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If it Comes to War, Can the US Compete With China?
Hazlitt ^ | June 11, 2014 | John Michael McGrath

Posted on 06/16/2014 9:09:11 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

China is building an island. It may be the kind of thing you do when you’re a rapidly growing economy, but in this case it’s also the thing you do when you want to make a territorial claim on parts of the Pacific Ocean your neighbours also claim. In this case, China is building an island complete with airstrip in waters claimed by Vietnam and the Philippines.

It’s just the latest chapter in the Big Book of China Being Dickish, and in case you’ve just jumped into this book, the Council on Foreign Relations has a handy map for all of the competing territorial claims China is making in the Pacific against basically every nearby country with sandy beaches.

It may not sound like it, but it actually is a coincidence that the major Pacific powers just wrapped up one of the major annual conferences on security matters in the region, where Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe accused China of “aggregating one fait accompli after another.” American commentary, like that of Ely Ratner in the Wall Street Journal, suggests America take a more confrontational stance with China in places where the rising power is throwing its weight around.

In short, there remain a number of ways that things could go badly in the Pacific. The biggest thing we have going for us, for now, is that most everyone who’s actually in charge agrees it would be insane to start shooting over rocks that barely rise higher than the waves on a good day. But governments don’t last forever, and patience is not a long-term plan.

So what would a supremely bad set of days look like? I think Robert Farley has a thorough rundown of the interests of China and the US in a possible shooting war: the US would be trying to make things as painful as possible for China to remove any offensive capability and possibly destabilize the Chinese government, while the Chinese would try to disrupt the US-led alliance system in the Pacific.

One of Farley’s points that people should probably dwell on is how, even if things go well for the US, any lucky shots the Chinese manage to get in will be enormously more costly for the US than for China. While Chinese factories and shipyards could replace Chinese losses in short order,

The United States may have a harder time replacing losses, and not only because US warships and aircraft cost more than their Chinese counterparts. The production lines for the F-15 and F-16 are near the end, and the US no longer produces F-22. Moreover, US shipbuilding has declined to the point that replacing significant war losses could take a very long time.

If, for example, the Chinese manage to sink a US aircraft carrier with one of its ballistic missiles, as a steady stream of alarmist articles has spent a decade warning against, that carrier is unlikely to be replaced very quickly, if at all. This puts the US at a structural disadvantage in any conflict with China: whatever harm China causes the US is likely to be long-term or even permanent, while any harm the US causes China is likely to be temporary.

To spell out the increasing time costs of large weapon systems a bit more explicitly: the USS Enterprise that retired in 2012 began construction in 1958 and was in service by early 1962. The next Enterprise is currently expected to begin construction in 2018 but not enter service until 2027. And that assumes the Navy figures out the bugs that are plaguing the newest model carrier.

It’s all very daunting, but it begs the question of US industrial capacity. That is, it assumes the level (or more accurately, the efficiency) of military spending we’ve seen to date is the best the US can do, and that the US couldn’t, in a crisis, get much better at building things that go boom or are meant to make other people go boom.

But just as the next major-power war is going to look like nothing we’ve ever seen before, so will the home front. That we’ve gotten used, in the last decade, to fighting wars while arguing about whether everyone or just the very rich should get tax cuts says nothing about the merits of marginal tax rates, but quite a bit about how seriously we’ve taken our wars.

A war with China (or any other major power) won’t allow us the luxury to choose whether to take it seriously or not, and the kinds of costs it will impose on us won’t allow us the luxury of simply going away and calling it victory, like we’re doing in Afghanistan. This, in case it’s not obvious, is why war with China should be avoided.

The other scenario, then, is that the military-industrial complex is as fat and lazy as we assume it is, but that it would quickly get into a fighting trim if a crisis called for it. In one sense, this is good news for the US: losses in a fight with China could be replaced and the Pacific status quo could be maintained. The bad news is that this realistically just means we need to discuss the possibility of a first and second shooting war between the two giants of the global economy.

Since one war would be a disaster and a second one would be at least as bad, we return to square one: hoping the people who realize how crazy it all is continue to keep a lid on things, until China’s rise can be accommodated without violently disrupting the status quo. Seventy years after D-Day and a century after the start of World War I, we should be sobered by the fact that we don’t have a great history of this.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; History; Military/Veterans
KEYWORDS: china; economy; energy; military
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1 posted on 06/16/2014 9:09:11 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

The Chicoms are loving the Obama presidency. They’ve hacked all our computers, stole all our patents, now time to attack Japan!


2 posted on 06/16/2014 9:10:28 PM PDT by Viennacon
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Sssshhhh. Don’t wake up the ‘bring jobs back’ broken record parrot.


3 posted on 06/16/2014 9:13:51 PM PDT by deadrock (I am someone else.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
If it Comes to War, Can the US Compete With China?

Given the quality of our current political leadership, I doubt we could win a shootout with Canada.

4 posted on 06/16/2014 9:15:31 PM PDT by okie01 (The Mainstream Media: Ignorance on parade.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
The other scenario, then, is that the military-industrial complex is as fat and lazy as we assume it is, but that it would quickly get into a fighting trim if a crisis called for it.

No kidding. A lot of half-assed weapons systems were deployed at the beginning of WWII because they were needed and there was no time to test them properly beforehand. Any conflict with China would involve weapons under development being deployed willy-nilly. While glitches will be inevitable, development would be sped up because users would learn about their capabilities and limitations under live fire from intelligent adversaries instead of having to gin up artificial test scenarios that attempt to guess what an adversary would and could do with his suite of weaponry.

5 posted on 06/16/2014 9:19:22 PM PDT by Zhang Fei (Let us pray that peace be now restored to the world and that God will preserve it always.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

More important than weapons in war is the will on the part of the leaders and the people to fight and win.

We’re about to lose Iraq and Afghanistan, as we did Vietnam, not because the enemy has more or better weapons, but because they have a stronger will to fight and win and have a cause in which they fervently believe in.


6 posted on 06/16/2014 9:20:19 PM PDT by aquila48
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Yes.

We have about 20 aircraft carriers. They might have one.

It would be tough. /s


7 posted on 06/16/2014 9:23:38 PM PDT by lonestar67 (I remember when unemployment was 4.7 percent / Cruz 2016)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

General Bergdahl will save us!


8 posted on 06/16/2014 9:24:51 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Sure, or used to, before Øbama and the purges.

But even if PRESIDENT Regan were running the show, it would not be easy.

China has some, what, 1.5 Billion people? Something tells me that losing a hundered (or two) million or so to war, would not concern them in the least.

‘Quantity has a quality all it’s own.’ - Uncle Joe Stalin.

Nobody in government would use the means necessary ( and China is a compact country compared to the former, and current, USSR) to counter such an attack, even if same were used against us.


9 posted on 06/16/2014 9:26:24 PM PDT by AFreeBird
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To: Viennacon
The Chicoms are loving the Obama presidency.

This one thing I think it's unfair to blame on Obama. They robbed us blind during the Clinton years, and the Bush years helped them too. (Not to mention the first Bush's years) If Obama is helping them, he';s just following a well-established tradition.

10 posted on 06/16/2014 9:31:45 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Even this sober article doesn’t acknowledge that China plans to destroy our homeland with nuclear hellfire. They plan to win, not sit around for years while we rebuild a navy.


11 posted on 06/16/2014 9:34:32 PM PDT by Williams
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To: nickcarraway

The difference is, they are much more capable now, so the theft is too huge for even the media to cover up.


12 posted on 06/16/2014 9:38:54 PM PDT by Viennacon
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
China is building an island.

Well, send some Dem Congressmen and tip that thing over!

13 posted on 06/16/2014 9:47:40 PM PDT by Still Thinking (Freedom is NOT a loophole!)
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To: aquila48
Curtis LeMay couldn't have said it better!
14 posted on 06/16/2014 9:48:19 PM PDT by M-cubed
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To: okie01
Given the quality of our current political leadership, I doubt we could win a shootout with Canada.

A shoot out with Canada? With these ass hats, we could not win a shoot out at a hockey game.

15 posted on 06/16/2014 10:05:51 PM PDT by Mark17 ( Rudyard Kipling: it is unhealthy, for evil doers, to awaken the sleeping Saxon, and piss him off)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

It will be an epic bitch slap, hands down and we’re the one delivering it.

Bring it you kommie midgets. ...


16 posted on 06/16/2014 10:10:36 PM PDT by Vendome (Don't take life so seriously-you won't live through it anyway-Enjoy Yourself ala Louis Prima)
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To: Still Thinking
Well, send some Dem Congressmen and tip that thing over!

Easier yet - send the EPA and issue a cease work order as there has been no decade long study and formulation of an environmental impact statement. They stop everything here - why not in China ?

17 posted on 06/16/2014 10:11:33 PM PDT by llevrok (Straight. Since 1950.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet; blueyon; KitJ; T Minus Four; xzins; CMS; The Sailor; ab01; txradioguy; ...

Active Duty ping.


18 posted on 06/16/2014 10:14:46 PM PDT by Jet Jaguar (Resist in place.)
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To: deadrock; Cringing Negativism Network

Do you mean Cringing?
S/he’s right. The interest we pay the Chinese pays for their military.
I’ll wake him/her up.


19 posted on 06/16/2014 11:46:20 PM PDT by tumblindice (America's founding fathers: all armed conservatives)
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To: aquila48

EVERYONE loses in Afghanistan. We were doing great. We kicked out Al Queda. We then decided to stay. They never like that.

So, we are just another on a long list of empires that have died in the Mountains..


20 posted on 06/17/2014 1:20:29 AM PDT by Vermont Lt (If you want to keep your dignity, you can keep it. Period........ Just kidding, you can't keep it.)
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