I see 2 possibilities for China, either the people rebel and the Army backs them or they turn into a giant NK. Of course I’m just talking out my a$$.
Falklands, yep. Chavez provoking Colombia and Maduro stirring up shit by claiming to annex 2/3 of Guyana right now. South Africa’s “Bush War” in the 70s and 80s. The Kims have so reliably threatened to go on a “war footing” every time they have some kind of internal crisis that a lot of outside observers use it as an indicator of what’s going on in the DPRK.Argentina in The Falklands?
The Falklands is a great example of an exception to the rule, for sure. I am not sure about the others, for various reasons. That said, I think there are some pretty obvious differences between the Falklands and a potential Chinese decision to go to war with us to maintain their power (like that it might very easily end in complete nuclear waste). Personally, I'd be afraid of a desperate Chinese play if I were the Uyghurs maybe, but I feel pretty safe here. The better comparison I'd think, would be the Chinese gambling we wouldn't stop them from taking Taiwan, much like Argentina bet the British would let them have the Falklands. I think, though, we've been pretty clear where that road ends, unlike the British.Falklands, yep. Chavez provoking Colombia and Maduro stirring up shit by claiming to annex 2/3 of Guyana right now. South Africa’s “Bush War” in the 70s and 80s. The Kims have so reliably threatened to go on a “war footing” every time they have some kind of internal crisis that a lot of outside observers use it as an indicator of what’s going on in the DPRK.
We have a long history of putting together really good alliances. I’d say it’s our real superpower.alliance
Great report. It is interesting to note that China’s military power is reaching an apex just as their economy is getting a bit wobbly. Makes things quite dangerous…like Germany in 1914.Good FP article on the subject
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Wasn't meant to point fingers. More a commentary that we could elect the most pro-China President since Nixon (neither of the front runners are remotely this...) and they will face the hard reality of Xi's stubborness and will to achieve the 100 years plan. We can either back them into a corner or we can fuel their military buildup with American dollars.Kind of a chicken vs egg problem.
Idk, 15 years ago everything was revolving around CENTCOM IMO.I've been hearing this fear mongering about China since I was a Mid nearly 15 years ago. I was briefed by a flag who said, matter of factly, that we'd be at war with China within a few years at most, and I've heard the same thing nearly every year since. I'm not saying it won't ever happen, but I'm not going to keep believing it every time I hear someone cry wolf.
Regarding the first bolded bit above, autocrats in history do not have a track record of starting wars with near peer competitors as a way out. They have (as far as the examples I can think of) traditionally picked on the little guys. IE, Hussein vs Kuwait, Putin vs Ukraine, Hitler vs Jews (and weak Euro neighbors), etc. Are there any examples that should make us fear China attacking us?
Argentina in The Falklands?
The Falklands is a great example of an exception to the rule, for sure. I am not sure about the others, for various reasons. That said, I think there are some pretty obvious differences between the Falklands and a potential Chinese decision to go to war with us to maintain their power (like that it might very easily end in complete nuclear waste)....The better comparison I'd think, would be the Chinese gambling we wouldn't stop them from taking Taiwan, much like Argentina bet the British would let them have the Falklands. I think, though, we've been pretty clear where that road ends, unlike the British.
I've been hearing this fear mongering about China since I was a Mid nearly 15 years ago. I was briefed by a flag who said, matter of factly, that we'd be at war with China within a few years at most, and I've heard the same thing nearly every year since. I'm not saying it won't ever happen, but I'm not going to keep believing it every time I hear someone cry wolf.
We love fear mongering, and between the flags trying to justify higher budgets, the politicians trying to justify military spending in their districts, the military industrial complex justifying their programs, the media trying to get clicks, and the academics trying to make their careers, there's plenty of people selling it.
China hasn't used it's military hardly at all in modern history, and the smart money is on that trend continuing.
Hitler didn't attack Russia to resolve a deteriorating domestic political situation. Quite the opposite actually. Nor did Japan attack us, who thought their ruler a god and never would have revolted. Nor did Hussein vs Iran, or Arab countries vs Israel. You're forgetting that key component in the discussion.Germany vs Russia (the WWII one)? Japan vs the US and allies? Hussein vs Iran (granted, he did think they were weak...)? Arab countries and terrorist groups vs Israel, numerous times?
Whatever their reasons for claiming war with China has been imminent for the last 30+ years, they have been wrong thus far.It isn't fearmongering if the threat is real and growing. Claiming it is all just military leaders and politicians discounts a lot of very smart folks who have serious concerns about China and its increasingly aggressive foreign policy and rapidly increasing military capability. That has largely happened over the last 20 years, and accelerated under Xi Jinping.
For much of its modern history China wasn't able to use its military except against its neighbors, which it has done at least 5 times since the end of World War II, the difference now is they have far more capability.
If China is wise, and I think they are, they will simply wait for our debt bomb to explode. There's been much talk of China peaking and such here, but we're staring at a much steeper cliff than they are.