Breaking News Stories
These are news stories breaking after the publishing of this Word
from.
– China, Growing Superpower
The Chinese military threat
The Washington Times
This year's Pentagon report on China's military power is somewhat
tougher than in previous years. Released Tuesday, the report concludes
that China could threaten not just its smaller neighbors, like Taiwan,
but in time "modern militaries operating in the region," which is
Pentagon-speak for the United States.
| The Pentagon report
details China's moves to develop anti-satellite weaponry,
computer-network war fighting capabilities, nuclear- and
electromagnetic-pulse options against Taiwan and examines the
capabilities for an amphibious landing. |
"The pace and scope of China's military are, already, such as to put
regional military balances at risk," the Pentagon concludes. This report
is a needed wake-up call following by a week the threat, since
disavowed, by a ranking Chinese general that China would hit "hundreds"
of U.S. cities with nuclear weapons if the United States should
intervene if Beijing attacks Taiwan.
Most of the report specifies in cautious language the ways China is
building the means to threaten its neighbors and the United States.
First, China is bolstering its naval, submarine and cruise-missile
capabilities in an apparent bid to challenge U.S. naval dominance of the
Asia-Pacific region. China is building a nuclear-missile arsenal and is
already capable of striking "virtually all of the United States." It is
purchasing advanced aircraft systems and is moving to professionalize
and modernize the People's Liberation Army. China's defense spending
could reach $90 billion this year, about three times what it admits
spending. Only the United States and Russia spend more.
Taiwan remains the focus of Chinese military strategy, but "some of
China's military planners are surveying the strategic landscape beyond
Taiwan." In fact, several Chinese military strategists seem to view
Taiwan not as an end but as a means of projecting power into the oceans.
Gen. Wen Zongren, political commissar of the Academy of Military
Science, said recently that the Taiwan problem is of "far reaching
significance to breaking international forces' blockade against China's
rise ... [T]o rise suddenly, China must pass through oceans and go out
of the oceans in its future development."
The Pentagon report details China's moves to develop anti-satellite
weaponry, computer-network warfighting capabilities, nuclear- and
electromagnetic-pulse options against Taiwan and examines the
capabilities for an amphibious landing. Looming over these conclusions
is the fact -- oft-mentioned in the report -- that U.S. intelligence
agencies have nowhere near full knowledge of China's military
capabilities, or its intentions. The most threatening elements could be
the ones we don't yet know.
It's worth pointing out that this report is a consensus document with
many authors. Hawks, doves and others pull and tug and the result of
such pulling and tugging is frequently an inconclusive muddle. So it's
significant that the mainstream recognizes the China threat in
increasingly clear-eyed terms. The report should be read carefully on
Capitol Hill.
|