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Why China’s Big Military Parade Is Nothing To Be Afraid Of

F-22Raptor

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On the first of October, China held an enormous National Day military parade in Beijing, jam-packed with missiles, tanks and other new gear. To drum up international interest, China ran previews–complete with “accidental” reveals–before the big show, holding mysterious, canvas-shrouded “rehearsals” under cover of darkness, pushing Western observers into a rapture of existential hand-wringing over the revelations to come. And it worked. The fearful message got through, and the news of China’s hypersonic glide vehicles and other new gear were met with alarming headlines.

Excessive Western pearl-clutching over new Chinese military technology is exactly what the Chinese regime wanted.

China’s hope is that reflexive Western fear mongering will drive poor policy decisions all over the globe. Yes, the Chinese military is certainly strong and getting stronger, but America’s chronic over-hyping of China’s military prowess only serves to make the Chinese military look stronger than it is. China reaps great geopolitical benefits from maintaining that perception.

This gear-driven defense hysteria is not good for the United States. Threat inflation incentivizes over-reaction and short-term American responses, while de-emphasizing efforts to build comprehensive strategic approaches able to better manage a rising and powerful China. Unfounded fear of China’s new gear fosters U.S. defeatism, and encourages potential regional partners to hedge their bets.

But stoking Western hysteria is not good for China, either. Perceptions of Western timidity feeds China’s already aggressive and often arrogant approach to geopolitical challenges, raising the risk of a catastrophic miscalculation.

The challenge for the West is to respect these public shows of martial force while keeping our wits about us. Fear may be an easy motivator that gets media eyeballs and unlocks Congressional appropriations, but it far is too dangerous to rely upon as a strategy.

To bend Winston Churchill’s old adage, the world has nothing to fear from China’s big parade but fear itself.

Take Content-Free Unboxings With A Grain Of Salt:

China’s National Day Parade offered a smoggy smorgasbord of new tanks, missile systems, electronic warfare gear and deterrence tools—all helpfully labeled for the benefit of Western observers. Again and again, the parade hammered home the message that China’s military, with the backing of China’s manufacturing and emergent high-tech research capabilities, is a professional force that few can match.

That’s fine. American media audiences have an insatiable apatite for the mystery of “unboxing” new things, and certainly China has made enormous strides since the backward excesses of the Cultural Revolution.

But Western observers don’t need to help burnish China’s reputation. In the absence of detailed information at these high-profile “unboxings” of new Chinese weaponry, America’s public-sector China-watchers can only report what they see in stage-managed “reveals.” But, far too often, observers presume the revealed equipment is effective on the battlefield. In the absence of that contextual information on performance—which is difficult to come by—the default assumption is that each new system is perfectly ready to threaten. Again, it is a habit that endows China’s military-industrial complex with far too much unearned competence.

Take shipbuilding. China may be quite good at naval shipbuilding. But aside from raw shipbuilding capacity–which barely beats shipbuilding superpower South Korea–China’s naval vessels suffer several of the same design oversights that bedevil American naval ships. But the way the story is told is very different. For China observers, a design change on a Chinese destroyer is more likely to be interpreted as fearsome new development, while a similar design change on a U.S. ship is probably set to be criticized as a design oversight.

Even the expressions of China’s raw industrial capability, while daunting, are not necessarily so fearsome when presented with a little extra context. Certainly, it sounds frightening to note, as one observer did, that, as of mid-May, China has launched sixty Type 056 Corvettes and twenty Type 052D Destroyers in seven years.

That’s scary.

But we forget that America has already demonstrated that capability. Between 1975 and 1980, the United States commissioned thirty Spruance class Destroyers. America still has that capacity; the shipyard that built them, now owned by Huntington Ingalls, exists today, building Coast Guard Cutters, Destroyers and Amphibious Assault Vessels. And what about China’s sixty 1,500-ton Type 056 Corvettes? Well, they are puny vessels that the U.S. Navy doesn’t even build anymore. But the U.S. could. In fact, the U.S. Coast Guard is building almost sixty 350-ton Fast Response Cutters in one of Bollinger’s Louisiana shipyards—commissioning thirty-five of the vessels in about seven years. Both the design and operational tempo could be scaled up to something matching the Type 056.

In shaping narratives, context is quite important. The commissioning of the first of China’s seven Type 071 Yuzhao class landing platform docks (LPDs) occurred in 2007, and the others have either entered service or are preparing to be commissioned in the next year. The new Chinese LPDs have been hailed as great successes, introducing China to blue water amphibious operations. In the same time period though, America has quietly commissioned ten far more capable San Antonio class (LPD 17) class amphibious transports. And while the LPD 17 was a terrible shipbuilding story at the start, Huntington Ingalls’ ultimate success with the project has been under-appreciated.

When Western observers present Chinese gear, alone and without context, there are few checks on the public’s imagination. Currently, China is receiving accolades for launching their first flat-deck Type 075 amphibious helicopter carrier. That’s great—it was built quickly. (Though recent alarming reports that the ship went from keel to launch in about six months overlook Chinese reports that construction of the vessel was reportedly underway in early 2017, which would generally match the three-year U.S. pacing for laying the keel and launching flat-decks of similar size.) But, yard efficiency aside, these big platforms are relatively simple to build–even France could lay the keel and launch their Mistral class helicopter carriers in little more than a year. Even though these types of vessels have been in service all over the world and China has been talking about a flat-deck helicopter carrier (which was previously called the Type 081) for years now, China’s helicopter carriers were delayed and delayed again. At some point, might all that exhaustive pre-planning have become interpreted as, in essence, a delay? Or evidence of a design problem? Similar performance in the United States would be roundly criticized.

Even the autonomous HSU-001 submersiblesthat were revealed at the parade yesterday would have benefited from a discussion of American capabilities. Defense giant Boeing has been operating larger prototypes for years now, chalking up over 2,500 hours on Echo Voyager, a 51 foot long autonomous submarine with a range of 6,500 nautical miles and an endurance measured in months. Boeing’s self-funded investment paid off, and the U.S. Navy ordered four of these Extra-Large Unmanned Underwater Vehicles earlier this year. And that’s not all. The U.S. Navy is racing ahead with additional contracts for many other autonomous undersea vehicles.

Alarmist observers are always quick to say that they are merely trying to raise awareness to the coming challenge from China. That, in itself, is a noble goal. But, without context, fear-driven hyperbole or overblown efforts to leverage the public’s apatite for mystery is backfiring for everyone but the alarmists.

It would be wise to heed the warnings from the Pentagon’s latest Annual Report to Congress on Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s Republic of China that detail China’s efforts to conduct influence operations and to engage in public opinion warfare. This–in helping raise awareness of media manipulation– might be where American agencies and entities involved in the observation and assessment of China can do more to raise public awareness. They can also do much more to shape the public dissemination of an informed narrative that warns of the challenges ahead without reliance upon overt appeals to fear.

China wants the U.S. public to fear the Chinese military. The last thing China wants is for international observers to put aside their fears and begin realizing that China’s big military and industrial complex and its “Made In China” aspirations are just an imperfect cover for creeping authoritarianism and a Communist bureaucracy that is afraid of its own people.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/craigh...g-military-parade-is-nothing-to-be-afraid-of/
 
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Chinese perform a parade suddenly west media goes crazy. its as if china is not allowed to even look west it must bow down like good Lil china boy. The days of bullying is over, china is matured now and is flexing its big muscles, he being on steroid now.
 
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Solid article and viewpoint.

Fear-mongering is the root cause of many problems around the world. Western observers in particular are known to create irrational hype of entities whom they come to perceive as rivals or threats under national considerations. Eventually US proceeds to corner and penalize these entities without any regard of views and perspectives that do not align with its own.

China is developing military capabilities as per its perceptions of how to cope with potential challenges in front of it. The weapons in question are unlikely to be infallible and/or unstoppable in warfare but they function as tools of deterrence which seems to be the intent behind them.

Xi Jinping have emphasized the importance of peaceful development once again.

http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2019-10/02/c_138444522.htm

Fear-mongering lead to conflicts and wars which is not good for the world at large. Cold Wars are irrational and must be discouraged.
 
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On the first of October, China held an enormous National Day military parade in Beijing, jam-packed with missiles, tanks and other new gear. To drum up international interest, China ran previews–complete with “accidental” reveals–before the big show, holding mysterious, canvas-shrouded “rehearsals” under cover of darkness, pushing Western observers into a rapture of existential hand-wringing over the revelations to come. And it worked. The fearful message got through, and the news of China’s hypersonic glide vehicles and other new gear were met with alarming headlines.

Excessive Western pearl-clutching over new Chinese military technology is exactly what the Chinese regime wanted.

China’s hope is that reflexive Western fear mongering will drive poor policy decisions all over the globe. Yes, the Chinese military is certainly strong and getting stronger, but America’s chronic over-hyping of China’s military prowess only serves to make the Chinese military look stronger than it is. China reaps great geopolitical benefits from maintaining that perception.

This gear-driven defense hysteria is not good for the United States. Threat inflation incentivizes over-reaction and short-term American responses, while de-emphasizing efforts to build comprehensive strategic approaches able to better manage a rising and powerful China. Unfounded fear of China’s new gear fosters U.S. defeatism, and encourages potential regional partners to hedge their bets.

But stoking Western hysteria is not good for China, either. Perceptions of Western timidity feeds China’s already aggressive and often arrogant approach to geopolitical challenges, raising the risk of a catastrophic miscalculation.

The challenge for the West is to respect these public shows of martial force while keeping our wits about us. Fear may be an easy motivator that gets media eyeballs and unlocks Congressional appropriations, but it far is too dangerous to rely upon as a strategy.

To bend Winston Churchill’s old adage, the world has nothing to fear from China’s big parade but fear itself.

Take Content-Free Unboxings With A Grain Of Salt:

China’s National Day Parade offered a smoggy smorgasbord of new tanks, missile systems, electronic warfare gear and deterrence tools—all helpfully labeled for the benefit of Western observers. Again and again, the parade hammered home the message that China’s military, with the backing of China’s manufacturing and emergent high-tech research capabilities, is a professional force that few can match.

That’s fine. American media audiences have an insatiable apatite for the mystery of “unboxing” new things, and certainly China has made enormous strides since the backward excesses of the Cultural Revolution.

But Western observers don’t need to help burnish China’s reputation. In the absence of detailed information at these high-profile “unboxings” of new Chinese weaponry, America’s public-sector China-watchers can only report what they see in stage-managed “reveals.” But, far too often, observers presume the revealed equipment is effective on the battlefield. In the absence of that contextual information on performance—which is difficult to come by—the default assumption is that each new system is perfectly ready to threaten. Again, it is a habit that endows China’s military-industrial complex with far too much unearned competence.

Take shipbuilding. China may be quite good at naval shipbuilding. But aside from raw shipbuilding capacity–which barely beats shipbuilding superpower South Korea–China’s naval vessels suffer several of the same design oversights that bedevil American naval ships. But the way the story is told is very different. For China observers, a design change on a Chinese destroyer is more likely to be interpreted as fearsome new development, while a similar design change on a U.S. ship is probably set to be criticized as a design oversight.

Even the expressions of China’s raw industrial capability, while daunting, are not necessarily so fearsome when presented with a little extra context. Certainly, it sounds frightening to note, as one observer did, that, as of mid-May, China has launched sixty Type 056 Corvettes and twenty Type 052D Destroyers in seven years.

That’s scary.

But we forget that America has already demonstrated that capability. Between 1975 and 1980, the United States commissioned thirty Spruance class Destroyers. America still has that capacity; the shipyard that built them, now owned by Huntington Ingalls, exists today, building Coast Guard Cutters, Destroyers and Amphibious Assault Vessels. And what about China’s sixty 1,500-ton Type 056 Corvettes? Well, they are puny vessels that the U.S. Navy doesn’t even build anymore. But the U.S. could. In fact, the U.S. Coast Guard is building almost sixty 350-ton Fast Response Cutters in one of Bollinger’s Louisiana shipyards—commissioning thirty-five of the vessels in about seven years. Both the design and operational tempo could be scaled up to something matching the Type 056.

In shaping narratives, context is quite important. The commissioning of the first of China’s seven Type 071 Yuzhao class landing platform docks (LPDs) occurred in 2007, and the others have either entered service or are preparing to be commissioned in the next year. The new Chinese LPDs have been hailed as great successes, introducing China to blue water amphibious operations. In the same time period though, America has quietly commissioned ten far more capable San Antonio class (LPD 17) class amphibious transports. And while the LPD 17 was a terrible shipbuilding story at the start, Huntington Ingalls’ ultimate success with the project has been under-appreciated.

When Western observers present Chinese gear, alone and without context, there are few checks on the public’s imagination. Currently, China is receiving accolades for launching their first flat-deck Type 075 amphibious helicopter carrier. That’s great—it was built quickly. (Though recent alarming reports that the ship went from keel to launch in about six months overlook Chinese reports that construction of the vessel was reportedly underway in early 2017, which would generally match the three-year U.S. pacing for laying the keel and launching flat-decks of similar size.) But, yard efficiency aside, these big platforms are relatively simple to build–even France could lay the keel and launch their Mistral class helicopter carriers in little more than a year. Even though these types of vessels have been in service all over the world and China has been talking about a flat-deck helicopter carrier (which was previously called the Type 081) for years now, China’s helicopter carriers were delayed and delayed again. At some point, might all that exhaustive pre-planning have become interpreted as, in essence, a delay? Or evidence of a design problem? Similar performance in the United States would be roundly criticized.

Even the autonomous HSU-001 submersiblesthat were revealed at the parade yesterday would have benefited from a discussion of American capabilities. Defense giant Boeing has been operating larger prototypes for years now, chalking up over 2,500 hours on Echo Voyager, a 51 foot long autonomous submarine with a range of 6,500 nautical miles and an endurance measured in months. Boeing’s self-funded investment paid off, and the U.S. Navy ordered four of these Extra-Large Unmanned Underwater Vehicles earlier this year. And that’s not all. The U.S. Navy is racing ahead with additional contracts for many other autonomous undersea vehicles.

Alarmist observers are always quick to say that they are merely trying to raise awareness to the coming challenge from China. That, in itself, is a noble goal. But, without context, fear-driven hyperbole or overblown efforts to leverage the public’s apatite for mystery is backfiring for everyone but the alarmists.

It would be wise to heed the warnings from the Pentagon’s latest Annual Report to Congress on Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s Republic of China that detail China’s efforts to conduct influence operations and to engage in public opinion warfare. This–in helping raise awareness of media manipulation– might be where American agencies and entities involved in the observation and assessment of China can do more to raise public awareness. They can also do much more to shape the public dissemination of an informed narrative that warns of the challenges ahead without reliance upon overt appeals to fear.

China wants the U.S. public to fear the Chinese military. The last thing China wants is for international observers to put aside their fears and begin realizing that China’s big military and industrial complex and its “Made In China” aspirations are just an imperfect cover for creeping authoritarianism and a Communist bureaucracy that is afraid of its own people.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/craigh...g-military-parade-is-nothing-to-be-afraid-of/
That is just bullshit. China only wants those stupid American politicians to seriously think twice before messing with China. The parade is not for U.S. public's consumption.

I think U.S. politicians are scared so they drag U.S. public in and hide themselves behind.
 
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On the first of October, China held an enormous National Day military parade in Beijing, jam-packed with missiles, tanks and other new gear. To drum up international interest, China ran previews–complete with “accidental” reveals–before the big show, holding mysterious, canvas-shrouded “rehearsals” under cover of darkness, pushing Western observers into a rapture of existential hand-wringing over the revelations to come. And it worked. The fearful message got through, and the news of China’s hypersonic glide vehicles and other new gear were met with alarming headlines.

Excessive Western pearl-clutching over new Chinese military technology is exactly what the Chinese regime wanted.

China’s hope is that reflexive Western fear mongering will drive poor policy decisions all over the globe. Yes, the Chinese military is certainly strong and getting stronger, but America’s chronic over-hyping of China’s military prowess only serves to make the Chinese military look stronger than it is. China reaps great geopolitical benefits from maintaining that perception.

This gear-driven defense hysteria is not good for the United States. Threat inflation incentivizes over-reaction and short-term American responses, while de-emphasizing efforts to build comprehensive strategic approaches able to better manage a rising and powerful China. Unfounded fear of China’s new gear fosters U.S. defeatism, and encourages potential regional partners to hedge their bets.

But stoking Western hysteria is not good for China, either. Perceptions of Western timidity feeds China’s already aggressive and often arrogant approach to geopolitical challenges, raising the risk of a catastrophic miscalculation.

The challenge for the West is to respect these public shows of martial force while keeping our wits about us. Fear may be an easy motivator that gets media eyeballs and unlocks Congressional appropriations, but it far is too dangerous to rely upon as a strategy.

To bend Winston Churchill’s old adage, the world has nothing to fear from China’s big parade but fear itself.

Take Content-Free Unboxings With A Grain Of Salt:

China’s National Day Parade offered a smoggy smorgasbord of new tanks, missile systems, electronic warfare gear and deterrence tools—all helpfully labeled for the benefit of Western observers. Again and again, the parade hammered home the message that China’s military, with the backing of China’s manufacturing and emergent high-tech research capabilities, is a professional force that few can match.

That’s fine. American media audiences have an insatiable apatite for the mystery of “unboxing” new things, and certainly China has made enormous strides since the backward excesses of the Cultural Revolution.

But Western observers don’t need to help burnish China’s reputation. In the absence of detailed information at these high-profile “unboxings” of new Chinese weaponry, America’s public-sector China-watchers can only report what they see in stage-managed “reveals.” But, far too often, observers presume the revealed equipment is effective on the battlefield. In the absence of that contextual information on performance—which is difficult to come by—the default assumption is that each new system is perfectly ready to threaten. Again, it is a habit that endows China’s military-industrial complex with far too much unearned competence.

Take shipbuilding. China may be quite good at naval shipbuilding. But aside from raw shipbuilding capacity–which barely beats shipbuilding superpower South Korea–China’s naval vessels suffer several of the same design oversights that bedevil American naval ships. But the way the story is told is very different. For China observers, a design change on a Chinese destroyer is more likely to be interpreted as fearsome new development, while a similar design change on a U.S. ship is probably set to be criticized as a design oversight.

Even the expressions of China’s raw industrial capability, while daunting, are not necessarily so fearsome when presented with a little extra context. Certainly, it sounds frightening to note, as one observer did, that, as of mid-May, China has launched sixty Type 056 Corvettes and twenty Type 052D Destroyers in seven years.

That’s scary.

But we forget that America has already demonstrated that capability. Between 1975 and 1980, the United States commissioned thirty Spruance class Destroyers. America still has that capacity; the shipyard that built them, now owned by Huntington Ingalls, exists today, building Coast Guard Cutters, Destroyers and Amphibious Assault Vessels. And what about China’s sixty 1,500-ton Type 056 Corvettes? Well, they are puny vessels that the U.S. Navy doesn’t even build anymore. But the U.S. could. In fact, the U.S. Coast Guard is building almost sixty 350-ton Fast Response Cutters in one of Bollinger’s Louisiana shipyards—commissioning thirty-five of the vessels in about seven years. Both the design and operational tempo could be scaled up to something matching the Type 056.

In shaping narratives, context is quite important. The commissioning of the first of China’s seven Type 071 Yuzhao class landing platform docks (LPDs) occurred in 2007, and the others have either entered service or are preparing to be commissioned in the next year. The new Chinese LPDs have been hailed as great successes, introducing China to blue water amphibious operations. In the same time period though, America has quietly commissioned ten far more capable San Antonio class (LPD 17) class amphibious transports. And while the LPD 17 was a terrible shipbuilding story at the start, Huntington Ingalls’ ultimate success with the project has been under-appreciated.

When Western observers present Chinese gear, alone and without context, there are few checks on the public’s imagination. Currently, China is receiving accolades for launching their first flat-deck Type 075 amphibious helicopter carrier. That’s great—it was built quickly. (Though recent alarming reports that the ship went from keel to launch in about six months overlook Chinese reports that construction of the vessel was reportedly underway in early 2017, which would generally match the three-year U.S. pacing for laying the keel and launching flat-decks of similar size.) But, yard efficiency aside, these big platforms are relatively simple to build–even France could lay the keel and launch their Mistral class helicopter carriers in little more than a year. Even though these types of vessels have been in service all over the world and China has been talking about a flat-deck helicopter carrier (which was previously called the Type 081) for years now, China’s helicopter carriers were delayed and delayed again. At some point, might all that exhaustive pre-planning have become interpreted as, in essence, a delay? Or evidence of a design problem? Similar performance in the United States would be roundly criticized.

Even the autonomous HSU-001 submersiblesthat were revealed at the parade yesterday would have benefited from a discussion of American capabilities. Defense giant Boeing has been operating larger prototypes for years now, chalking up over 2,500 hours on Echo Voyager, a 51 foot long autonomous submarine with a range of 6,500 nautical miles and an endurance measured in months. Boeing’s self-funded investment paid off, and the U.S. Navy ordered four of these Extra-Large Unmanned Underwater Vehicles earlier this year. And that’s not all. The U.S. Navy is racing ahead with additional contracts for many other autonomous undersea vehicles.

Alarmist observers are always quick to say that they are merely trying to raise awareness to the coming challenge from China. That, in itself, is a noble goal. But, without context, fear-driven hyperbole or overblown efforts to leverage the public’s apatite for mystery is backfiring for everyone but the alarmists.

It would be wise to heed the warnings from the Pentagon’s latest Annual Report to Congress on Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s Republic of China that detail China’s efforts to conduct influence operations and to engage in public opinion warfare. This–in helping raise awareness of media manipulation– might be where American agencies and entities involved in the observation and assessment of China can do more to raise public awareness. They can also do much more to shape the public dissemination of an informed narrative that warns of the challenges ahead without reliance upon overt appeals to fear.

China wants the U.S. public to fear the Chinese military. The last thing China wants is for international observers to put aside their fears and begin realizing that China’s big military and industrial complex and its “Made In China” aspirations are just an imperfect cover for creeping authoritarianism and a Communist bureaucracy that is afraid of its own people.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/craigh...g-military-parade-is-nothing-to-be-afraid-of/

LOL, western media. One day china is the big bad wolf coming for you, another day it's all hype, the cycle continues endlessly. :rofl:
 
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Oh well the last paragraph of the article said it all, China is a communist therefore their newly unviel weapons were not effective. No need to be alarmist.
 
.
Solid article and viewpoint.

Fear-mongering is the root cause of many problems around the world. Western observers in particular are known to create irrational hype of entities whom they come to perceive as rivals or threats under national considerations. Eventually US proceeds to corner and penalize these entities without any regard of views and perspectives that do not align with its own.

China is developing military capabilities as per its perceptions of how to cope with potential challenges in front of it. The weapons in question are unlikely to be infallible and/or unstoppable in warfare but they function as tools of deterrence which seems to be the intent behind them.

Xi Jinping have emphasized the importance of peaceful development once again.

http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2019-10/02/c_138444522.htm

Fear-mongering lead to conflicts and wars which is not good for the world at large. Cold Wars are irrational and must be discouraged.
I always asked myself why do Eastern bloc countries like big military parades compared to most western countries? I want to also see one here in UK, Germany, France or even in U.S . :close_tema:
 
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USA demands transparency from Chinese military.
China holds a parade.
The US then calls it flexing muscles and threatening peace.
China coming forward only showing transparency.
Now Forbes is telling to the public don't be afraid we in the West already have those or even better
China is shrugging its shoulders while celebrating its anniversary with spectacular fireworks.
Meanwhile US military higher up is panicking in the war room.
 
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I always asked myself why do Eastern bloc countries like big military parades compared to most western countries? I want to also see one here in UK, Germany, France or even in U.S . :close_tema:

1. France does have an annual military parade.

2. Nato members do milirary parade on a daily basis in Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, Libyia etc.
 
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I always asked myself why do Eastern bloc countries like big military parades compared to most western countries? I want to also see one here in UK, Germany, France or even in U.S . :close_tema:

You just worry about Brexit before asking yourself irrelevant questions.
 
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"Excessive Western pearl-clutching over new Chinese military technology is exactly what the Chinese regime wanted."

Hahaha, this is so stupid. Whoever wrote the article doesn't know that scaremongering is an actual tactic used within a government to give more legitimacy to increase defense spending. The Chinese government doesn't gave two shits about whether a foreign government is scared of them or not. In reality, a government can't just spend billions of dollars in defense spending, so pro-war hawks and defense contractors have to give reasons in order to persuade their government to spend more in the military, the common tactics being scaremongering and exaggeration of a perceived threat.

"China’s hope is that reflexive Western fear mongering will drive poor policy decisions all over the globe. Yes, the Chinese military is certainly strong and getting stronger, but America’s chronic over-hyping of China’s military prowess only serves to make the Chinese military look stronger than it is. China reaps great geopolitical benefits from maintaining that perception."

No, China's hope is to simply modernize its military, again the Chinese government doesn't care if some foreign government is scared of them or not. The funny thing is that the PLA doesn't go around claiming they can easily beat the US military, instead the PLA admits its weaknesses and strives to modernize and grow stronger. China prefers to only display a certain percentage of its military strength, it's why sometimes it's hard to find first-hand sources on newest Chinese military equipment.

"This gear-driven defense hysteria is not good for the United States. Threat inflation incentivizes over-reaction and short-term American responses, while de-emphasizing efforts to build comprehensive strategic approaches able to better manage a rising and powerful China. Unfounded fear of China’s new gear fosters U.S. defeatism, and encourages potential regional partners to hedge their bets."

China isn't responsible for America fearmongering and exaggerating the supposed Yellow Peril 2.0 threat. It's the American government itself that hypes up the fear, not China. Also what is even the ultimate goal of trying to contain a rising China? It's funny how the writer says the US has unfounded fears on China yet the article has the vibe that screams China very bad, which itself is very much an unfounded fear.

"But stoking Western hysteria is not good for China, either. Perceptions of Western timidity feeds China’s already aggressive and often arrogant approach to geopolitical challenges, raising the risk of a catastrophic miscalculation."

:rofl:

"China’s National Day Parade offered a smoggy smorgasbord of new tanks, missile systems, electronic warfare gear and deterrence tools—all helpfully labeled for the benefit of Western observers. Again and again, the parade hammered home the message that China’s military, with the backing of China’s manufacturing and emergent high-tech research capabilities, is a professional force that few can match."

They're all labeled because it's much easier to know which is which rather than have an announcer tirelessly introduce numerous equipment to the audience.

"But Western observers don’t need to help burnish China’s reputation. In the absence of detailed information at these high-profile “unboxings” of new Chinese weaponry, America’s public-sector China-watchers can only report what they see in stage-managed “reveals.” But, far too often, observers presume the revealed equipment is effective on the battlefield. In the absence of that contextual information on performance—which is difficult to come by—the default assumption is that each new system is perfectly ready to threaten."

That's because those weapons are new so of course they haven't been tested in a live battlefield yet. And even if these weapons are new and not battle-tested yet, that still doesn't make them inferior.

"Take shipbuilding. China may be quite good at naval shipbuilding. But aside from raw shipbuilding capacity–which barely beats shipbuilding superpower South Korea–China’s naval vessels suffer several of the same design oversights that bedevil American naval ships."

The gap between China's shipbuilding production and South Korea's shipbuilding production isn't really significant and both nations are very close to matching. If anything, the gap between China's shipbuilding production and America's shipbuilding production is greater, plus let's not forget that China is building more warships than South Korea and that's because PLA Navy is a larger navy than South Korea's.

"For China observers, a design change on a Chinese destroyer is more likely to be interpreted as fearsome new development, while a similar design change on a U.S. ship is probably set to be criticized as a design oversight."

This is stupid and disingenuous af. When China makes a military vehicle that looks even vaguely similar to a supposed counterpart to America's (eg. J-20 to F-22, J-10 to F-16), people claim it's C O P Y & P A S T E so I don't know where this writer got this garbage from.

"Even the expressions of China’s raw industrial capability, while daunting, are not necessarily so fearsome when presented with a little extra context. Certainly, it sounds frightening to note, as one observer did, that, as of mid-May, China has launched sixty Type 056 Corvettes and twenty Type 052D Destroyers in seven years.

That’s scary.

But we forget that America has already demonstrated that capability. Between 1975 and 1980, the United States commissioned thirty Spruance class Destroyers. America still has that capacity; the shipyard that built them, now owned by Huntington Ingalls, exists today, building Coast Guard Cutters, Destroyers and Amphibious Assault Vessels."


Now this is just mental gymnastics kicked to maximum. Back in the 70s and 80s, China's defense industry was still meager while PLA's budget was small at somewhere around 10-to-11 billion USD by late 80s, but the fact that China has been building large numbers of modern capable warships 20 years ago shows how fast the PLA Navy has modernized.

"And what about China’s sixty 1,500-ton Type 056 Corvettes? Well, they are puny vessels that the U.S. Navy doesn’t even build anymore. But the U.S. could. In fact, the U.S. Coast Guard is building almost sixty 350-ton Fast Response Cutters in one of Bollinger’s Louisiana shipyards—commissioning thirty-five of the vessels in about seven years. Both the design and operational tempo could be scaled up to something matching the Type 056."

Hahahaha damn the writer has to cope by simply compensating. Sad. Funny that the writer called the Type 056 puny and then brings up the FRCs. Plus FRCs aren't impressive, especially since Type 056 is more armed and can be further upgraded thanks to its larger size.

"In shaping narratives, context is quite important. The commissioning of the first of China’s seven Type 071 Yuzhaoclass landing platform docks (LPDs) occurred in 2007, and the others have either entered service or are preparing to be commissioned in the next year. The new Chinese LPDs have been hailed as great successes, introducing China to blue water amphibious operations. In the same time period though, America has quietly commissioned ten far more capable San Antonio class (LPD 17) class amphibious transports. And while the LPD 17 was a terrible shipbuilding story at the start, Huntington Ingalls’ ultimate success with the project has been under-appreciated."

Type 071 was China's first step into amphibious assault ships. Also, again with the writer coping by simply compensating.

"When Western observers present Chinese gear, alone and without context, there are few checks on the public’s imagination. Currently, China is receiving accolades for launching their first flat-deck Type 075 amphibious helicopter carrier. That’s great—it was built quickly. (Though recent alarming reports that the ship went from keel to launch in about six months overlook Chinese reports that construction of the vessel was reportedly underway in early 2017, which would generally match the three-year U.S. pacing for laying the keel and launching flat-decks of similar size.) But, yard efficiency aside, these big platforms are relatively simple to build–even France could lay the keel and launch their Mistral class helicopter carriers in little more than a year."

Mistral-class is smaller than Type 075. Does the writer even have sense of spatial awareness?

"Even the autonomous HSU-001 submersiblesthat were revealed at the parade yesterday would have benefited from a discussion of American capabilities. Defense giant Boeing has been operating larger prototypes for years now, chalking up over 2,500 hours on Echo Voyager, a 51 foot long autonomous submarine with a range of 6,500 nautical miles and an endurance measured in months."

Again with the size compensation.

"Alarmist observers are always quick to say that they are merely trying to raise awareness to the coming challenge from China. That, in itself, is a noble goal. But, without context, fear-driven hyperbole or overblown efforts to leverage the public’s apatite for mystery is backfiring for everyone but the alarmists."

Kinda ironic for a writer who's alarmist because China bad, dey gon create regional incidents.

"China wants the U.S. public to fear the Chinese military. The last thing China wants is for international observers to put aside their fears and begin realizing that China’s big military and industrial complex and its “Made In China” aspirations are just an imperfect cover for creeping authoritarianism and a Communist bureaucracy that is afraid of its own people."

The writer doesn't get it. The last thing Chinese government gives a shit about is the opinions of neocon warhawks. Also at the alarmist sentiment at the end, not surprising.

This article is junk, but it's not much of a surprise since it's from Forbes, aka The Buzzfeed of Business & Geopolitics. The only thing I got from the article is "Stop being alarmist because Chinese army crap, btw let's continue demonizing China thus giving CCP more legitimacy to increase its military capability thus giving defense contractors more reason to demand Congress to expand the US defense budget despite being several times larger than China's".
 
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