Chinese Military Experts Urge Beijing To Prepare For War With U.S
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Chinese military journalists are publicly urging the People's
Liberation Army (PLA) to prepare immediately for an attack by U.S.
forces in the South China Sea. One expert at Zhejiang University's
National Institute for South China Sea Studies, Shi Xiaoqin, claims that
the U.S. is deliberately trying to provoke China. They also suggest the
regime reinforce Chinese installations on reefs claimed by China.
If
this analysis gains traction by Chinese political and military leaders,
U.S. military commanders in the South China Sea should plan for the
possibility that China might initiate hostilities in keeping with its
doctrine of preemptive retaliation, a seeming attempt falsely to claim
"self-defense."
One writer suggests that the
PLA should immediately move fighter aircraft to Chinese air bases in the
Spratly Islands at Fiery Cross, Subi Reef, and Mischief Reef. He also
boldly claims that the augmented presence of U.S. naval and air assets
in the South China Sea is no longer just a show of force by America.
Chen Hu, a Chinese military journalist, also asserts that
the U.S. is now intent on provoking a conflict and is preparing for
battle. Chen claims that the return of B1 bombers to Guam and continued
deployment of two U.S. aircraft carrier groups in the South China Sea,
despite the conclusion of military exercises, is supposedly a sign of
Washington's aggressive intent.
Chen suggests
that recent U.S. "Freedom of Navigation" maneuvers and the high number
of U.S. surveillance collection missions along the Chinese coast is
additional proof of American attack planning. Former PLA officer Wang
Yunfei and naval equipment expert suggests that flights by American
RC-135, E-8c, and RC-12X surveillance aircraft equate to "pre-battle
strategic technical surveillance." As the joke goes from the children's
playground: "It all started when he hit me back."
Wang
further warns that U.S. President Donald J. Trump is likely to initiate
a military conflict in the South China Sea region before the November 3
U.S. presidential election, speculating that "stirring up external
frictions, especially military conflicts with China, will help the
incumbent president for his re-election campaign."
The
leaders of China's Communist Party (CCP) also see that nothing was done
by anyone, including the U.S., to stop China's grab of Hong Kong this
year -- 27 years early. This paralysis of the West must have looked to
the CCP like a green light to keep on grabbing.
Wang even lays out his analysis on particular avenues of
approach by which U.S. bombers might attack their Chinese targets. Wang,
now a Chinese naval specialist, writes that the U.S. will probably
ship-launch Tomahawk Cruise against Chinese bases in the South China
Sea.
He further specifies that the PLA should
deploy China's own aircraft carriers in the south central region of the
sea, as the best strategy to counter any U.S. assault. He adds that
China must also deploy fighter jets and air defense missiles on various
Chinese reefs.
Wang singled out the Scarborough
Shoal in the South China Sea's Paracel Island Chain as the most likely
initial piece of real estate that the U.S. might seek to seize. The
Scarborough (Huangyan) Shoal/Reef is claimed by both China and the
Republic of the Philippines.
Perhaps one
reason why China might expect that Scarborough Shoal is a likely target
is that the U.S. wants to re-cement military agreements with the
Philippines that would allow American military assets access to Clark
Air Force Base, Subic Bay Naval Base and other newer facilities. U.S.
support for Manila's claim to the Scarborough Shoal against China's
might be sufficient to convince the mercurial president of the
Philippines, Rodrigo Duterte, to patch up relations with the U.S.
Chinese
writer Zheng Hao, who assesses that it is possible that U.S.-Chinese
tensions in the South China Sea could escalate into a "hot war," cites
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's July 13 statement that the South
China Sea is "not China's maritime empire" as indicative of the Trump
Administration's hostile intent.
Zheng appears
to be especially concerned about the July 7 U.S.-Japan naval exercise,
which included an operation by the U.S. aircraft carrier Ronald Reagan
and two warships of the Japanese Maritime Defense Forces. Zheng laments
that the 2018 draft of the Code of Conduct in the South China Sea has
not yet been signed by the Association of South East Asian Nations
(ASEAN) and China.
One hope to avoid or at least postpone an imminent clash
in the South China Sea is for China and the U.S. to activate the crisis
prevention apparatus established in November 2014. This diplomatic
device includes a Memorandum of Understanding on notification of
military activities and rules of behavior designed to keep air and naval
encounters peaceful.
So far, there is no
public acknowledgement that either China or the U.S. is employing the
crisis prevention mechanism. One recent sign of efforts by both sides to
avoid a military incident was the Pentagon's August 7 announcement that
U.S. Secretary of Defense Mark Esper and his Chinese counterpart,
Minister of Defense Wei Fenghe, held a 90-minute teleconference last
week.
China, however, has been the party with
the hostile intent, not only with Hong Kong, but also with an attack on
northern India, an extensive military base build-up in the South China
Sea, an attempted appropriation of the Japan-administered Senkaku
Islands and a "fishing fleet" of 250 vessels showing up near the
Galapagos Islands, off Ecuador.
Another recent
move from Beijing was to conduct live-fire targeting drills in the
South China Sea from July 25 through August 2. The announcement of this
exercise was promulgated by the PLA and not, as is usual, by the Chinese
government's maritime administration.
If
China continues its aggressive posture toward the U.S.-allied free
states of Asia, especially Taiwan, a direct confrontation between the
Chinese and U.S. militaries in the South China may indeed be necessary.
Originally published at Gatestone Institute - reposted with permission.
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