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China's Military Buildup Could Push USA Out of Asia

Lankan Ranger

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China's Military Buildup Could Push USA Out of Asia

Just this past week, the Chinese government announced an increase of nearly 13 percent in its defense budget over the previous year. Officially, the defense budget stands at slightly more than $91 billion--a sum now second in the world only to what the United States spends on its military.

This is only the "official," declared budget. China's real expenditures for military affairs are far greater, with jets and ships it buys from Russia, its research and development programs, and its strategic weapons all "off the books."

Moreover, if one factors in the vast difference in what it costs to field and pay for the average member of the Chinese military versus those same costs for an American serviceman or woman, the "price-adjusted" Chinese military budget may approach $300 billion.

While this figure is at best an estimate and still clearly smaller than what the United States spends on defense, America's edge in spending does not necessarily translate into clear military pre-eminence in Asia.

The U.S. military has global tasks and responsibilities, while the vast majority of China's defense expenditures goes toward building up a capability in this one specific but vital region of the word.

So what has China gotten for its money after two decades of double-digit increases in military spending? The short answer is a change in the East Asian military balance.

In 1996, President Clinton sent two American aircraft carriers into the waters off of Taiwan in response to a series of missile tests and military exercises by the Chinese designed to intimidate Taiwan as its 1996 presidential election approached.

He did so confident that U.S. naval power was sufficient to control any crisis and deter further Chinese attempts at military coercion. Today, faced with a Chinese arsenal of new planes, ships, submarines, and missiles, no American president could act with such surety.

Of course, it wasn't supposed to be this way. Chinese leaders have long emphasized that Beijing's "rise" would be "peaceful." Alas, the nature of the Chinese military buildup poses the single most dangerous challenge to the security of the Asia-Pacific region since that of Imperial Japan. China's huge missile arsenal, in particular, is extremely destabilizing.

Nor was this new military imbalance supposed to happen so rapidly. Until recent years, U.S. defense officials and senior commanders have been pooh-poohing the Chinese modernization efforts.

Now Adm. Robert Willard, head of U.S. forces in the region, says his command must "step up efforts to maintain regional stability" in response to "China's immense presence in the Pacific Ocean." He recognizes that U.S. military supremacy, the defining characteristic of the regional security architecture, is open to question.

Yet, it is far from clear that Willard will have enough forces, or the right kind of forces, to maintain stability. The U.S. Navy has shrunk to less than half its 600-ship, Reagan-era peak, while the Air Force's F-22 procurement--and the Raptor would be a key trump card in offsetting the advantages China realizes with its missile force--was ended with the purchase of just a quarter of the planned number of jets.

China also presents a challenge to U.S. advantages in space, on which all American forces depend, and in "cyberspace."

Indeed, no one has been more heartened than strategists in Beijing by the U.S. defense budget cuts of recent years that have eliminated more than $325 billion in weapons modernization.

And with the congressional Republicans seemingly poised to reduce the Pentagon budget requests even further, the Chinese are happy to let nature take its course.

But if history teaches us anything, it is a course likely to incur greater costs down the road for both the United States and its allies.

Articles & Commentary
 
Ya?:what:
And howz that gonna happen?
Is China preparing for a preemptive strike against American installation in Japan and South korea?

Even US will increase its concentration in Asia or heavily arm SK and Japan, they can't let go their super power status in the region.
 
Ya?:what:
And howz that gonna happen?
Is China preparing for a preemptive strike against American installation in Japan and South korea?

Even US will increase its concentration in Asia or heavily arm SK and Japan, they can't let go their super power status in the region.

:coffee: USA as UK, Japan as India, when the UK to give up control of India, Whether India continues to follow the UK?

Now China's military expenditure is 2.6% GDP, America's military expenditure is 4.6% GDP, it can maintain the military balance in East Asia.
If China's economy size grew to like the USA's, China maintains 2.6% GDP military spending, How many American military spending to maintain a balance in East Asia?
 
When will the department of DEFENSE for the US be used for actual defense of the US homeland?

Right now the US war machine is butchering millions on the other side of the world while illegal Mexicans and Blacks are swarming into the US, showing its undefended borders! US military, defense of national borders #100, offense and butchering civilians #1.
 
:coffee:
If China's economy size grew to like the USA's, China maintains 2.6% GDP military spending, How many American military spending to maintain a balance in East Asia?

American military strength is complimented by the military & financial strength of its allies in the region. allies like Japan & South Korea, combined with the strength of US, it will be even hard for China on home ground. while China has no such allies to speak of & it has antagonized most of its neighbors recently. and giants like India also stand on China's door step.

with its allies the US has more than an edge in Asia.
 
Ya?:what:
And howz that gonna happen?
Is China preparing for a preemptive strike against American installation in Japan and South korea?

Even US will increase its concentration in Asia or heavily arm SK and Japan, they can't let go their super power status in the region.

it happens with money.

money is everything.
 
:coffee: USA as UK, Japan as India, when the UK to give up control of India, Whether India continues to follow the UK?

Now China's military expenditure is 2.6% GDP, America's military expenditure is 4.6% GDP, it can maintain the military balance in East Asia.
If China's economy size grew to like the USA's, China maintains 2.6% GDP military spending, How many American military spending to maintain a balance in East Asia?

Sory i was not able to get the meanimg out of the first part can any one explain me that
 
American military strength is complimented by the military & financial strength of its allies in the region. allies like Japan & South Korea, combined with the strength of US, it will be even hard for China on home ground. while China has no such allies to speak of & it has antagonized most of its neighbors recently. and giants like India also stand on China's door step.

with its allies the US has more than an edge in Asia.

Alliances change when balance of power shifts. Countries Americans can count on in the region are basically limited to Japan, South Korea and to a less extend Vietnam and Singapore. For rest of the ASEA, the most U.S. can hope is to prevent them from bandwagoning with China.
 
This isn't going to happen without proxy wars. India could be the first.
 
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