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The China Thread

Started by Jacob, September 24, 2012, 05:27:47 PM

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CountDeMoney

Considering China's maritime prowess since the Ming dynasty, they're probably all theirs.

DGuller

Quote from: CountDeMoney on December 01, 2013, 11:43:11 PM
Considering China's maritime prowess since the Ming dynasty, they're probably all theirs.
:pinch:

CountDeMoney

Assburgers like you always ruining jokes.

DGuller


CountDeMoney

QuoteMore Chinese Air ID Zones Predicted



TAIPEI, SEOUL AND TOKYO — China's establishment of an air defense identification zone (ADIZ) last week over the East China Sea has given the US an unexpected challenge as Vice President Joseph Biden prepares for a trip to China, Japan and South Korea beginning this week.

The trip was scheduled to address economic issues, but the Nov. 23 ADIZ announcement raised a troubling new issue for the US and allies in the region. China's ADIZ overlaps the zones of Japan, South Korea and Taiwan.

Sources indicate China's ADIZ could be part of its larger anti-access/area-denial strategy designed to force the US military to operate farther from China's shorelines.

China might also be planning additional identification zones in the South China Sea and near contested areas along India's border, US and local sources say.

China's ADIZ might be an attempt by Beijing to improve its claim to disputed islands in the East China Sea also claimed by Japan, sources said. These islands — known as the Senkaku in Japan and the Diaoyu in China — are under the administrative control of Japan.

Mike Green, senior vice president for Asia and Japan chair at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), said this is part of a larger Chinese strategy beyond disputes over islands.

"This should be viewed as a part of a Chinese effort to assert greater denial capacity and eventual pre-eminence over the First Island Chain" off the coast, he said.

Green, who served on the US National Security Council from 2001 to 2005, said China's Central Military Commission in 2008 "promulgated the 'Near Sea Doctrine,' and is following it to the letter, testing the US, Japan, Philippines and others to see how far they can push."


June Teufel Dreyer, a veteran China watcher at the University of Miami, Fla., said "salami slicing" is a large part of China's strategic policy. "The salami tactic has been stunningly successful, so incremental that it's hard to decide what Japan, or any other country, should respond forcefully to. No clear 'red line' seems to have been established," Dreyer said.

The Chinese refer to it as "ling chi" or "death from a thousand cuts."

For example, China's new ADIZ overlaps not only Japan's zone to encompass disputed islands, but South Korea's zone by 20 kilometers in width and 115 kilometers in length to cover the Socotra Rock (Ieodo or Parangdo). Socotra is under South Korean control but claimed by China as the Suyan Rock.

Seoul decided to expand its ADIZ after China refused to redraw its declared zone covering the islands. Seoul's Ministry of National Defense (MND) and related government agencies are consulting on how to expand the South Korean ADIZ, drawn in 1951 by the US military, officials said.

"We're considering ways of expanding [South] Korea's air defense identification zone to include Ieodo," said Wi Yong-seop, vice spokesman for the MND.

During annual high-level defense talks between Seoul and Beijing on Nov. 28, South Korean Vice Defense Minister Baek Seung-joo demanded that Wang Guanzhong, deputy chief of the General Staff of the Chinese Army, modify China's ADIZ.

"We expressed regret over China's air defense identification zone that overlaps our zone and even includes Ieodo," Wi said after the bilateral meeting. "We made it clear that we can't recognize China's move and jurisdiction over Ieodo waters."

Amid these growing tensions, South Korea's arms procurement agency announced Nov. 27 it would push forward on procurement of four aerial refueling planes. Currently, South Korea's F-15 fighter jets are limited to flying missions over Ieodo for 20 minutes. New tankers will extend that time to 80 minutes.

"With midair refueling, the operational range and flight hours of our fighter jets will be extended to a greater extent, and we will be able to respond to potential territorial disputes with neighboring countries," a spokesman for South Korea's Defense Acquisition Program Administration said.

In the southern part of China's ADIZ, which overlaps Taiwan's ADIZ, Beijing was careful not to cover Taiwan's Pengjia Island, which is manned by a Taiwan Coast Guard unit.

"The exclusion of the Pengjia Islet indicates that mainland China respects our stance," said Chinese Nationalist Party legislator Ting Shou-chung. Relations across the Taiwan Strait have been improving over the past several years.

"We're all waiting for the other shoe to drop," said Peter Dutton, an ADIZ expert and director of the China Maritime Studies Institute at the US Naval War College.

"We're looking to see how China will now behave," he said. "Hopefully, they will not try to fly inside the airspace over the Senkaku Islands, since that is under Japanese sovereign administration and would therefore be a highly provocative act."

Dutton downplayed fears of another civilian airliner being shot down, as was the case in 1983, when a Soviet Su-15 fighter shot down a South Korean airliner that strayed into Soviet airspace, killing 269.

In 1988, a US Navy Ticonderoga-class cruiser, the USS Vincennes, shot down Iran Air Flight 655 over the Arabian Gulf, killing 290. The Vincennes mistook the airliner for an Iranian F-14 Tomcat fighter jet.

"For civilian aircraft, this is really not a major issue," he said. "Those aircraft almost always file flight plans in advance and follow the directions of ground controllers. This means that their route through the ADIZ would already by pre-approved, and this is not a problem for the Chinese."

Dutton said the real concern is the freedom of military flights.

"But both the US and Japan have said they do not intend to alter their behavior or to abide by the ADIZ procedures, no matter what they are, for military flights," he said.

In 2001, a Chinese J-8 fighter collided with a US Navy EP-3 Aries signals intelligence aircraft near Hainan Island. Bonnie Glaser, a China specialist at CSIS, said she does not expect China to "back down" from its ADIZ policy, and anticipates more intercepts by Chinese fighters of US reconnaissance aircraft.

"The risk of accident will undoubtedly increase, especially [with] fighters [flown at] Mach 1 by young, inexperienced pilots," she said.

Alessio Patalano, a lecturer in the Department of War Studies, King's College, London, said the Chinese move might have been prompted by the current tensions in the East China Sea, and recent discussions in Japan about how the military can deal with Chinese drones and manned patrol aircraft that intrude into Japan's air defense space.

"Chinese authorities are seeking to force Japan to accept the existence of the dispute challenging Japanese control of the islands," Patalano said. "The problem with this is that Chinese authorities are using military and paramilitary tools to force a change of status quo to what is a political issue.

"Of course, a more robust response could see the US and Japan deploy air assets in the overlapping areas of the ADIZ to challenge the Chinese position," Patalano said. "US and Japanese aircraft flying together in the Chinese ADIZ would present a serious dilemma to Chinese authority."

Green said the US should at least send a "joint US-Japan patrol into the area to prove the point that coercion does not work."

The announcement of the ADIZ also affects the Chinese military, likely adding to the Air Force's status over the traditional role the Army has played as national defender.[/size]

Ed Anger

Stay Alive...Let the Man Drive

Admiral Yi


Ed Anger

Stay Alive...Let the Man Drive

Neil

Japan needs to get some nuclear-tipped missiles, ASAP.
I do not hate you, nor do I love you, but you are made out of atoms which I can use for something else.

jimmy olsen

#369
Yay, Korea.

http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2013/12/02/no-end-in-sight-for-chinese-air-restriction-zone

QuoteNo End in Sight for Chinese Air Restriction Zone
FAA punts to State Dept. on guidance for commercial flights while analysts worry about busy, tense airspace

By Paul D. Shinkman
December 2, 2013 RSS Feed Print

Tensions are boiling in the East China Sea and will likely continue as South Korea becomes the latest nation to formally protest new Chinese air restriction rules.

The Republic of Korea announced Monday it would likely expand its own "Aerial Defense Identification Zone" to include part of the region near the disputed Senkaku/Diaoyu islands, over which China created an ADIZ last week. This follows Japanese outrage and confusion over whether the U.S., its staunch ally, warned its commercial pilots to avoid the region.


Vice President Joe Biden continues his trip to Japan and China, and eventually South Korea in an attempt to prevent tempers from flaring further. International analysts, however, say diffusing the air restriction zone fallout will be a long game.

"I don't think the Chinese will retract it under any circumstances," says Bonnie Glaser, a China expert with the D.C.-based Center for Strategic and International Studies. "The last thing China wants to be seen is as bowing to pressure from foreigners."


The next steps, then, are ensuring a framework exists for regional countries to hammer out their differences in case of a crisis, such as the 2001 "Hainan Island incident." This accidental collision between a U.S. surveillance plane and a Chinese fighter jet killed the Chinese pilot and brought the U.S. and China to the brink of conflict. Cooler heads eventually prevailed upon realizing the potential international ramifications of breaking relations.

But that conclusion may not be so easily achieved in a row between the Japanese and Chinese, two nations with historic grudges that experts say have a difficult time empathizing with the other.

The Chinese government on Monday urged Japan to "face and seriously introspect" its history of invasion, according to state-sponsored news service Xinhua. Monday marks the 70th anniversary of the Japanese declarations of war that contributed to the outbreak of World War II.

"We urge again the Japanese side to face and seriously introspect its invasion history, honor its words and seriously implement its international responsibilities, so as to gain trust from its Asian neighboring countries and the international community," said Hong Lei, a spokesman for the Chinese foreign ministry.

The Japanese foreign ministry expressed outrage over the weekend, following reports that the U.S. government instructed commercial pilots to cede to the Chinese rules.

"The U.S. action may represent Washington's intention to be interpreted either way, giving consideration to both commercial carriers demanding the safety of flights and the Japanese government," a ministry official told Japanese newspaper the Asahi Shimbun.


A spokesman from the Federal Aviation Administration declined to comment Monday, deferring instead to the State Department, when asked what guidance the civil aviation organization would give to commercial airliners.

The State Department doubled back on its position over the weekend.

"The U.S. government generally expects that U.S. carriers operating internationally will operate consistent with [Notices to Airmen] issued by foreign countries," said a statement issued by the department Saturday. "Our expectation of operations by U.S. carriers consistent with NOTAMs does not indicate U.S. government acceptance of China's requirements for operating in the newly declared ADIZ."

The key element in adherence to these new Chinese rules lies in whether the flight is bound for mainland China. Secretary of State John Kerry was quick to point out days after the Chinese announced the ADIZ that all aircraft are already subject to these same rules if entering another nation's airspace to land.

Route maps published by U.S. commercial carriers such as US Airways and Delta show very few trips that would take a commercial jet through the region cordoned off by China's air restriction zone.

But the region remains rife with military aircraft. Japan scrambled F-15s hours after the Chinese established the air defense zone as a show of force. The U.S. flew two B-52 bombers through days later.

"The chances of collision are probably greater between a Chinese aircraft and a Japanese aircraft," says Glaser, the senior adviser for Asia at CSIS. "Particularly on the Chinese side, you may have a young, inexperienced pilot, particularly when it comes to evasive tactics and maneuvers."

Two of President Barack Obama's closest former advisers pointed to the Hainan incident on talk show appearances Sunday.

"You have obviously major powers there, China, Korea and Japan. China has unilaterally undertaken a set of steps here which instead of lowering tensions, increase tensions," said Tom Donilon, who served as a counselor to Obama for national security matters since his 2008 campaign, and formally as national security advisor from 2010 to 2013.

"They really do present the prospect of the possibility of miscalculation and mistake," he said, while speaking on ABC News' This Week, adding of the Hainan incident, "it's that risk of miscalculation and mistake that we need to be very concerned about going forward here."

Former National Security Agency and CIA Director Michael Hayden told Fox News Sunday China's move to establish the ADIZ is "dangerous and dumb."

"They treat the South China Sea or they want to treat the South China Sea the way you and I treat Lake Michigan. No one is going to accept that," said Hayden.


The U.S. barely capped the boiling tensions following the 2001 collision before it spun out of control, he said.

"This is bad from the Chinese perspective. I really don't understand why they did it," Hayden said.
It is far better for the truth to tear my flesh to pieces, then for my soul to wander through darkness in eternal damnation.

Jet: So what kind of woman is she? What's Julia like?
Faye: Ordinary. The kind of beautiful, dangerous ordinary that you just can't leave alone.
Jet: I see.
Faye: Like an angel from the underworld. Or a devil from Paradise.
--------------------------------------------
1 Karma Chameleon point

Queequeg

So is China doing this entirely for domestic political consumption?  They're not making any friends. 
Quote from: PDH on April 25, 2009, 05:58:55 PM
"Dysthymia?  Did they get some student from the University of Chicago with a hard-on for ancient Bactrian cities to name this?  I feel cheated."

CountDeMoney

Quote from: Queequeg on December 02, 2013, 09:57:34 PM
So is China doing this entirely for domestic political consumption?  They're not making any friends.

I'm sure there's a substantial portion of that, yes.  Not so much the general populace--that's just a bonus--but for the Party. 
After all, the CCP plenary was barely a month ago, and the Party's a bit sad over the economic slowdown.

Admiral Yi

Quote from: Queequeg on December 02, 2013, 09:57:34 PM
So is China doing this entirely for domestic political consumption?  They're not making any friends.

I suspect lust for oil and other raw materials plays a part.

The Minsky Moment

The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists.
--Joan Robinson

Josquius

So.... Has this gone according to plan for china? Or have they embarrassed themselves, not expecting the good guys to call their bluff?
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