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Know Thyself

File: 1422566786672.jpg (589.83 KB, 1920x1080, 16:9, 1408934338911.jpg)

 No.12

>China enters 2015 in the top position, where it will likely remain for a very long time, if not forever. In doing so,
>it returns to the position it held through most of human history.

>China’s strength and progress depends on the security of a world order largely designed by the United States, and there are no easy ways to get around the limits this places on China’s foreign policy choices.


United States not as the single world super power leading and swaying all? Economists show their true loyalties.

>http://www.globalfirepower.com/

>1-USA
>2-RUSSIA
>3-CHINA
>4-INDIA
>5-UK
>6-FRANCE
>7-GERMANY
>8-TURKEY
>9-SOUTH KOREA
>10-JAPAN

>Global Firepower (GFP) provides a unique analytical display of data concerning today's world military powers. Over 100 world military powers are considered in the ranking which allows for a broad spectrum of comparisons to be achieved concerning relative military strengths.

>The user should note that nuclear capability is not taken into account as that would defeat the purpose of such comparisons. Instead, the GFP ranking is based strictly on each nation's potential conventional war-making capabilities across land, sea and air. The final ranking also incorporates values related to resources, finances and geography. Some statistics have been estimated where official numbers are not publicly available.

A major consideration in war is that if you want to profit from your campaigns you have to be able to pillage and plunder something in the aftermath. Nukes are useful but completely ignore that consideration.

 No.13

All I have to say is that the united States going in to the middle east had multiple reasons.

1. To disable the negotiations between Iraq and China over oil investments

2. To take the largest mineral deposit from the hands of the world in Afghanistan

3. To stop the opium trade to China from Afghanistan which then caused chinas population to convert from taoism, bhudism, Hinduism to Christianity.

4. To expand Israel

Basically it was ideological warfare between China and the US.
I'm basing this off of the 9/11 being an inside job. Terrorism isn't a factor at all, the so called terrorist are civilians trying to fight back for their land in the middle east.

Its tough being a world power in 2015, just look what the US had to do.. Kill 3000 of their own people just to have that edge over China.

 No.14

>>13
>
>3. To stop the opium trade to China from Afghanistan which then caused chinas population to convert from taoism, bhudism, Hinduism to Christianity.
What?

>>13
>To expand Israel
kikel lobby is strong in America.

The United States of America has the best military in theworld and all major corporations do business from America, of course they will be using military industrial complex to secure foreign investments.

 No.143

The balance of military power in Asia is shifting against the US as China makes aggressive territorial moves, a major independent report will warn on Wednesday.

Barack Obama’s “pivot to Asia”, a major policy shift first outlined in 2011, is mired in confusion against a backdrop of a “significantly more complicated” international security picture, the researchers argue.

The study by the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a leading Washington thinktank, calls for America to flex its military muscle in the region by deploying extra nuclear attack submarines and developing advanced long-range missiles.

The report was commissioned by the Department of Defense at the behest of Congress and is set to be discussed at a hearing of the Senate armed services committee. It is likely to be seized on by Republican presidential candidates who accuse Obama of weak leadership in the face of a rising China, resurgent Russia and nuclear-armed North Korea.

“Chinese and North Korean actions are routinely challenging the credibility of US security commitments, and at the current rate of US capability development, the balance of military power in the region is shifting against the United States,” the report states. “Robust funding is needed to implement the rebalance.”

Obama had hoped his foreign policy shift towards Asia would renew alliances, capitalise on economic opportunities and allow him to escape the gravitational pull of the strife-torn Middle East. But it has proved to be a difficult balancing act, for example when frostiness between China and Japan makes it clear that Washington remains on the latter’s side. Former defense secretary Chuck Hagel, a champion of the strategy, resigned just over a year ago.

The CSIS’s follow-up to a 2012 study says the US should continue its three historically interrelated interests in Asia and the Pacific: protecting America and its allies; promoting trade; and supporting democracy.

Then it outlines four areas to build upon. First, it argues, Washington needs to continue aligning Asia strategy within the US government and with allies and partners. “The study finds that although the Obama administration has issued a series of speeches and documents on the rebalance, there remains no central statement of the US government’s rebalance strategy.”

During interviews with leaders throughout the Department of Defense, in other US departments and agencies, on Capitol Hill and across the Asia-Pacific, the study team “consistently heard confusion about the rebalance strategy and concern about its implementation”.

Second, the authors say, US leaders should accelerate efforts to strengthen ally and partner capability, capacity, resilience and interoperability. Third, the US should sustain and expand its military presence in the Asia-Pacific.

“China has accelerated its coercive activities and the pace of its island-building in the East and South China Seas, and North Korea has continued developing its nuclear and ballistic missile capabilities,” it warns.

“The Chinese People’s Liberation Army’s anti-access/area denial capabilities that many once viewed as Taiwan-specific are rapidly expanding to the Second Island Chain and beyond, affecting not only an increasing number of US allies and partners, but also US territories such as Guam.”

The authors recommend increasing surface fleet presence, increasing the number of nuclear attack submarines in Guam from four to six, continuing to diversify air operating locations, bolstering regional missile defenses, stockpiling critical precision munitions and enhancing intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance cooperation with allies within the region.

Fourth is a call for the US to innovate to plug “critical capability gaps in two areas”: defending against emerging risks to US forces, such as the growing ballistic missile risk to American ships and forward bases, and gaining an “asymmetric, cost-imposing counter” to potential regional competitors.


 No.163

>>143

http://archive.is/LK1p3

"Something like this by China will definitely be seen as a provocative move not just by the United States but all the countries in the region."

Beijing claims nearly all of the South China Sea, including small islands that are hundreds of kilometres from its southern coast.

Four countries in South-East Asia have unresolved territorial disputes with China over the South China Sea, which has important shipping lanes and potential oil and other natural resources.

In January, a US warship sailed into the area of sea containing the Paracel Islands group.

China has deployed an advanced surface-to-air missile system to one of the disputed islands it controls in the South China Sea, officials in the US and Taiwan said.

Taiwan defence ministry spokesman Major General David Lo told the Reuters news agency on Wednesday that the missile batteries had been set up on Woody Island, part of the Paracels chain, which is under Chinese control but also claimed by Taiwan and Vietnam.

"Interested parties should work together to maintain peace and stability in the South China Sea region and refrain from taking any unilateral measures that would increase tensions," Lo said on Wednesday.

A US military official also confirmed the "apparent deployment" of the missiles, first reported by Fox News.

Images from civilian satellite company ImageSat International show two batteries of eight surface-to-air missile launchers as well as a radar system, according to Fox.




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