that will keep the Chinese Communist Party decision-makers on their back feet when it comes to pursuing their strategic goal of pushing America out of the Indo-Pacific,” he said.

Miles Yu, a State Department official in charge of China policy during the Trump administration, has described the U.S. approach to China as misguided “anger management” based on false fears of Chinese reactions and bluffs rather than proactive U.S. initiatives.

“For decades, our China policy was carried out based upon an ‘anger management’ mode — that is, we formulated our China policy by calculating how mad the CCP might be at us, not what suits the best American national interest,” Mr. Yu said in a recent interview.

The tool was unveiled during a briefing for Ms. Hicks at Indo-Pacific Command’s Honolulu headquarters. Included in the briefing were the theater’s senior commander, Adm. John C. Aquilino; Pacific Fleet Commander Adm. Samuel Paparo; Gen. Charles Flynn, commander of the Army Pacific; and other senior leaders for frontline military forces in charge of dealing with China.

Over the past five years, American military forces in the Pacific have stepped up proactive actions designed to push back against Chinese military encroachment. The activities began during the Trump administration.

Chinese military forces, in turn, have sharply increased aggressive and threatening operations, mainly against Taiwan and against rival claimants to sovereignty in the South China Sea.

Toward Taiwan, China has stepped up military flights and naval maneuvers close to the self-ruled island. U.S. officials have described the actions as coercive and threatening.

China has carried out war games, including long-range missile tests, in disputed islands throughout the strategic South China Sea.

Chinese naval vessels have sought to drive U.S. warships out of the sea when the Navy conducts “freedom of navigation operations” through disputed waterways.

Last month, the State Department warned China that it faced a military response after Chinese coast guard vessels blocked Philippine efforts to resupply a military post in the Spratly Islands.

Mr. Yu has argued that failed policies have been based on a fundamental misunderstanding of how China’s rulers try to manipulate the U.S. First, the Chinese voice anger and rage at U.S. actions and then see how the United States reacts. The process allows the Chinese to calibrate American policy responses to suit their interests.

“Unfortunately, too often, we fell for this CCP sophistry and made our China policies to appease CCP sensitivities and fake outrage to avoid an often imagined and exaggerated direct confrontation with the seemingly enraged CCP,” he said.

More broadly, Mr. Gershaneck said, the adoption of the app sends a terrible message to frontline U.S. military personnel that they should always back down and never risk angering China. The military should instead invest in software that will assist military officers and diplomats on how to exploit Chinese weaknesses and engage in successful political warfare against Beijing, he added.

Disclosure of the software followed reports that Gen. Mark A. Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, so feared Chinese military misperceptions of a U.S. attack that he telephoned a Chinese general to tell him that the United States would inform him of any military attacks in the fraught days after the 2020 U.S. presidential election.

A spokesman for Gen. Milley did not respond to a request for comment on the app.

Gordon Chang, a Chinese affairs expert, said the “appeasement app” is a political gift for the Chinese military.

“We should send Chinese flag officers an app that sends them alerts whenever they are about to do something that will get us angry,” Mr. Chang said.

Capt. Fanell, the former Pacific Fleet intelligence director, said the focus on “strategic friction” software reflects an institutionalization at Indo-Pacific Command of a central tenet of pro-China policies first put into place by Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and adopted more recently by the Obama administration. That policy calls for avoiding all military and other activities that could provoke China or lead to the perception by Beijing of “containment.” The overall objective was to preserve positive ties.

“During my time in uniform, we saw the American government, both State and Defense departments, impose selfinduced constraints on the exercise of American military and diplomatic operations in order to not provoke the PRC,” said Capt. Fanell, who retired in 2015.

U.S. reconnaissance flights near China’s coasts and requests of regional allies to push back against Chinese hegemony were called off or reduced based on fears that they would place the greater U.S.Chinese relationship at risk.

“These same appeasers proclaimed that the ‘relationship’ with China was the most important relationship for America’s national security and thus we had to constrain our actions,” Capt. Fanell said. He added that the officials “were actively promoting a policy of kowtowing to the Chinese Communist Party and its bad behavior.”

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The Commie Ho appeases China
« Reply #1423 on: December 22, 2021, 03:56:13 AM »
Harris: It’s ‘no one’s fault’ that virus spread to U.S.

BY DAVE BOYER THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Vice President Kamala Harris said it’s “no one’s fault” that COVID-19, which originated in China, spread to the U.S. and the rest of the world.

In an interview with CBS News, the vice president also set herself apart from President Biden by refusing to blame unvaccinated Americans for the spread in the U.S.

“I don’t think this is a moment to talk about fault,” Ms. Harris told interviewer Margaret Brennan. “It is no one’s fault that this virus hit our shores, or hit the world. It is more about individual power and responsibility and the decisions that everyone has the choice to make.”

The Republican National Committee responded on Tuesday, “Wrong. It’s China’s fault.”

The virus originated in Wuhan, China. A report by a U.S. government national laboratory concluded this year that it’s “plausible” the virus leaked from a Chinese lab in Wuhan, and that the theory deserves further investigation.

Last year, Ms. Harris blamed then-President Trump for the virus spreading in the U.S., saying Mr. Trump was “delusional” and failed to take the virus “seriously from the start.”

“This virus has impacted almost every country, but there’s a reason it has hit America worse than any other advanced nation. It’s because of Trump’s failure to take it seriously from the start,” she said at the time. “His refusal to get testing up and running, his flip-flopping on social distancing and wearing masks, his delusional belief that he knows better than the experts — all of that is the reason and the reason an American dies of COVID-19 every 80 seconds.”

But deaths from COVID-19 under the Biden administration now equal the number during the Trump administration. The U.S. reached the milestone of 800,000 deaths last week, double the 400,000 deaths that had been recorded by Mr. Trump’s last full day in office.

Her latest interview also is a departure from Mr. Biden, who has laid blame on people who don’t get vaccinated.

In September, Mr. Biden told Americans in a speech, “This is a pandemic of the unvaccinated. And it’s caused by the fact that despite America having an unprecedented and successful vaccination program, despite the fact that for almost five months free vaccines have been available in 80,000 different locations, we still have nearly 80 million Americans who have failed to get the shot.”

In her comments to CBS, Ms. Harris said Americans “have the power today to go out and if you’ve not been boosted, go get boosted. The power today to go and get vaccinated. And that will have an impact on where we end up tomorrow.”

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GPF: Hong Kong elections
« Reply #1424 on: December 23, 2021, 04:04:21 AM »
Hong Kong's Legislative Council elections have put the legislature in the hands of pro-Beijing factions, and will accelerate Western sanctions against China. The Dec. 19 LegCo elections saw record low voter turnout at 30% — compared to 58% in the 2016 LegCo elections and 70% in the 2019 District Council elections — and saw 89 out of 90 LegCo seats given to pro-Beijing candidates, with the remaining one given to a centrist candidate. All 11 pro-democracy candidates lost in the geographical constituency portion of the LegCo election, the same candidates that prompted the Hong Kong government to claim this truly was a "diverse" election, despite the "patriots only" selection process designed to weed out candidates less amenable to Beijing. In response, senior officials from the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom released a Dec. 20 joint statement decrying democratic erosion in Hong Kong, as did the European Union and the G-7.

This election has been delayed since September 2020 as the Hong Kong government enacted the National Security Law following the massive protests of summer 2019, which saw millions of citizens march in the streets.
As of Dec. 16, Hong Kong authorities have wielded the National Security Law to convict two Hong Kongers and arrest eight others for urging people not to vote in the LegCo elections.
The LegCo landslide deepens the continued erosion of all branches of the Hong Kong government, while the voter turnout shows democratic abstention as a remaining outlet for protest. Given that 40 of the 90 LegCo seats were selected by the Election Committee, which will also select Hong Kong's next chief executive in March 2022, Beijing's influence over Hong Kong's executive branch is also secure.

The judiciary's independence has been slower to erode, with the branch continuing to act as a minor limiter on the expansion of police jurisdiction for National Security Law cases, but it is only a matter of time before this branch too aligns with the pro-Beijing government, given the chief executive's power to appoint judges and recent statements from the empowered national security office that the judiciary should reflect China's will. This inevitability is well exemplified by Maria Yuen's withdrawn candidacy from the Court of Final Appeals in June following pro-Beijing legislative pressure and calls earlier in June from pro-Beijing legislators to appoint more non-Western judges and those who have not criticized the National Security Law.
For dissolved civil society groups and the large portion of Hong Kong citizens who still oppose Beijing's gradual takeover of their city, the record low voter turnout (the lowest since 1995, prior to the handover of Hong Kong to Beijing) represented one of the few remaining avenues for political protest. Calls by exiled pro-democracy leaders and a few local dissenters to forgo the vote may have greatly influenced the low turnout, along with widespread dissatisfaction with the city's rapid pro-Beijing swing since 2019 under Chief Executive Carrie Lam.
The National Security Law-related arrests for discouraging voting in LegCo elections expand the scope of the main law used to suppress Hong Kong political dissent, with recent charges expanding from conducting actions that "violate the National Security Law" to those that "go against the interests of national security" more broadly. In addition, Security Chief Chris Tang confirmed in September that the list of explicit National Security Law crimes would be broadened in this new LegCo session to include theft of state secrets, treason, sedition and cooperation with foreign political organizations in Hong Kong.
Western sanctions pressure against Chinese human rights abuses will grow as the erosion of democracy in Hong Kong worsens, while the new LegCo will promote Hong Kong's greater regulatory and economic alignment with Beijing. The immediate reaction from Western groups, like the G-7, Five Eyes and the European Union, suggests Western sanctions pressure on Beijing officials in Hong Kong will accelerate, scuttling recent attempts to seek moderate cooperation with Beijing. The legislative takeover also forebodes the slow, but certain, arrival of mainland Chinese laws, like the Anti-Foreign Sanctions Law and the Cybersecurity Law, which officials in Lam's Cabinet have recently confirmed will be applied to the special administrative region. This China-aligned legal and legislative trajectory for Hong Kong will continue to undermine foreign investor sentiment and confidence in Hong Kong as a global financial hub. Lastly, this pliable legislature will support Lam's explicit efforts to increase Hong Kong's economic ties to China (versus the West) — including alignment with Beijing's national development plans — and, to that end, align the region's COVID-19 management policies with Beijing's to expedite border reopening with the mainland.

The U.S. Treasury announced its intention Dec. 20 to level secondary financial sanctions against any foreign entities conducting business with select Beijing officials in Hong Kong, which Washington has already sanctioned for their role in the territory's democratic erosion.

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AG: Additional thoughts on Taiwan
« Reply #1425 on: December 24, 2021, 03:01:16 AM »
Much to disagree with here, but he does raise difficult questions which cannot be ignored

https://amgreatness.com/2021/12/23/additional-thoughts-on-taiwan/

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Re: AG: Additional thoughts on Taiwan
« Reply #1426 on: December 24, 2021, 07:26:16 AM »
I agree.  Much to disagree with there.  Important points wrong by omission, I think.

1. One reason the Chinese Communist Party has no legitimate claim to rule and oppress more people and more territory is that they start with no legitimate claim to rule and oppress the people they already do.

2. What are the lessons of WWII - if this is a conflict potentially of that scale.  Stop evil sooner.  Don't let it persist, expand and grow in strength, power and territory.  Intervene sooner.

3.  Don't conflate China, the region with culture, ethnicity, region and history, with this small, brutal, ruling politburo.  The idea of Taiwan rejoining 'China' must be contingent on China becoming free.  Otherwise it is just putting more people and a greater amount of the planet in tyranny. Why are we not pushing hard for reforms there?  Instead we keep lending them legitimacy, cf. Olympics, trade, etc.

4.  American freedom came with outside help.  Why is that crucial point always ignored?

5. The regime of China only grows stronger and stronger in their iron fist over their people.  We hold some responsibility in that, starting with Nixon's opening to these thugs and everything that followed. We believed prosperity would lead to freedom, and WE did not change course when proved wrong.  We still haven't changed course.  To a large extent, we gave them the tools to expand the oppression.  Now offer them a free pass to expand?  And then what?  Draw a new red line for them to cross and it still won't fit his definition of 'in our national interest'.

6. Within the article he admits WE ARE under attack by China.  [I think we have a thread for that.]  It is a fair point to me that you do whatever you can do to stop their expansion on another front as part of fighting back and stopping their attack on us.   How does their leverage and infiltration of us get checked when they add complete control of the semiconductor industry to their war chest?

7.  Did we really lose the wars in Iraq, in Afghanistan?  How is Saddam doing.  He stood up to us and now rots in hell.  Osama bin Laden likewise.  We lost at nation building which is another matter.

8 .  What is the South China Sea and who controls it when China rules both sides of the Taiwan Strait?  What is OUR interest in that?  Absent the US, the Philippines will keep the shipping lanes open?

9. China cannot be resisted from the inside.  Only from the outside.  Then the question becomes, who if not us is the resistance?  The "Quad" minus the US?  Look at the world economic map, posted recently.  Look at the equivalent world military map.  Look at the balance of power in the world absent the US. As tyranny and oppression grow and the US retreats, freedom loses. It's already losing.  What is worth fighting for?  Nothing? Just let it all go to hell? It's not our fight?  I dissent.
« Last Edit: December 24, 2021, 09:36:54 AM by DougMacG »

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Re: US-China (& Japan, South China Sea-- Vietnam, Philippines, etc)
« Reply #1427 on: December 24, 2021, 10:02:38 AM »
Excellent big picture post Doug!

A big question remains:

What is the actual balance of forces between us and China in China's littoral waters? 

In outer space? 

In cyberspace?

Would we win or lose if China moves against Taiwan? 

Are the American people up for such a war?

Under present leadership?

Even were we to succeed in defending Taiwan for now, what would China's next move be?  Germ warfare?  (Again?)   Cyberwar?  Hypersonic first strike?  All of the above?

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Re: US-China, South China Sea, Deterrence in a lose lose war
« Reply #1428 on: December 24, 2021, 11:00:31 AM »
(Crafty) "What is the actual balance of forces between us and China in China's littoral waters? 
In outer space? 
In cyberspace?
Would we win or lose if China moves against Taiwan? 
Are the American people up for such a war?
Under present leadership?"


Who would win an all-out war?  Some models say China.  Add in our allies, maybe us.  Figure in current 'leadership' maybe them.  Best answer is the lose-lose outcome.  From mutually assured destruction to mutual assured loss, big time losses.  Both sides would probably destroy military targets and stop at some point.  Do the American people have the stomach for it?  No.  But what about the regime ruling China?  Don't they actually actually have more to lose, again cf. Saddam and Osama.  A perfect alignment of the status quo allow a hundred people or so to brutally control a billion.  If China is roughly our military equal, there must be a (US) plan in place to take down their central control in an extreme conflict.  In a true, existential conflict, the President would be unable to micromanage it and would have to move responsibility from the woke figureheads to real military leaders, at least one would hope. 

Interesting point that China wouldn't want to destroy the island they wish to take.  Also they don't want to destroy the economic trading partners that make them what they are economically and militarily today.  Have we ever seen that, all out war between two countries that almost totally depend on each other?  Certainly not on this scale.  They are already overtaking us without firing a shot.  The status quo favors them, while only a first move by them could disrupt that and bring unforeseen change.

Isn't the image and prestige Xi has in China his most treasured asset, along with fear, the reason this henchman and military will follow him wherever he leads?  Peace, security and economic growth and success, along with obviously the fear of crossing the totalitarian regime, keep him in power.  Wouldn't starting an unprovoked war that leads to disaster undermine and risk that?

Look at the other side of it.  If China hit our central control, killed the President, VP, all cabinet members, blew up all 536 members of Congress and obliterated every central building of government in Washington D.C., after grieving we would replace it one election cycle and the new people would not likely be soft on China.

Isn't our willingness to defend others in freedom the reason this conflict won't happen.  And as soon as we say we won't come to Taiwan's aid, won't that be the reason they invade?

FYI to the original author:  The status quo is not the goal.  We should be calling out the tyranny and illegitimacy of the regime in every sentence in every message.  They criticize us (and threaten Taiwan) openly and freely.  We can call for free and fair elections in China every day until someday it happens if it takes a hundred or a thousand years.  Someone should say it.  ["Mr. Gorbachev ... tear down this wall!"]  US weakness and appeasement has never yielded the peace it promises. 

Our (mostly) silence of their oppression is perhaps the (second biggest?) crime of the century.
« Last Edit: December 24, 2021, 11:09:20 AM by DougMacG »

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US running out of time to prepare to defend Taiwan
« Reply #1429 on: December 25, 2021, 06:06:40 AM »
MILITARY
US Running Out of Time to Prepare for Possible War With China Over Taiwan: Experts
By J.M. Phelps December 23, 2021 Updated: December 23, 2021 biggersmaller Print

The Chinese regime is rapidly expanding its military and modernizing its weaponry. Taiwan and the United States could be caught flat-footed if they fail to recognize the urgency of the threat, analysts warn.

China will have the ability to mount a full-scale invasion of Taiwan by 2025, according to Taiwanese Defense Minister Chiu Kuo-cheng. He also called the rising tensions between China and Taiwan the most severe he has seen in 40 years.

Retired Capt. James Fanell, former director of intelligence and information operations for the U.S. Navy’s Pacific Fleet, agreed. The United States needs to be prepared for a conflict as tension escalates to “near out-of-control levels” between China and Taiwan, he told The Epoch Times.

Fanell said the Chinese regime has become an “aggressor nation.” While some would argue they haven’t taken enough military action to be called an aggressor, he said, “the people that are supposed to be intelligent and forward-thinking about national security shouldn’t have to wait for China to launch an invasion of Taiwan to then be able to say China is an aggressor.”

This year, Chinese warplanes have entered Taiwan’s air defense zone in record numbers. In November, two Chinese amphibious landing dock ships also simulated an assault east of Taiwan.

“Essentially, China is encircling Taiwan and putting a noose around its neck,” Fanell said, adding that “they’ll just keep tightening it more and more as time goes on.” Each provocation from the Chinese regime is an effort to get Taiwan to “lash out.” Such action, he added, could be used as justification by the Chinese regime to launch an invasion of Taiwan.

Ill-prepared for Conflict
According to the Lowy Institute’s Asia Power Index, China’s defense spending surpasses that of India, Japan, Taiwan, and all 10 members of the Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN) combined.

David Sauer, a retired senior CIA officer who served as chief of station and deputy chief of station in multiple overseas command positions in East Asia and South Asia, said it is imperative to “read the writing on the wall and see looming danger [of the growing military power].”

If the Chinese regime were to move forward with an invasion of Taiwan, Sauer said, “they will want to do it as fast as possible, while limiting the amount of death and destruction.” He said he imagines “[the Chinese regime’s] goal would be to do it so fast that the U.S., Japan, and the international community can’t react fast enough to make any kind of difference.”

Time is running out for the United States and Taiwan to prepare to go to war with China, he said.

“Taiwan is going to have to be extremely resilient, hopefully holding on long enough for the United States to marshal enough forces to arrive and defend them with success,” Sauer said.

On Nov. 29, President Biden approved recommendations from the Pentagon’s global posture review. While the review was not made public, the Pentagon’s summary of its findings left much to be desired, according to Sauer.

“Little was said about China,” he said, explaining that the review lacked any specifics on strategic changes to U.S. capabilities or capacity for military operations in the Pacific. “The Pentagon appears to have missed an opportunity to recommend the deployment of more forces in the Pacific theatre,” he said.

“What does that say to the Chinese regime?” Sauer added. “The Chinese regime is massively increasing their military capabilities and the United States, under the direction of Biden and Austin, are not really doing anything different to match that buildup.”

For Fanell, the United States has been asleep at the wheel for decades.

“China has been conducting the largest military modernization in the post-WWII environment of any country in Asia,” Fanell said.

For at least 20 years, he said, experts have suggested China’s military buildup was normal, because China is a large country, having the second-largest economy in the world.

“This is what big countries do, they say—but it’s this kind of thinking that has made us ill-prepared,” Fanell said. “For the past few decades, U.S. operations have focused on the Middle East, and in doing so, the strategic threat of the PRC [People’s Republic of China] was largely minimized.”

“The last 30 years have been spent in the desert and mountains of Afghanistan, focused on killing individual terrorists.”

All the while, the Chinese Navy has embarked on building the largest navy in the world with 355 ships. The Pentagon has projected that the People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) will increase its number of ships to 460 by 2030. In comparison, a 30-year plan for the U.S. Navy to build ships would bring its fleet to 355 by 2049. At this rate, some analysts fear that the PLAN is outpacing the U.S. Navy in terms of naval capabilities.

“[The United States] does not currently have the military power structure that’s required to fight China in the domain that’s going to be required, a maritime domain in the Pacific,” said Fanell, who retired in 2015 having served nearly 30 years focused on Indo-Asia Pacific security affairs, and the Chinese navy and its operations.

A Crucial Decade Ahead
While the Chinese regime wants to avoid a full-blown military conflict in the immediate future, the timeframe for such action is narrowing, according to Sauer. He noted Taiwan’s society is far removed from that of mainland China. “Given the unabashed efforts of China to take over Hong Kong, the chances for Taiwan to relinquish their autonomy peacefully are slim to none,” he said.

Fanell agreed, saying the Chinese regime does not necessarily want to go to full-blown war to achieve its goals. “But as time goes on [without Taiwan’s submission], the pressure to use military force increases exponentially,” he said, adding that Taiwan and the United States are running out of time because the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is on a timeline.

2049 will mark the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Chinese regime. As the date moves closer, Fanell said the CCP is on a timeline to be “totally restored and complete.” In effect, their goal is to complete what Chinese leader Xi Jinping refers to as the “great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation.”

According to Fanell, “whoever is the paramount leader at this time will be able to stand up in front of the world and say China has completed the great rejuvenation, having taken control of areas they believe are theirs.” These areas include Taiwan and the disputed border regions of India, he noted.


For the CCP, they are likely focusing on one key question: “How late can [the Chinese regime] wait to use military force and still expect the world to come to Beijing on 1 October 2049 and celebrate the great rejuvenation?”

Following the massacre at Tiananmen Square, the world condemned “the barbarous actions of the PRC and CCP in 1989,” he said. “Fast-forward 19 years and President Bush sat, with sleeves rolled up, among commoners in a stadium to enjoy the spectacular opening ceremony of the 2008 Beijing Olympics.”

If 20 years is the proposed mark for the world to forget about the atrocities of Tiananmen Square, then “back up 20 years from 2049,” Fanell. Thus, the time period between now and 2030, he characterizes as “the decade of great concern”—“the most dangerous time in the world” for Taiwan and its allies.

If the Chinese were to take “aggressive” military action between 2025 and 2030, for example, he said, “the Chinese also recognize that the West has a short attention span, and will forget about their use of force, just like they forgot about Tiananmen Square.”

“Many of the same people who will oppose the invasion of Taiwan will also forget about the invasion, and find themselves attending the big [rejuvenation] ceremony in 2049,” Fanell said.

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ET: Taiwan should destroy semiconductor plants if China invades
« Reply #1430 on: January 07, 2022, 12:09:44 PM »
Taiwan Should Destroy Island’s Semiconductor Plants If China Invades, Paper Says
The proposed deterrence strategy aims at hurting the Chinese economy
By Frank Fang January 5, 2022 Updated: January 5, 2022biggersmaller Print
A scorched-earth policy involving Taiwan destroying its own advanced semiconductor plants in the event of a Chinese invasion would be a good deterrence strategy for the self-ruled island against warmongering China, according to a recent paper published by the U.S. Army War College.

“In practice, this strategy means assuring China an invasion of Taiwan would produce a major economic crisis on the mainland, not the technological boon some have suggested would occur as a result of the PRC [People’s Republic of China] absorbing Taiwan’s robust tech industry,” the paper’s (pdf) authors state.

The key is to make Taiwan “unwantable,” the paper states, and the economic costs would “persist for years” even after the regime in Beijing had taken over the island.

The paper, titled “Broken Nest: Deterring China from Invading Taiwan,” was published in the last 2021 issue of the institution’s quarterly journal Parameters, an official U.S. Army periodical. Jared McKinney, chair of the department of strategy and security studies at the eSchool of Graduate Professional Military Education at Air University, and Peter Harris, associate professor of political science at Colorado State University, are the authors.

The strategy centers around China’s current heavy reliance on importing semiconductors, which are tiny devices that power everything from computers, smartphones, and electric vehicles, to missiles. According to China’s state-run media, Beijing imported over $350 billion worth of chips in 2020.

That year, only 5.9 percent of semiconductors ($8.3 billion) used in China were manufactured domestically, according to a report by U.S.-based semiconductor market research company IC Insights.

In October last year, IC Insights warned that the Chinese regime believes it can solve its problem of not being able to produce leading-edge semiconductors through “reunification with Taiwan.”

China claims Taiwan as a part of its territory even as the self-governing island is a de facto independent country with its own democratically elected officials, military, and currency.

Currently, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp. (TSMC), the world’s largest contract chipmaker, and Samsung in South Korea are the only companies in the world capable of making the most advanced five-nanometer chips. TSMC is scheduled to produce the next-generation three-nanometer chips in the second half of this year.

Epoch Times Photo
A chip by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp. (TSMC) at the 2020 World Semiconductor Conference in Nanjing, Jiangsu Province, China, on Aug. 26, 2020. (STR/AFP via Getty Images)
As chips get smaller in size, they deliver more performance-per-watt, meaning that they run at a faster speed while consuming less power.

The paper recommends that Taiwan “destroy facilities belonging to” TSMC in the face of a Chinese invasion, given that the Taiwanese chipmaker is China’s most important supplier. The challenging aspect of the strategy would be to make the scorched-earth strategy “credible” to the Chinese regime, according to the paper’s authors.

“If China suspects Taipei would not follow through on such a threat, then deterrence will fail,” they explain.

The authors recommend that Taiwanese authorities set up an “automatic mechanism” to destroy TSMC’s plants, to be “triggered once an invasion [by Beijing] was confirmed.”

Without Taiwanese chips, China’s economy would take a hit and Beijing would be unable to maintain sustained economic growth, hurting the Chinese Communist Party’s legitimacy to rule mainland China, according to the paper.

“The purpose here must be to convince Chinese leaders invading Taiwan will come at the cost of core national objectives: economic growth, domestic tranquility, secure borders, and perhaps even the maintenance of regime legitimacy,” the authors add.

The authors offered several other recommendations that could further deter China from invading Taiwan. These include the United States threatening to lead a global sanction campaign against any chip exports to China, or giving a green light for U.S. allies such as Japan, South Korea, and Australia to develop their own nuclear weapons, if the invasion takes place.


“If penalties for invading Taiwan can be made severe and credible enough, Beijing could still be deterred from choosing such a course of action,” the paper states.

The authors also note that they were told by a Chinese analyst with ties to China’s navy that Beijing’s goal for a successful invasion of Taiwan was 14 hours, and Beijing estimated that it would take 24 hours for the United States and Japan to respond.

“If this scenario is close to being accurate, China’s government might well be inclined to attempt a fait accompli as soon as it is confident in its relative capabilities,” the authors write.

In October last year, Taiwan’s defense minister warned that the Chinese regime will be capable of mounting a full-scale invasion of the island by 2025.

“If Taiwan fell to China, a successful democracy would be extinguished, and Beijing’s geopolitical position in East Asia would be enhanced at the expense of the United States and its allies,” the authors write.

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ET
« Reply #1431 on: January 08, 2022, 05:13:18 AM »
Rep. Ami Bera (D-CA) chairs a House Committee on Foreign Affairs Asia and Pacific subcommittee hearing concerning the coronavirus outbreak, in the Rayburn House Office Building on Capitol Hill on Feb. 5, 2020 in Washington. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
US-CHINA RELATIONS
China Engaged in ‘Direct Coercion’ of United States: Rep. Bera
By Andrew Thornebrooke January 7, 2022 Updated: January 7, 2022biggersmaller Print
The United States must do more to understand how China’s communist regime is leveraging economic coercion and statecraft against it, according to Rep. Ami Bera (D-Calif.).

“It’s extremely important that the United States administration, whether it’s a Democratic or Republican administration, understands how China uses economic coercion,” Bera said during a webinar hosted by the Center for a New American Security (CNAS), a D.C.-based think tank.

“What they’re doing really is direct coercion,” he added.

Since the beginning of the trade war between the United States and China in 2018, economic reprisals such as tariffs, sanctions, and investment restrictions have increasingly defined the Sino-American relationship.

Most recently, reports documented a massive hoarding spree by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), through which the regime continues to stockpile precious resources like semiconductor chips and cotton.  This was conducted apparently to insulate itself from the effects of U.S. trade controls.

Bera underscored the problem of ambiguity in U.S. economic and deterrence strategy, saying that the Congress and the Biden administration needed to better clarify the nation’s tools for conducting economic competition and its rules for deploying them.

“We should have some clarity in terms of the deterrent tools that are available,” Bera said, “and some of those tools are economic deterrent tools.”

That effort is also the subject of a proposed bipartisan bill that Bera introduced alongside Rep. Ann Wagner (R-Mo.), called the Countering China Economic Coercion Act.

That bill, if made law, would require the president to establish a task force responsible for developing and implementing a strategy to respond to the CCP’s economic coercion, and to monitor the associated costs and impacts of such coercion.

“The People’s Republic of China’s [PRC] heavy-handed and predatory economic policies harm our partners and undermine American interests well beyond the Indo-Pacific region,” Wagner said in an associated press release.

“Our efforts to respond to PRC economic coercion must be strategic, measured, and proactive.”

Whether the United States could influence the Chinese regime without inflaming tensions, or even open lines of meaningful dialogue, however, remained an open question for Bera.

“We’re going to be competitive with China in the 21st century. That’s a given,” Bera said. “Competition is not a bad thing, [but] can we have competition without direct confrontation?”

“We don’t have to guess the direction that Xi Jinping wants to take China.”

To that end, Bera said that there was some silver lining to Xi’s hardline and at times provocative ruling style.

“I think that the heavy-handed approach that China sometimes takes actually is doing our work for us,” Bera said.

“I would have said three to four years ago [for example] that Australia was taking a somewhat laissez-faire attitude towards China. That’s not the case today. They’re probably one of our strongest allies in understanding how to counter what China is doing around the world and certainly in the Indo-Pacific.”

US is Slower to Act than China
Bera’s comments also helped to contextualize a report released by CNAS in December, titled “Containing Crisis: Strategic Concepts for Coercive Economic Statecraft.”

That report was based on scenario exercises carried out by CNAS that found that the United States was generally less willing than China to engage in very aggressive economic coercion, and that both nations’ governments still desired wide-ranging access to one another’s markets.

“While both China and the United States may be willing to accept negative economic impacts to pursue geopolitical objectives, both also demonstrate a preference to broadly retain access to the other’s market, which may constrain the use of the most extreme forms of economic coercion,” the report said.

The report also noted, however, that the CCP was willing to use a much wider array of methods to coerce the United States and others economically, whereas the United States generally limited itself to targeted sanctions or export controls.

Notably, the report found that U.S. economic strategy aimed overall at preserving the international status quo. Because of this, the United States tended to coordinate policy more slowly than China, as it sought a balance between defending its principles and de-escalating situations from outright conflict.

The report recommended that the United States pursue a persuasive, rather than coercive, strategy with regard to its economic toolset, and underscored the strategic importance of improving diplomatic relations with middle powers throughout Asia and the Indo-Pacific.

Biden Administration Hopes for new Indo-Pacific Framework
Bera’s comments echoed similar remarks made by Kurt Campbell, White House coordinator for the Indo-Pacific, during a webinar hosted by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace on Jan. 6.

Campbell’s remarks, in turn, were similar to the prognosis of the CNAS report. He said that that the United States’ relationship with smaller nations throughout Asia and the Indo-Pacific, particularly in trade, would be central to any successes or failures that it might have in directing the future of the region.

“We’ve got to make clear that not only are we deeply engaged diplomatically, militarily, comprehensively, strategically, [but] that we have an open, engaged, optimistic approach to commercial interactions [and] investment in the Indo-Pacific,” Campbell said.


“The ramparts, the areas in which we are going to need to compete in the Indo-Pacific, are not necessarily just in military competition, but across arenas of technology,” Campbell also said.

To that end, the official said that the nation would need to find a trade framework to replace the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), a 19-nation trade agreement that grew out of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), which the Trump administration withdrew from in 2017.

Former President Donald Trump spurned the TPP, and withdrew from the proposed deal owing to criticism that it was bad for the American job market. Biden administration officials have said for months that they are engaged in an effort to create a new, more robust economic framework for the Indo-Pacific. Nothing has yet materialized of the effort, however.

In all, Campbell signaled that a new framework would be finalized, but also cautioned that real, meaningful competition, would be the defining feature of Sino-American relations for decades to come.

“The general proposition of the Biden administration is that the dominant paradigm between the United States and China is increasingly going to be defined by competition,” Campbell said.

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GPF: Taiwan-Canada
« Reply #1432 on: January 11, 2022, 03:45:36 PM »
Pursuing Taiwan. Canada said on Monday it would pursue a foreign investment protection agreement with Taiwan. According to Canada’s International Trade Ministry, the two parties will work together to “promote supply chain resilience and mutually beneficial commercial opportunities.” The announcement comes as relations between Canada and mainland China are at an all-time low.



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ET: US must expand battlefield to win against China over Taiwan
« Reply #1435 on: January 27, 2022, 09:37:50 AM »
US Must ‘Expand the Battlefield’ to Win a War Against China Over Taiwan: Experts
By J.M. Phelps January 26, 2022 Updated: January 27, 2022biggersmaller Print

0:00
7:00



1

The United States can win a war against China over Taiwan, analysts say, but it must take steps to expand its efforts in the different domains of economics, warfare, and diplomacy against the Chinese regime.

Describing a wargaming exercise conducted in October 2020, including a simulated conflict with the Chinese regime over Taiwan, then-Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Gen. John Hyten said in July, “Without overstating the issue, it failed miserably.” As a result, Hyten called upon the Pentagon to overhaul its warfighting strategy to gain the edge in battle by 2030.

Grant Newsham, a retired U.S. Marine Colonel who was the first Marine Liaison Officer to the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force, told The Epoch Times that “the more people hear about losing a fight with China over Taiwan, it creates a sense of defeatism, a sense that there’s nothing we can do.” He said that “America must expand the battlefield” to find success against the Chinese regime.

James Fanell, a former director of intelligence and information operations for the U.S. Pacific Fleet, concurred. He said that “the U.S. would have difficulties operating inside the first island chain, so the battlespace needs to be expanded not just in the military arena, but also the economic and diplomatic arena.”

Weaken With Sanctions
Newsham and Fanell said lines of trade and commerce can be affected, if not stopped. And this would have a significant impact on the Chinese regime’s ability to exert itself over Taiwan. “Because China is dependent on overseas assets,” Newsham said. “It is very vulnerable.”

Some of China’s top imports include integrated circuits, crude petroleum and petroleum gases, and soybeans. China is the second-largest trade destination in the world with total imports averaging approximately $1.61 trillion.

“The Chinese military, for all its rapid growth and power, is not able to defend China’s overseas interests, or its overseas lines of communication,” Newsham said. The country is “simply too dependent” on the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and the European Union, its major import partners.

Fanell said, “By limiting access to overseas assets including technology, energy, and even food, it would put the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) at great risk.”

Newsham said that while it is seldom mentioned, it is also worth noting that “the renminbi [RMB], is not a convertible form of currency.” It’s merely the official currency of the People’s Republic of China, but “China can barely buy anything overseas with it, nor does anybody really want the currency,” he said.

According to Newsham, the United States could impose financial sanctions on China to take advantage of these “huge vulnerabilities” by stopping the flow of goods and keeping the use of the “people’s currency” internalized.

Fanell agreed, saying that “crippling economic sanctions would get China’s attention very quickly.” Additionally, he said the United States Navy could “interdict to stop or divert ships” from delivering many of its imported resources.

It is then that the Chinese regime would become “very vulnerable, not only militarily, but also financially and economically.” By expanding the battlefield in this manner, Newsham said “China would be given a very bad hand to play and be placed in a very weak position.”

Admittedly, if a fight with the Chinese regime was limited to the Taiwan Strait, Newsham said, “America would have a hard time, [but] by expanding the battlefield, odds would change immensely in favor of the United States.”

Break Taiwan’s Isolation
Decades of “isolation” from large-scale joint exercises with its military allies must also come to an end, according to Newsham. “Taiwan’s military has not developed the way it should have over the last 40 years due to a lack of exposure to other militaries,” he explained.

“Consider the problems that the Taiwanese could face in large-scale operations with other militaries, having never trained and conducted exercises together.”

Newsham said he suspects such training with Taiwan has been neglected for so long for fear of upsetting the Chinese regime. “That sends a message to Taiwan: we love you and we’ll support you, but we’re afraid to be seen in public with you,” he said. “It is past time for Taiwan’s allies to break the isolation and engage in multilateral training and exercise with Taiwan.”

If the isolation is not broken, he said the chances of allowing Taiwan to develop so that it could defend itself are severely jeopardized.

What’s more, Fanell said the CCP has heard from American military leaders that the United States won’t “strike the mainland.” According to him, many fear that an attack on China’s mainland would immediately escalate to a nuclear war. But Fanell doesn’t agree.

“The United States has done nothing more than give the Chinese regime the unwitting benefit of knowing they won’t ever have to really defend themselves,” he said. The United States needs to be willing to do whatever is necessary to “change the Chinese regime’s calculus and make them reconsider attacking Taiwan,” he added.

Collective Condemnation
Other countries must use diplomatic means to impact the Chinese regime’s global standing, Fanell said. One possibility includes making use of the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad), an informal partnership between Australia, India, Japan, and the United States.

Fanell suggested that the U.S. State Department should encourage the Quad’s foreign ministers to issue a joint statement, alongside any other nation in the Indo-Pacific, that would condemn the Chinese regime for what it has done against Hong Kong and is doing against Taiwan. “The point is, if the Chinese regime is going to be confronted, all levers of national power will have to be used.”

In terms of diplomacy, Fanell said “the world needs to be much more aggressive” in confronting the Chinese regime for what it’s doing “against freedom and liberty, and against international norms and standards.” He said the Chinese regime is “the odd nation out” and “the exception to the rule,” adding that “it’s not about America versus China, but it’s about China versus the world.”

According to Fanell, this must be exposed in a way that “further diminishes the standing and posture” of the Chinese regime on a global scale. And part of the problem can be attributed to the United States, he added.

“Big corporations and investment firms need to stop pouring billions of dollars into China, [because] some portion of every dollar that’s spent there is going toward building the PLA, [People’s Liberation Army] which in turn, uses it to prepare for war against the United States.”

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WT: Honorable Chinese doctor
« Reply #1437 on: February 08, 2022, 03:50:43 AM »
Chinese doctor remembered for speaking out

Li sounded alarm of initial COVID-19 outbreak, endured authorities’ cruelty

BY BILL GERTZ THE WASHINGTON TIMES

The medical doctor who tried to sound the alarm on the initial outbreak of COVID-19 in late 2019 and later died from the disease was remembered Monday, two years after Chinese authorities forced him to confess to making illegal internet statements that reflected badly on the country.

Li Wenliang, an ophthalmology doctor at Wuhan Central Hospital, was among the first to send a message to an online group of friends and medical doctors warning of the outbreak of a new deadly disease that appeared to be a new strain of the SARS virus that hit China 18 years earlier.

“[Seven] cases of SARS were diagnosed in the South China Fruit and Seafood Market and were isolated in the emergency department of our hospital,” Dr. Li wrote on We-Chat, the Chinese social media and messaging site, on Dec. 30, 2019.

Two other doctors also sounded the alarm in December 2020, including Liu Wen, a neurologist at the Wuhan Central Hospital who noted that a case of infectious viral pneumonia was diagnosed in the Houhu district. “SARS has been basically confi rmed,” he said, adding that medical workers should adopt protective measures to avoid infection.

A third doctor, Xie Linka, at the Cancer Center of Wuhan Union Medical College Hospital, took to WeChat to warn of an outbreak of “unexplained pneumonia (similar to SARS).”

The posts triggered an immediate crackdown by Chinese government censors who blocked all posts using the word “Wuhan unknown pneumonia,” “SARS variation,” “Wuhan Seafood Market,” and others related to the virus outbreak. Beijing would go on to face global criticism for its lack of openness and handling of the origins and early outbreak of the pandemic.

On Jan. 1, 2020, eight medical doctors, including Dr. Li, were arrested by security police, interrogated and charged with making false statements on the internet, a crime in China punishable by imprisonment.

Dr. Li, 34, was forced to write a “self-criticism” statement claiming his online remarks were wrong because they created a “negative impact” on society. On Jan. 9, 2020, Dr. Li signed a letter of reprimand for the Wuhan Public Security Bureau, the political police agency, describing his WeChat posts as “illegal.”

Despite the crackdown, Dr. Li became an instant hero in China for standing up to the party on behalf of the health of ordinary people. His persecution and death set off a wave of public anger that forced the police to rescind the signed letter of reprimand.

But the police in a statement also accused the doctor’s Chinese supporters of using what was termed the “Li Wenliang incident” in a conspiracy with unidentified “hostile forces” to undermine the regime.

“It should be recognized that certain hostile forces, in order to attack the Chinese Communist Party and the Chinese government, gave Dr. Li Wenliang the label of an antisystem ‘hero’ and ‘awakener.’ This is entirely against the facts. Li Wenliang is a Communist Party member, not a so-called ‘anti-institutional figure,’ and those forces with ulterior motives who wish to fan the fires, deceive people and stir up emotions in society are doomed to fail,” the statement said.

“Hostile forces” is the blanket term used by CCP propagandists to discredit those who speak out and criticize party leaders and institutions by insinuating that they are acting as tools for foreign governments.

Authorities were unable to impose a prison sentence on the doctor because he became ill with the disease and died on Feb. 7, 2020, leaving behind a pregnant wife and child.

Randall Schriver, a former Pentagon and State Department official, said Dr. Li discovered that a patient had suffered from the new SARS outbreak and tried to warn his colleagues of the emerging epidemic.

“Today we stand solemnly with the people of the People’s Republic of China who grieve the death of Dr. Li Wenliang, a lone hero who died while alerting the world of the perils of COVID-19,” said Mr. Schriver, now chairman of the Project 2049 Institute, a think tank.

“Despite warnings from the security bureau officials, he went back to work and tirelessly cared for patients, until he was diagnosed with COVID-19 and passed away on Feb. 7, 2020,” Mr. Schriver said.

“His bravery and willingness to stand against China’s authoritarian regime and inform the public of the COVID19 outbreak saved many lives in China, as people took his warnings seriously and wore masks from the early stages of the outbreak.”

Critics say China’s government continues to hide information about the initial disease outbreak and has not apologized to Dr. Li’s family for his treatment by authorities after he went public

ccp

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Li Wenliang who is reported to have died of corona
« Reply #1438 on: February 08, 2022, 06:51:38 AM »
The Chinese doctor

could have been murdered:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Li_Wenliang

how many 33 year olds have died of corona?

Crafty_Dog

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Re: US-China (& Japan, South China Sea-- Vietnam, Philippines, etc)
« Reply #1439 on: February 08, 2022, 08:41:54 AM »
Thank you for that follow up.

Crafty_Dog

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Taiwan
« Reply #1440 on: February 08, 2022, 09:48:31 AM »
U.S.-Taiwan deal. The U.S. approved a deal worth $100 million to upgrade Taiwan’s Patriot missile defense system. China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs condemned the move and urged the U.S. to scrap the deal. A ministry spokesperson said Beijing would take the necessary steps to protect its sovereignty and security.

Crafty_Dog

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Chang: Xi/China coming for US
« Reply #1441 on: February 16, 2022, 08:03:30 AM »
Will Xi Jinping's 'End of Days' Plunge China and the World into War?
by Gordon G. Chang
February 16, 2022 at 5:00 am

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Xi Jinping, China's mighty-looking leader, has an "enormous array of domestic enemies." — Gregory Copley, president of the International Strategic Studies Association and editor-in-chief of Defense & Foreign Affairs Strategic Policy, to Gatestone Institute, February 2022.

Xi created that opposition. After becoming China's ruler at the end of 2012, he grabbed power from everyone else and then jailed tens of thousands of opponents in purges, which he styled as "anti-corruption" campaigns.

Beijing is panicking, adding nearly a trillion dollars in total new credit last month, a record increase.... When the so-called "hidden debt" is included, total debt in the country amounts to somewhere in the vicinity of 350% of gross domestic product.

Not surprisingly, Chinese companies are now defaulting. The debt crisis is so serious it can bring down China's economy—and the country's financial and political systems with it.

In the most recent hint of distress, "Fang Zhou and China"... wrote a 42,000-character essay titled "An Objective Evaluation of Xi Jinping." The anti-Xi screed, posted on January 19 on the China-sponsored 6park site, appears to be the work of several members of the Communist Party's Shanghai Gang faction, headed by former leader Jiang Zemin. Jiang's faction has been continually sniping at Xi and now is leading the charge against him.

Xi's problems, unfortunately, can become our problems. He has, for various internal political reasons, a low threshold of risk and many reasons to pick on some other country to deflect elite criticism and popular discontent.

The Communist Party of China has always believed its struggle with the United States is existential—in May 2019 the official People's Daily declared a "people's war" on America—but the hostility has become far more evident in the past year.

Virulent anti-Americanism suggests Xi Jinping is establishing a justification to strike America. The Chinese regime often uses its media to first warn and then signal its actions.

America has now been warned.


Xi Jinping, China's mighty-looking leader, created his opposition. After becoming ruler at the end of 2012, he grabbed power from everyone else and then jailed tens of thousands of opponents in purges, which he styled as "anti-corruption" campaigns. Xi's problems, unfortunately, can become our problems. Virulent anti-Americanism suggests Xi is establishing a justification to strike America. Pictured: Xi at the Great Hall of the People on May 28, 2020 in Beijing. (Photo by Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)

When truckers took over Canada's capital, Ottawa, and shut down border entry points to America, some called it a "nationwide insurrection." Mass demonstrations have occurred across the democratic world. People have had enough of two years of mandates and other disease-control measures.

Not so in the world's most populous state, which maintains the world's strictest COVID-19 controls. There are no known popular protests in the People's Republic of China against anti-coronavirus efforts.

Yet China is not stable, and Xi Jinping is facing his "End of Days," as a recent essay by opposition figures (see below) puts it. The revolt is not in society at large but at the top of the Communist Party. As Gregory Copley, president of the International Strategic Studies Association, told Gatestone, Xi Jinping, China's mighty-looking leader, has an "enormous array of domestic enemies."

Xi created that opposition. After becoming China's ruler at the end of 2012, he grabbed power from everyone else and then jailed tens of thousands of opponents in purges, which he styled as "anti-corruption" campaigns.

Xi also used the disease to great advantage. As Copley, also the editor-in-chief of Defense & Foreign Affairs Strategic Policy, points out, "Xi's 'zero COVID' policy is, indeed, less about stopping the spread of COVID and more about suppressing his internal enemies, both in the public and in the Party."

The "enormous array" is now starting to strike back. Xi is most vulnerable on his handling of the country's stagnating economy. For one thing, the draconian campaign against COVID—massive testing, meticulous contact-tracing, strict lockdowns—have of course undermined consumption, which Beijing has touted as the core of the economy.

Beijing is panicking, adding nearly a trillion dollars in total new credit last month, a record increase. Chinese technocrats have also become sneaky, embarking on what the widely followed Andrew Collier of Global Source Partners terms "shadow stimulus"—stimulus provided by local governments and their entities in order to allow the central government to avoid reporting spending.

China needs a vibrant economy to service enormous debts, largely run up as Beijing overstimulated the economy, especially beginning in 2008. When the so-called "hidden debt" is included, total debt in the country amounts to somewhere in the vicinity of 350% of gross domestic product.

Not surprisingly, Chinese companies are now defaulting. The debt crisis is so serious it can bring down China's economy—and the country's financial and political systems with it.

For three decades, a Chinese leader was essentially immune to criticism because all decisions of consequence were shared by top figures in the Communist Party. Xi Jinping, however, as he took power also ended up with accountability—in other words, with no one else to blame. With things not going China's way in recent years, Xi, often called the "Chairman of Everything," is taking heat.

There are signs of intensifying discord among senior leaders. In the most recent hint of distress, "Fang Zhou and China"— "Fang Zhou" is a pseudonym meaning "ark"—wrote a 42,000-character essay titled "An Objective Evaluation of Xi Jinping." The anti-Xi screed, posted on January 19 on the China-sponsored 6park site, appears to be the work of several members of the Communist Party's Shanghai Gang faction, headed by former leader Jiang Zemin. Jiang's faction has been continually sniping at Xi and now is leading the charge against him.

Fang's piece incorporates previously voiced criticisms but does so in a comprehensive fashion. Fang blames Xi for, among other things, ruining the economy.

"Xi will be the architect of his own defeat," writes Fang at the end of the rant, in a section titled "Xi Jinping's Denouement" or "End of Days." "His style of governance is simply unsustainable; it will generate even newer and greater policy missteps."

Fang notes that Xi was able to take advantage of a feeble opposition but has not been able to accomplish much. "Xi's policies have been retrogressive and derivative, his successes minor and his blunders numerous," writes the Asia Society's Geremie Barme, who translated the essay, summarizing Fang's thoughts. Fang believes Xi "deserves a score of less than zero."

Xi is not one to let a decade of zero scores get in the way of his continued rule. Communist Party norms require him to step down at the 20th National Congress, to be held sometime this fall if tradition holds. He obviously wants a precedent-breaking third term as general secretary so that he can become, as outsiders say, "Dictator for Life." Most observers expect he will get that new term.

Maybe. Fang Zhou's essay shows Communist Party leaders are risking stability by airing disagreements in public. Xi Jinping therefore, now realizes he is in the fight of his life.

Xi's problems, unfortunately, can become our problems. He has, for various internal political reasons, a low threshold of risk and many reasons to pick on some other country to deflect elite criticism and popular discontent.

In 1966, Mao Zedong, Communist China's first ruler, started the decade-long Cultural Revolution to vanquish political enemies in Beijing. Xi is doing much the same thing now, especially with his "common prosperity" program, which could return China to the 1950s.

Unlike Mao, however, Xi has the power to plunge the world into war, and he has reason to lash out soon.

Xi is targeting the United States. On August 29 of last year, People's Daily, China's most authoritative publication, accused America of launching "barbaric" attacks on the Chinese nation. On the 21st of that month, Global Times, a tabloid controlled by People's Daily, insinuated the U.S. was working with China's "enemies."

The Communist Party of China has always believed its struggle with the United States is existential—in May 2019 the official People's Daily declared a "people's war" on America—but the hostility has become far more evident in the past year.

Virulent anti-Americanism suggests Xi Jinping is establishing a justification to strike America. The Chinese regime often uses its media to first warn and then signal its actions.

America has now been warned.

Gordon G. Chang is the author of The Coming Collapse of China, a Gatestone Institute distinguished senior fellow, and a member of its Advisory Board.

Follow Gordon G. Chang on Twitter

ccp

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G M

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Re: China vs US in conflict 2022
« Reply #1443 on: February 18, 2022, 07:51:56 AM »

ccp

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Re: US-China (& Japan, South China Sea-- Vietnam, Philippines, etc)
« Reply #1444 on: February 18, 2022, 07:59:07 AM »
".After 20 years, we lost to illiterates who fcuk goats.

No one takes us seriously."

Bill forgot to mention our military does lead China in wokeness

in 2022.    :-P

G M

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Bad news for OZ, NZ and us
« Reply #1445 on: February 18, 2022, 10:18:05 AM »
http://ace.mu.nu/archives/397844.php

At least the current totalitarian governments are preparing the populations for Chinese rule.



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Nine Chinese Jets Violate Taiwan Airspace
« Reply #1447 on: February 24, 2022, 12:20:04 PM »
quote author=G M link=topic=2134.msg139287#msg139287 date=1635464193
"Xi only respects the viable threat of force."
--------------
Among the sanctions Biden has slapped on Putin for full scale invasion of Ukraine include unfollowing him on Twitter, according to the Babylon Bee.  Is that about right?

Before the tanks even reach Kiev, unopposed, we see this:

Nine Chinese Jets Violate Taiwan Airspace
https://thehill.com/policy/international/china/595661-taiwan-reports-nine-chinese-aircraft-in-defense-zone

Who predicted THAT?   [everyone here?]


http://www.zzwave.com/plaboard/posts/3968357.shtml
« Last Edit: February 24, 2022, 01:52:09 PM by DougMacG »

Crafty_Dog

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Taiwan should be taking notes here:
« Reply #1448 on: February 27, 2022, 03:51:07 PM »

G M

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Re: Taiwan should be taking notes here:
« Reply #1449 on: February 27, 2022, 03:58:02 PM »