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Countering anti-China rhetoric in the Mass Media

Chicago is America's third-largest city. Many people read the Chicago Tribune. I don't appreciate it when someone writes anti-China propaganda in the comment section of the Chicago Tribune. They're going to hear from me.

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U.S. allowed China to soar

The U.S. attempt to "contain" China has been pretty tame compared to the squeeze on the Soviet Union.

1. There is no Asian NATO.

2. The U.S. blocked trade with the Soviet Union via the Jackson-Vanik trade sanction law. "Most Favored Nation" (MFN) status for the Soviet Union/Russia had been withheld for decades until Russia joined the WTO in December of last year.

In contrast, U.S. MFN was granted to China in the 1990s (see Most favoured nation).

In reality, the U.S. granted China free trade status after 1980. China could not have become an economic trade giant without active U.S. support.

Permanent normal trade relations

"For many years, People's Republic of China was the most important country in this group which required an annual waiver to maintain free trade status. The waiver for the PRC had been in effect since 1980. Every year between 1989 and 1999, legislation was introduced in Congress to disapprove the President's waiver. The legislation had sought to tie free trade with China to meeting certain human rights conditions that go beyond freedom of emigration. All such attempted legislation failed to pass."

3. The U.S. wouldn't let the Soviet Union/Russia into the WTO until last year. China joined the WTO ten years ago.

4. Not only did the United States open its market to Chinese goods for decades, the United States opened its universities to Taiwanese (i.e. ethnic Chinese) and mainland Chinese. Let's be honest, U.S. universities opened up our minds and now we're all super-smart. Hehe.

In conclusion, I (for one) am grateful to the United States. Let us hope that we can build an enduring Sino-American friendship. The Chinese standard of living continues to rise dramatically year-after-year and Chinese industries are starting to dominate in one sector after another. While it is true that Chinese work very hard, it is also due to decades of accommodation by the Big Guy (aka Hyperpower).

In the 1980s, American did not realise by promoting free trade with China will create another super power. The China in 1980 is in pathetic state, nobody will imagine after 30 yrs, it will become the 2nd largest economy power and possible 2nd largest military power after USA..

Greed is the thing that killed USA... The greed to earn higher profit by cost cutting. China is smart that to make China favourable for invest ,so that they will outsource their manufacturing facilities to China.

Even today, China is still the favourable destination for investment or setup of manufacturing plant.

A hardworking workforce. Minimal labour law.. Highly effectial network to transport yr goods(road, bridge and first class port)
 
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Demolishing weak Filipino arguments to encroach on Chinese sovereignty over Huangyan Island/Scarborough Shoal

My post on at least 20 different popular YouTube videos (including Voice of America video on South China Sea):

"It is a historical fact that China was the first to discover Huangyan Island/Scarborough Shoal in 1279 A.D. and incorporate it into official Yuan Dynasty government maps. Chinese sovereignty has been continually exercised with the use of Huangyan Island by countless generations of Chinese fishermen.

There are no provisions in the 1982 UNCLOS that permits the retroactive confiscation of pre-existing sovereign territory that dates from 1279 A.D. Also, the U.S. refuses to recognize UNCLOS."

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Filipino nationalists don't like it when I rip out the heart of their arguments to encroach on Chinese sovereignty over Huangyan Island/Scarborough Shoal.
 
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Sovereignty does not depend on inhabitation

Here I am on the most popular Voice of America YouTube video (by views) on the South China Sea to refute the notion that sovereignty is dependent on inhabitation.

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Working my way through the Filipino arguments

I'm still commenting on the most popular Voice of America YouTube video regarding the South China Sea. This is where all of the China-haters like to congregate and I'm basically challenging them to a debate on the merits.

I have demolished the following Filipino nationalists' arguments:

1. Proximity - Huangyan Island/Scarborough Shoal is indeed closer to the Philippines than to China. So what? Who cares? Historical first discovery determines ownership, not proximity. The most prominent example is the Falkland Islands. It's British, because of first discovery.

2. Inhabitation is not a determinant of sovereignty - Look at the thousands of uninhabited Greek islands. No one disputes those islands are Greek. Hence, inhabitation is not important in determining sovereignty.

3. Exclusive Economic Zone under UNCLOS - The United States does not recognize UNCLOS. In other words, UNCLOS has no basis in international law. Also, UNCLOS has no provision to permit the retroactive seizure of sovereign territory that dates from 1279 A.D.

4. ITLOS - Since the United States does not recognize UNCLOS, ITLOS has no jurisdiction or validity.

I'll keep knocking down the baloney arguments put forth by the Filipino nationalists. Sooner or later, they'll finally admit that Huangyan Island/Scarborough Shoal has been Chinese after the first discovery by China's Yuan Dynasty in 1279 A.D.

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Thank you to everyone that voted "thumbs up" on my comment pertaining to the Greek islands. It is currently a top comment on the Voice of America YouTube video.
 
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In the 1980s, American did not realise by promoting free trade with China will create another super power. The China in 1980 is in pathetic state, nobody will imagine after 30 yrs, it will become the 2nd largest economy power and possible 2nd largest military power after USA..

Greed is the thing that killed USA... The greed to earn higher profit by cost cutting. China is smart that to make China favourable for invest ,so that they will outsource their manufacturing facilities to China.

Even today, China is still the favourable destination for investment or setup of manufacturing plant.

A hardworking workforce. Minimal labour law.. Highly effectial network to transport yr goods(road, bridge and first class port)

we help curb their inflation, maintain a robust stock market and wealth in their shareholders (whose companies have their operations in China) and prevent their environmental deterioration for 3 decades; and of course, their economy's liquidity!
 
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The Tide of Chinese History

Let's take a look at a few notable events in Chinese foreign affairs during the past decades and try to guess where China is headed.

In 1979, China took care of Vietnam by burning down the northern part of their country. In 1997, China sent the British packing. I'm guessing India is next on China's hit list around 2025 (when the J-20 Mighty Dragon stealth fighter fleet will be ready).

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China devastated Vietnam in 1979

sino vietnamese war

"Aftermath

The legacy of the war is lasting, especially in Vietnam. The Chinese implemented an effective "scorched-earth policy" while retreating back to China. They caused extensive damage to the Vietnamese countryside and infrastructure, through destruction of Vietnamese villages, roads, and railroads."

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By 2025, I expect China to repeat its British ultimatum to India

China's anti-imperialism stance has been consistent. At some point, China's patience will run out and foreign countries will face the ultimatum of Chinese military power. Either voluntarily return Chinese South Tibetan territory (i.e. occupied Arunachal Pradesh) or beg on your knees at the feet of the PLA.

The choice will be yours: comply or be destroyed.

Hong Kong and Macau - Andrew Stone, Piera Chen, Chung Wah Chow - Google Books

"The peaceful agreement that eventually settled the status of Hong Kong was by no means a foregone conclusion in the decades leading up to it. The key negotiators have since revealed just how touchy China felt about Hong Kong and how close it came to retaking the territory by force.

Margaret Thatcher, the British prime minister who negotiated the deal, said later that Deng Xiaoping, then China's leader, told her he 'could walk in and take the whole lot this afternoon'.

She replied that China would lose everything if it did. 'There is nothing I could do to stop you,' she said, 'but the eyes of the world would now know what China is like.'

Lu Ping, the top Chinese negotiator, recently confirmed that this was no bluff on Deng's part."
 
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In many ways, the Vietnam War was an undeclared war between the United States and China. Arguably, it was a resounding Chinese victory.

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General Westmoreland: "[Without China] there would have been little chance for a Vietnamese victory against the French, and later against the Americans and South Vietnamese."

Vietnamese were slaves of the French in their own country. China's support freed the Vietnamese from French imperialists.

China provided critical support to enable Vietnam to unify their country. In return, the ungrateful Vietnamese are flirting with their former enemy, the United States, to stab China in the back.

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Military History Online - Chinese Support for North Vietnam during the Vietnam War: The Decisive Edge

"Chinese Support for North Vietnam during the Vietnam War: The Decisive Edge
by Bob Seals

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China would continue; however, to provide substantial levels of military aid for North Vietnam to the tune of $106 million from 1955 to 1963, effectively giving the North the resources needed to begin the insurgency in the South. [43] Thus, the North Vietnamese would form the National Liberation Front, NLF, in December of 1960 and the People’s Liberation Armed Forces, PLAF, the following year in 1961. Both the NLF and PLAF would be more commonly referred to as the Viet Cong, or Vietnamese Communists. [44]
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Support requested and provided

The most immediate need was for anti-aircraft artillery, units to counter the overwhelming American air power over North Vietnam. Ho would request Chinese AAA units during a meeting with Mao in May of 1965 and PLA forces would begin flowing into North Vietnam in July of 1965 to help defend the capital of Hanoi and the transportation network to include railroad lines and bridges.[50] This movement of troops from China was not lost on the U.S. as reported in a Top Secret CIA Special Report which identified seven major PLA units in North Vietnam to include the 67th AAA Division, and an estimated 25,000 to 45,000 Chinese combat troops total. [51] Recent Chinese sources indicate that this PLA AAA Division did indeed operate in the western area of North Vietnam. [52] In addition to AAA forces the PLA also provided missiles, artillery and logistics, railroad, engineer and mine sweeping forces. These forces would not only man AAA sites but would also build and repair Vietnamese infrastructure damaged or destroyed by U.S. airstrikes. [53] Such units would have quite a bit of repair work to do given that there would be more than a million tons of bombs dropped by U.S. aircraft upon North Vietnam from 1965 to 1972. [54] The Second Vietnam War would drag on for years as a sort of operational stalemate existed in the skies over North Vietnam. The U.S. could and did bomb the North at will, but the sheer numbers of Chinese forces, to include a total of 16 AAA divisions serving with a peak strength of 170,000 troops attained in 1967, would ensure that a high price would be paid by U.S. pilots with targets often rapidly rebuilt after destruction. [55] Chinese engineering and logistics units would perform impressive feats of construction throughout their stay in North Vietnam effectively keeping the transportation network functioning.
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Analysis of support

“So the more troops they send to Vietnam, the happier we will be, for we feel that we will have them in our power, we can have their blood…They will be close to China…in our grasp. They…will be our hostages.” [59]
- - Chou En-lai speaking to Nasser, 1965

So how does one analyze the considerable military support provided by the PRC for the DRV during the 25 year period from 1950-1975, encompassing both the First and Second Vietnam Wars? Was the military aid provided, to include equipment, advisors and planning assistance, decisive in both conflicts or would the North Vietnamese have prevailed without this Chinese military support? In retrospect it seems clear that the Chinese military support for the DRV would be crucial. This Chinese support would be, in many respects, timely, appropriate and helpful without doing the job that the North Vietnamese needed to do themselves; that is, fight and win on the ground in South Vietnam. The PRC would not conduct an intervention on the scale that it conducted in Korea, avoiding the international perception of acting in the traditional China/tributary state relationship with Vietnam, all the while providing the tools and assistance required to “tip the scales” in both conflicts against the West. The People’s Republic would be, in effect, the world’s largest unsinkable aircraft carrier and army base, a strategic advantage that Western nations thousands of miles removed from the fighting could not hope to match.

As a biographer of Chairman Mao would remark “It was having China as a secure rear and supply depot that made it possible for the Vietnamese to fight for 25 years and beat first the French and then the Americans.” [60]

The numbers would be impressive enough, of the military equipment and supplies provided by China. According to Qiang Zhai, during the period 1950-54, the PRC would provide enough weapons, 116,000 small arms and 4630 artillery pieces, to equip some 5 infantry divisions, one heavy engineering and artillery division, one direct fire anti-aircraft artillery regiment and one guards regiment. [61] This infusion of equipment for almost seven divisions worth of troops could not, and would not, be matched by the French. As one U.S. military officer would comment years later “The French politicians continued their irresolute, incoherent, and penny-pinching support of military operations in Indochina, while demanding ‘decisive solutions.’” [62] The numbers would be even more impressive in the Second Vietnam War. Chinese support provided would increase by a factor of ten with arms and equipment from uniforms to tanks to small arms on a yearly basis greater than the entire military aid provided in the early 1950’s against the French. [63] Additionally the Chinese anti-aircraft artillery troops, peaking at a total of 17 divisions and 150,000 men in 1967, would claim credit for downing 1,707 U.S. aircraft over North Vietnam. [64] These Chinese combat troops who were not to be used south of the 21st parallel in North Vietnam; however, the presence of these units secured the North’s rear, turning the nation into the most heavily defended area in the world, and allowing the DRV to use resources in South Vietnam and elsewhere that would have been devoted to homeland defense. [65] In effect the U.S. would not be able to open a second front over the skies of North Vietnam, as it had been able to so successfully over Germany in the Second World War, due to these Chinese divisions.

But the mere presence of China to the north would also be a constant “sword of Damocles” hanging over the heads of Western and South Vietnamese nations. This nearness would also ensure that the ever present possibility of massive, full scale Chinese intervention would always be a factor that had to be considered by Western political and military leaders. Any plans for taking the fight to the North Vietnamese enemy on his home field by going north could not be seriously considered given the clear warnings by the PRC that it would intervene with massive force. The Chinese took great pains to communicate this willingness to fight on behalf of North Vietnam, if seriously threatened, to the United States, communicating warnings via various channels to include ambassadorial talks in Poland, third-party leaders such as the Pakistani and Tanzania Presidents and the British ambassador in Beijing. [66] In some respects this pledge of assistance was just as valuable as the tanks, trucks and guns provided by the PRC.

Conclusion

“Why have the Americans not made a fuss about the fact that more than 100,000 Chinese troops help you building the railways, roads and airports although they knew about it?” [67]
- - Chairman Mao to Vietnamese Premier Dong, 1970

In conclusion, as we can see from the considerable historical material outlined above, the military support provided by the People’s Republic of China, to include advisors, equipment and combat troops, was the decisive factor for the Communist Democratic Republic of Vietnam prevailing during 1949-1975 in both the First and Second Vietnam Wars. The small arms, mortars, ammunition, uniforms, tanks, artillery, radars, anti-aircraft guns, jet aircraft, trucks, and naval vessels were critical in the North Vietnamese struggle. However, what was even more critical and normally not acknowledged in the laundry list of war material is the psychological and strategic advantage provided by Communist China’s pledge to intervene in the advent of a United States invasion of North Vietnam, and communicating that pledge to the U.S. This strategic advantage in effect cannot be overstated.

As General Westmoreland’s former G-2, or Intelligence Officer would write after the Vietnam Wars “With a friendly China located adjacent to North Vietnam, there would have been little chance for a Vietnamese victory against the French, and later against the Americans and South Vietnamese.” [68] It is rather ironic that most professional historians tend to downplay or ignore China’s decisive role in North Vietnam’s victory while the military and intelligence communities, U.S. at least, are much more willing to acknowledge this fact. Perhaps this is understandable since if one acknowledges the role played by China it calls into question such Vietnam myths as the “poorly armed guerrilla” and the “military genius” of Giap, among other issues. Historians such as Xiaoming Zhang and Qiang Zhai are challenging the paradigm of accepted Vietnam history and in doing so are performing a great service.

“Thus the highest realization of warfare is to attack the enemy plans;” according to the learned military theorist Sun-Tzu in the Art of War. [69] In respects this is exactly what the North Vietnamese, and Chinese did in both Vietnam Wars: they successfully attacked the Western powers war plans. The considerable support for the DRV by the PRC, to include a promise to intervene with massive numbers of troops in the event of an invasion of North Vietnam, effectively eliminated this course of action, and perhaps others, as potential war winning options for the West. Thus, with the support of China, on a strategic level of war the DRV was able to remain upon the offensive throughout the war, maintaining the initiative and finally achieving victory as Saigon fell in April of 1975."
 
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U.S. self-interests override any consideration for Filipino or Vietnamese interests

The United States is currently the world's leading economic and military power. China is expected to become the world's largest economy in the next ten years. I saw a study where China is projected to have the world's-largest military budget by 2035 (see citation below).

It is in the long-term interest of the United States to maintain a cooperative and positive relationship with China. Only fools believe the U.S. will engage in a shooting war with China over 1,000-year-old Chinese islands from the Han Dynasty.

All you have to do is look at North Korea. Why did George Bush attack Afghanistan and Iraq, but leave North Korea alone after it detonated an atomic bomb to implicitly threaten South Korea? The obvious answer is deference to China.

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The year 2035 is only two decades away. We all know China has a long term memory. In my judgment, the United States will no do anything rash to risk its good relations with China. You can kiss the Filipinos and Vietnamese goodbye.

China

"The dragon’s new teeth
A rare look inside the world’s biggest military expansion
Apr 7th 2012 | BEIJING

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AT A meeting of South-East Asian nations in 2010, China’s foreign minister Yang Jiechi, facing a barrage of complaints about his country’s behaviour in the region, blurted out the sort of thing polite leaders usually prefer to leave unsaid. “China is a big country,” he pointed out, “and other countries are small countries and that is just a fact.” Indeed it is, and China is big not merely in terms of territory and population, but also military might. Its Communist Party is presiding over the world’s largest military build-up. And that is just a fact, too—one which the rest of the world is having to come to terms with.

That China is rapidly modernising its armed forces is not in doubt, though there is disagreement about what the true spending figure is. China’s defence budget has almost certainly experienced double digit growth for two decades. According to SIPRI, a research institute, annual defence spending rose from over $30 billion in 2000 to almost $120 billion in 2010. SIPRI usually adds about 50% to the official figure that China gives for its defence spending, because even basic military items such as research and development are kept off budget. Including those items would imply total military spending in 2012, based on the latest announcement from Beijing, will be around $160 billion. America still spends four-and-a-half times as much on defence, but on present trends China’s defence spending could overtake America’s after 2035 (see chart).

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All that money is changing what the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) can do. Twenty years ago, China’s military might lay primarily in the enormous numbers of people under arms; their main task was to fight an enemy face-to-face or occupy territory. The PLA is still the largest army in the world, with an active force of 2.3m. But China’s real military strength increasingly lies elsewhere. The Pentagon’s planners think China is intent on acquiring what is called in the jargon A2/AD, or “anti-access/area denial” capabilities. The idea is to use pinpoint ground attack and anti-ship missiles, a growing fleet of modern submarines and cyber and anti-satellite weapons to destroy or disable another nation’s military assets from afar.

In the western Pacific, that would mean targeting or putting in jeopardy America’s aircraft-carrier groups and its air-force bases in Okinawa, South Korea and even Guam. The aim would be to render American power projection in Asia riskier and more costly, so that America’s allies would no longer be able to rely on it to deter aggression or to combat subtler forms of coercion. It would also enable China to carry out its repeated threat to take over Taiwan if the island were ever to declare formal independence.

China’s military build-up is ringing alarm bells in Asia and has already caused a pivot in America’s defence policy. The new “strategic guidance” issued in January by Barack Obama and his defence secretary, Leon Panetta, confirmed what everyone in Washington already knew: that a switch in priorities towards Asia was overdue and under way. The document says that “While the US military will continue to contribute to security globally, we will of necessity rebalance towards the Asia-Pacific region.” America is planning roughly $500 billion of cuts in planned defence spending over the next ten years. But, says the document, “to credibly deter potential adversaries and to prevent them from achieving their objectives, the United States must maintain its ability to project power in areas in which our access and freedom to operate are challenged.”

It is pretty obvious what that means. Distracted by campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan, America has neglected the most economically dynamic region of the world. In particular, it has responded inadequately to China’s growing military power and political assertiveness. According to senior American diplomats, China has the ambition—and increasingly the power—to become a regional hegemon; it is engaged in a determined effort to lock America out of a region that has been declared a vital security interest by every administration since Teddy Roosevelt’s; and it is pulling countries in South-East Asia into its orbit of influence “by default”. America has to respond. As an early sign of that response, Mr Obama announced in November 2011 that 2,500 US Marines would soon be stationed in Australia. Talks about an increased American military presence in the Philippines began in February this year.

The uncertainty principle


China worries the rest of the world not only because of the scale of its military build-up, but also because of the lack of information about how it might use its new forces and even who is really in charge of them. The American strategic-guidance document spells out the concern. “The growth of China’s military power”, it says, “must be accompanied by greater clarity of its strategic intentions in order to avoid causing friction in the region.”

Officially, China is committed to what it called, in the words of an old slogan, a “peaceful rise”. Its foreign-policy experts stress their commitment to a rules-based multipolar world. They shake their heads in disbelief at suggestions that China sees itself as a “near peer” military competitor with America.

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In the South and East China Seas, though, things look different. In the past 18 months, there have been clashes between Chinese vessels and ships from Japan, Vietnam, South Korea and the Philippines over territorial rights in the resource-rich waters. A pugnacious editorial in the state-run Global Times last October gave warning: “If these countries don’t want to change their ways with China, they will need to prepare for the sounds of cannons. We need to be ready for that, as it may be the only way for the disputes in the sea to be resolved.” This was not a government pronouncement, but it seems the censors permit plenty of press freedom when it comes to blowing off nationalistic steam.

Smooth-talking foreign-ministry officials may cringe with embarrassment at Global Times—China’s equivalent of Fox News—but its views are not so far removed from the gung-ho leadership of the rapidly expanding navy. Moreover, in a statement of doctrine published in 2005, the PLA’s Science of Military Strategy did not mince its words. Although “active defence is the essential feature of China’s military strategy,” it said, if “an enemy offends our national interests it means that the enemy has already fired the first shot,” in which case the PLA’s mission is “to do all we can to dominate the enemy by striking first”.

Making things more alarming is a lack of transparency over who really controls the guns and ships. China is unique among great powers in that the PLA is not formally part of the state. It is responsible to the Communist Party, and is run by the party’s Central Military Commission, not the ministry of defence. Although party and government are obviously very close in China, the party is even more opaque, which complicates outsiders’ understanding of where the PLA’s loyalties and priorities lie. A better military-to-military relationship between America and China would cast some light into this dark corner. But the PLA often suspends “mil-mil” relations as a “punishment” whenever tension rises with America over Taiwan. The PLA is also paranoid about what America might gain if the relationship between the two countries’ armed forces went deeper.

The upshot of these various uncertainties is that even if outsiders believe that China’s intentions are largely benign—and it is clear that some of them do not—they can hardly make plans based on that assumption alone. As the influential American think-tank, the Centre for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments (CSBA) points out, the intentions of an authoritarian regime can change very quickly. The nature and size of the capabilities that China has built up also count.

History boys


The build-up has gone in fits and starts. It began in the early 1950s when the Soviet Union was China’s most important ally and arms supplier, but abruptly ceased when Mao Zedong launched his decade-long Cultural Revolution in the mid-1960s. The two countries came close to war over their disputed border and China carried out its first nuclear test. The second phase of modernisation began in the 1980s, under Deng Xiaoping. Deng was seeking to reform the whole country and the army was no exception. But he told the PLA that his priority was the economy; the generals must be patient and live within a budget of less than 1.5% of GDP.

A third phase began in the early 1990s. Shaken by the destructive impact of the West’s high-tech weaponry on the Iraqi army, the PLA realised that its huge ground forces were militarily obsolete. PLA scholars at the Academy of Military Science in Beijing began learning all they could from American think-tanks about the so-called “revolution in military affairs” (RMA), a change in strategy and weaponry made possible by exponentially greater computer-processing power. In a meeting with The Economist at the Academy, General Chen Zhou, the main author of the four most recent defence white papers, said: “We studied RMA exhaustively. Our great hero was Andy Marshall in the Pentagon [the powerful head of the Office of Net Assessment who was known as the Pentagon’s futurist-in-chief]. We translated every word he wrote.”

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China’s soldiers come in from the cold

In 1993 the general-secretary of the Communist Party, Jiang Zemin, put RMA at the heart of China’s military strategy. Now, the PLA had to turn itself into a force capable of winning what the strategy called “local wars under high-tech conditions”. Campaigns would be short, decisive and limited in geographic scope and political goals. The big investments would henceforth go to the air force, the navy and the Second Artillery Force, which operates China’s nuclear and conventionally armed missiles.

Further shifts came in 2002 and 2004. High-tech weapons on their own were not enough; what mattered was the ability to knit everything together on the battlefield through what the Chinese called “informatisation” and what is known in the West as “unified C4ISR”. (The four Cs are command, control, communications, and computers; ISR stands for intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance; the Pentagon loves its abbreviations).

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Just another corner of the network

General Chen describes the period up to 2010 as “laying the foundations of modernised forces”. The next decade should see the roll-out of what is called mechanisation (the deployment of advanced military platforms) and informatisation (bringing them together as a network). The two processes should be completed in terms of equipment, integration and training by 2020. But General Chen reckons China will not achieve full informatisation until well after that. “A major difficulty”, he says, “is that we are still only partially mechanised. We do not always know how to make our investments when technology is both overlapping and leapfrogging.” Whereas the West was able to accomplish its military transformation by taking the two processes in sequence, China is trying to do both together. Still, that has not slowed down big investments which are designed to defeat even technologically advanced foes by making “the best use of our strong points to attack the enemy’s weak points”. In 2010 the CSBA identified the essential military components that China, on current trends, will be able to deploy within ten years. Among them: satellites and reconnaissance drones; thousands of surface-to-surface and anti-ship missiles; more than 60 stealthy conventional submarines and at least six nuclear attack submarines; stealthy manned and unmanned combat aircraft; and space and cyber warfare capabilities. In addition, the navy has to decide whether to make the (extremely expensive) transition to a force dominated by aircraft-carriers, like America. Aircraft-carriers would be an unmistakable declaration of an ambition eventually to project power far from home. Deploying them would also match the expected actions of Japan and India in the near future. China may well have three small carriers within five to ten years, though military analysts think it would take much longer for the Chinese to learn how to use them well.

A new gunboat diplomacy

This promises to be a formidable array of assets. They are, for the most part, “asymmetric”, that is, designed not to match American military power in the western Pacific directly but rather to exploit its vulnerabilities. So, how might they be used?

Taiwan is the main spur for China’s military modernisation. In 1996 America reacted to Chinese ballistic-missile tests carried out near Taiwanese ports by sending two aircraft-carrier groups into the Taiwan Strait. Since 2002 China’s strategy has been largely built around the possibility of a cross-Strait armed conflict in which China’s forces would not only have to overcome opposition from Taiwan but also to deter, delay or defeat an American attempt to intervene. According to recent reports by CSBA and RAND, another American think-tank, China is well on its way to having the means, by 2020, to deter American aircraft-carriers and aircraft from operating within what is known as the “first island chain”—a perimeter running from the Aleutians in the north to Taiwan, the Philippines and Borneo (see map).

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In 2005 China passed the Taiwan Anti-Secession Law, which commits it to a military response should Taiwan ever declare independence or even if the government in Beijing thinks all possibility of peaceful unification has been lost. Jia Xiudong of the China Institute of International Studies (the foreign ministry’s main think-tank) says: “The first priority is Taiwan. The mainland is patient, but independence is not the future for Taiwan. China’s military forces should be ready to repel any force of intervention. The US likes to maintain what it calls ‘strategic ambiguity’ over what it would do in the event of a conflict arising from secession. We don’t have any ambiguity. We will use whatever means we have to prevent it happening.”

If Taiwan policy has been the immediate focus of China’s military planning, the sheer breadth of capabilities the country is acquiring gives it other options—and temptations. In 2004 Hu Jintao, China’s president, said the PLA should be able to undertake “new historic missions”. Some of these involve UN peacekeeping. In recent years China has been the biggest contributor of peacekeeping troops among the permanent five members of the Security Council. But the responsibility for most of these new missions has fallen on the navy. In addition to its primary job of denying China’s enemies access to sea lanes, it is increasingly being asked to project power in the neighbourhood and farther afield.

The navy appears to see itself as the guardian of China’s ever-expanding economic interests. These range from supporting the country’s sovereignty claims (for example, its insistence on seeing most of the South China Sea as an exclusive economic zone) to protecting the huge weight of Chinese shipping, preserving the country’s access to energy and raw materials supplies, and safeguarding the soaring numbers of Chinese citizens who work abroad (about 5m today, but expected to rise to 100m by 2020). The navy’s growing fleet of powerful destroyers, stealthy frigates and guided-missile-carrying catamarans enables it to carry out extended “green water” operations (ie, regional, not just coastal tasks). It is also developing longer-range “blue water” capabilities. In early 2009 the navy began anti-piracy patrols off the Gulf of Aden with three ships. Last year, one of those vessels was sent to the Mediterranean to assist in evacuating 35,000 Chinese workers from Libya—an impressive logistical exercise carried out with the Chinese air force.

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Just practising

Power grows out of the barrel of a gun


It is hardly surprising that China’s neighbours and the West in general should worry about these developments. The range of forces marshalled against Taiwan plus China’s “A2/AD” potential to push the forces of other countries over the horizon have already eroded the confidence of America’s Asian allies that the guarantor of their security will always be there for them. Mr Obama’s rebalancing towards Asia may go some way towards easing those doubts. America’s allies are also going to have to do more for themselves, including developing their own A2/AD capabilities. But the longer-term trends in defence spending are in China’s favour. China can focus entirely on Asia, whereas America will continue to have global responsibilities. Asian concerns about the dragon will not disappear.

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That said, the threat from China should not be exaggerated. There are three limiting factors. First, unlike the former Soviet Union, China has a vital national interest in the stability of the global economic system. Its military leaders constantly stress that the development of what is still only a middle-income country with a lot of very poor people takes precedence over military ambition. The increase in military spending reflects the growth of the economy, rather than an expanding share of national income. For many years China has spent the same proportion of GDP on defence (a bit over 2%, whereas America spends about 4.7%). The real test of China’s willingness to keep military spending constant will come when China’s headlong economic growth starts to slow further. But on past form, China’s leaders will continue to worry more about internal threats to their control than external ones. Last year spending on internal security outstripped military spending for the first time. With a rapidly ageing population, it is also a good bet that meeting the demand for better health care will become a higher priority than maintaining military spending. Like all the other great powers, China faces a choice of guns or walking sticks.

Second, as some pragmatic American policymakers concede, it is not a matter for surprise or shock that a country of China’s importance and history should have a sense of its place in the world and want armed forces which reflect that. Indeed, the West is occasionally contradictory about Chinese power, both fretting about it and asking China to accept greater responsibility for global order. As General Yao Yunzhu of the Academy of Military Science says: “We are criticised if we do more and criticised if we do less. The West should decide what it wants. The international military order is US-led—NATO and Asian bilateral alliances—there is nothing like the WTO for China to get into.”

Third, the PLA may not be quite as formidable as it seems on paper. China’s military technology has suffered from the Western arms embargo imposed after the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. It struggles to produce high-performance jet engines, for example. Western defence firms believe that is why they are often on the receiving end of cyber-attacks that appear to come from China. China’s defence industry may be improving but it remains scattered, inefficient and over-dependent on high-tech imports from Russia, which is happy to sell the same stuff to China’s local rivals, India and Vietnam. The PLA also has little recent combat experience. The last time it fought a real enemy was in the war against Vietnam in 1979, when it got a bloody nose. In contrast, a decade of conflict has honed American forces to a new pitch of professionalism. There must be some doubt that the PLA could put into practice the complex joint operations it is being increasingly called upon to perform.

General Yao says the gap between American and Chinese forces is “at least 30, maybe 50, years”. “China”, she says, “has no need to be a military peer of the US. But perhaps by the time we do become a peer competitor the leadership of both countries will have the wisdom to deal with the problem.” The global security of the next few decades will depend on her hope being realised.


Correction: The following definitions have been changed in the main table of this article: "Main battle tanks" to "Modern main battle tanks”; "Armoured infantry vehicles" to “Armoured infantry fighting vehicles”; "Intercontinental ballistic missiles" to "Intercontinental ballistic missile launchers"; “Transport helicopters” to "Heavy/medium transport helicopters"; “Transport aircraft” to "Heavy/medium transport aircraft"; “Tanker and multi-role aircraft” to “Tanker aircraft”. Additionally, the data are from 2011 not 2010 as originally reported. These changes were made on 6th April 2012."
 
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China: 2,285,000 active troops. U.S. pivot to Asia - only 2,500 additional troops. What pivot?

China has a relentlessly modernizing military of 2,285,000 active troops. The U.S. pivot to Asia has currently added only 250 troops (see citation below) and the total will be 2,500 marines over the coming years. This is a meaningless "pivot."

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Commentary: Obama's Asia 'Bluff' | The National Interest

"Obama's Asia 'Bluff'
Amitai Etzioni | June 14, 2012

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When a leading expert on military affairs recently told a Brookings Institution meeting that President Obama’s much-touted pivot to Asia was “a bluff,” I considered the statement way off the mark. But since then, I have concluded that there is indeed less to Obama’s grand change in strategy than meets the eye. In fact, the pivot makes little sense. This suggests that one ought to look for domestic explanations.

The media points to the drawdown of American troops in the Middle East (particularly in Iraq and Afghanistan) and their increase in the Far East as exhibit one of the realignment of American military forces called for by the pivot. Actually, the new commitment to Asia is minuscule. The press refers to new deployment of 2,500 Marines in the region, but only 250 troops have actually arrived to date. The remainder are not expected to arrive for years. Furthermore, even when in full force—some say ten years from now—the Marines will add little to the 55,442 troops already stationed in the Asia-Pacific region at the end of last year, mostly in Japan (36,708), Guam (4,272) and afloat (13,618).

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta announced in early June that there also will be a shift in U.S. naval forces. While until now the United States has divided its warships roughly equally between the Atlantic and the Pacific, the Pacific will now host 60 percent of the fleet, albeit of a smaller fleet.

However, Panetta stressed that it will “take years for these concepts, and many of the investments we are making, to be fully realized.” There also will be more frequent visits by the American warships in Asian ports, and some ships will be berthed in Singapore, which is sure to delight the sailors and some local professionals but otherwise not matter much.

More significant is the question of what role these forces will play in the region. Obviously, our troops—even as augmented with a few Marines—are not meant to engage in any forthcoming military confrontation with China, with its constantly expanding and increasingly modernized army consisting of 2,285,000 active troops.

Nor is there any sign that China seeks a military confrontation with the United States. Although China’s military capacity is expanding, even the most hawkish American observers do not think China could stage such a confrontation for at least a decade. Moreover, that the Marines will be located 2,600 miles away from China reveals they are not meant to serve as a tripwire, which would entail placing them on the beaches of Taiwan or at the island chains contested in the South China Sea.

Military analysts will argue that these moves are not meant to provide a substantial realignment of military assets but rather to send a message. But as moviemaker Samuel Goldwyn famously quipped, “If you want to send a message, use Western Union.” Using troops does send a message—but is it one we wish to send?

Both Henry Kissinger and Zbigniew Brzezinski strongly favored heightened U.S. attempts to engage China as a partner in maintaining global order and urged “co-evolution” with China rather than attempts to contain it. There remains plenty of time to turn to military moves if China refuses to become a responsible stakeholder in the international order. True, China has made several rather assertive claims in the South China Sea, but these have almost uniformly involved laying claims as a starting point for negotiations. The United States may feel that it ought to support countries close to China, such as Vietnam, Malaysia and the Philippines, so that they will not risk being bullied by the rising global power. However, this can be accomplished through treaties, trade and aid without resorting to the present U.S. strategy of militarizing the conflict.

Why then the military “pivot to Asia”? It does make sense as one part of an election-year campaign, designed to deprive the GOP of one of its favorite and winning claims: that Democrats are weak on foreign policy. The more American voters concentrate on the Far East—in which no war looms and we can act as tough as we want without facing short-term consequences or exorbitant expenditures—the more they might be distracted from the shambles in Afghanistan and the resurgence of Al Qaeda in Yemen and Somalia. Hence, the better the world looks.

Mitt Romney’s hawkish statements about China and Russia suggest the Democrats are not the only ones seeking to play this card. Both sides should note, though, that the message is being received. China is likely to respond in kind by further accelerating its military buildup and repositioning some of its own forces. Indeed, it may well deepen its already considerable military ties with Pakistan. The notion that the United States could bankrupt China by involving it in an arms race, as Reagan did to speed the disintegration of the Soviet Union, is fanciful given that the United States is in more dire economic straits than is China and that China can invest in next-generation cyber weapons, space arms and antiship missiles without straining its economy.

It might be too much to hope that the Chinese authorities will understand the role domestic politics plays in our foreign policy. But one can rest assured that events in the Middle East—in Iran, Pakistan, Syria and Afghanistan—will remind us soon where the true front lines are.

Amitai Etzioni served as a senior advisor to the Carter White House; taught at Columbia University, Harvard and The University of California at Berkeley; and is a university professor and professor of international relations at The George Washington University."
 
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There has been raft of trade and investment agreements signed between China and south American countries. These deals will go long way promoting economic and political realtion of China. These agreements are specially important because US has been screaming about Asian pivot without much economic underpinning. China on the other hand quietly doing its own pivot in US backyard with quantifiable economic measure. Would our Chinese friends be interested in capturing some of the informaton here and perhaps some official Chinese view on relation with South America and how that fits into China's global strategy.

Argentina/China sign a raft of agreements to boost trade and investment
Argentina/China sign a raft of agreements to boost trade and investment — MercoPress

China, Argentina agree to further strategic ties
China, Argentina agree to further strategic ties - People's Daily Online

China and Brazil in $30bn currency swap agreement
BBC News - China and Brazil in $30bn currency swap agreement

China, Chile to establish strategic partnership, boost trade
China, Chile to establish strategic partnership, boost trade - Xinhua | English.news.cn

China's Wen offers $10 billion Latin America credit line
UPDATE 3-China's Wen offers $10 billion Latin America credit line | Reuters

China, Chile aim to double trade by 2015: Premier Wen
China, Chile aim to double trade by 2015: Premier Wen | Reuters
 
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China and Brazil in $30bn currency swap agreement
BBC News - China and Brazil in $30bn currency swap agreement

Chinese multibillion-dollar currency swaps pressure U.S. Fed to stop printing money.

China and the swap country (Brazil) also save 1 to 1.5% in transaction costs.


The Chinese currency swap agreements with other countries are extremely important. They serve two purposes.

1. China intends to eventually replace the U.S. as the world's major reserve currency. This became a strategic goal when the U.S. Federal Reserve started printing money on a massive scale, which is essentially a tax on everyone that holds U.S. dollars.

The U.S. is feeling the pressure from China. If the U.S. Fed keeps printing money recklessly (e.g. more Quantitative Easing), more countries will seek currency swap agreements with China. The U.S. wants to hold on to its position as the world's reserve currency for as long as possible. Hence, the Fed is restraining itself from another round of massive money printing.

2. By removing U.S. dollars from Sino-Brazilian trade, the $30 billion China-Brazil swap agreement will save Chinese and Brazilian companies a lot of money in transaction costs. Currently, U.S. financial institutions charge about 1 to 1.5% to process business transactions based in U.S. dollars.

For a $30 billion total trade amount, the profit margin for U.S. banks is $300 to $450 million to move a few numbers from one bank account into another. However, by transferring the currency transactions to Chinese and Brazilian banks, China and Brazil each stand to gain $150 to $225 million in transaction cost savings.

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I can't find my original citation for the 1 to 1.5% transaction cost, but I do have a substitute citation.

https://www.fttglobal.com/currencies-exchange.jsp

"Bank to Bank Currencies Exchange – When you electronically wire your funds from one Bank to another it will be converted between currencies if required. Banks typically charge between 1.5% and 5% when you perform this type of transfer. This is a very profitable business for the Banks"
 
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China always has Mongolia

Let's say the U.S. and China are at war and the U.S. Navy cuts off Middle Eastern oil. What is China's next move?

Well, there's a really big country next door called Mongolia. Mongolia is 1,564,115.75 square kilometers (or half the size of the Indian subcontinent) with only 2.7 million people.

Mongolia is full of coal and valuable minerals.

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In conclusion, if the U.S. Navy blocks China's energy sources in the Middle East then China would just annex Mongolia. There's plenty of energy and mineral resources to sustain China indefinitely. This will provide China with ample time to build a massive navy for a counterstrike.

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References:

Coal-mining region - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Mongolia

Mongolia has proven reserves of 12.2 billion tons of coal including 2 billion tons of coking coal and 10.1 billion tons of thermal coal.[6] Mongolia is estimated to have potential coal reserves of some 100 billion metric tonnes.[7][8] While Mongolia's output is approximately only 5 million tonnes of coal per year, it will grow significantly given its proximity to China.[9]"

https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/fields/2111.html

"Mongolia oil, coal, copper, molybdenum, tungsten, phosphates, tin, nickel, zinc, fluorspar, gold, silver, iron"

Mongolia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Natural resources
 
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Three compelling reasons for China to annex Mongolia

1. Mongolia has an estimated 100 billion tonnes of coal. This is energy independence for China.

2. Mongolia is located much closer to the North Pole. China can move its megaton-tipped thermonuclear warheads closer to the U.S. and install larger megaton-warheads or more MIRVs/MARVs.

3. Mongolia has 1,564,115 square kilometers of land, which can support an enormous number of Hans. The Mongolian population currently numbers only 2.7 million. This is due to a lack of water.

However, China has the technology and industrial capability to build a pipe carrying desalinated water from the Bohai Bay to Mongolia. Another possibility is to dam the Brahmaputra and divert the water northward to Mongolia. Indians will be unaffected, because they have the monsoon and can install rain catchment barrels.

In other words, China has the scientific, industrial, and economic power to make Mongolia bloom. Let's examine how many Hans Mongolia can support.

Mongolian land mass: 1,564,115 km2

Germany: 357,021 km2 (population: 81,799,600)
France: 674,843 km2 (population: 65,350,000)
Britain: 243,610 km2 (population: 62,262,000)
Italy: 301,338 km2 (population: 60,813,326)
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European total: 1,576,812 km2 (population: 270,224,926)

In conclusion, by annexing Mongolia and transporting in massive amounts of water, China can support another 270 million Hans. We can take our population from 1.34 billion to 1.61 billion!

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China follows standard military strategy

My prediction of China annexing Mongolia in response to a blockade of Middle Eastern oil supply makes the most sense for the following reasons.

1. China will do everything possible to avoid a head-on military clash with the United States. This is standard military strategy. You do not fight your enemy in a frontal assault. You should always try to outflank them.

Also, powerful thermonuclear countries want to avoid a direct military confrontation in the fear that an escalation may eventually lead to an all-out nuclear war, which no one wants. For fifty years during the Cold War, the Soviet Union and the U.S. never fought each other directly. We can expect this common sense behavior to continue between the U.S. and China.

2. We saw China employ a flanking maneuver to defeat the Japanese. The Japanese government held a Chinese fishing boat captain hostage. China demanded his release. The Japanese government refused and kept the Chinese captain imprisoned.

China applied a little pressure by shutting off rare earth metal exports and the Japanese government caved. Those Japanese hadn't even seen China's economic power yet and they released the Chinese captain immediately.

China would have eventually declared all Japanese exports to China as unsanitary/unsafe and excluded all Japanese exports on health grounds, infringement of Chinese patents, or unsafe (e.g. alleged unintended acceleration of Toyota vehicles waged by the U.S. NHTSA, which was later dropped on lack of proof; this taught former Japanese Prime Minister Hatoyama not to try and push the U.S. out of Futenma base). China has lots of big economic sticks and the Japanese caved after barely getting whacked.

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In a recent example, we saw China apply pressure to the Philippines.

a. China declared the Philippines unsafe and canceled all group tours.

b. China declared Filipino bananas unsanitary and quarantined them.

I think at this point, the Filipinos starting caving in. That was too bad. I was waiting for China to go down the list and declare every single Filipino import as unsanitary.

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A year ago, in another flanking maneuver, China blocked all Norwegian salmon for awarding the Nobel Peace Prize to a Chinese criminal. Taking its place, Scottish salmon replaced all Norwegian salmon imports. China didn't notice the difference, but Norwegian salmon exporters lost access to the world's second-largest market and they're still upset.

3. Like the Japanese, the American Neo-cons will make a mistake and provoke China. They will detain or stop a ship carrying Iranian oil to China. In response, China will not bleed itself by engaging the U.S. military. China will conduct a flanking movement and declare it is reluctantly annexing Mongolia to "keep the lights on" in China.

Just like the Russian annexation of Georgian territory, the world will grumble and eventually accept Chinese reunification with Mongolia as evidenced by the Qing Dynasty map.

In conclusion, my prediction of a Chinese annexation of Mongolia in response to an U.S. Neo-con provocation is a very reasonable outcome. The Neo-con hope is to humiliate China or draw the PLA Navy into Middle Eastern waters and defeat them there. That is not how China fights. We know China will respond with a flanking movement, such as annexing Mongolia.
 
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Indian military history and redrawing maps to steal Chinese land

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From The Hindu Archives, we see "the official [Indian] map as on August 15, 1947." This official 1947 Indian map does not include China's Aksai Chin.

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From The Hindu Archives, we see "the [new Indian] map in 1950, with the colour wash. The maps were published under the authority of India's Surveyor General, Brigadier G.F. Heaney." This official 1950 Indian map magically claims China's Aksai Chin.

From 1947 to 1950, India decided it would unilaterally redraw the Sino-Indian boundary map and claim Aksai Chin. I like this Indian trick. I think China should redraw its maps Indian-style and claim whatever we want of Indian territory.

The Indians are doing it and we should copy them. If the Indians are shameless, we should become just as shameless. The only way to deal with an aggressive and expansionist neighbor is to use their own dirty trick of redrawing maps (without any relation to history) against them.

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Reference: http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/thscrip/print.pl?file=20120713291304400.htm&date=fl2913/&prd=fline&
 
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