There is no deterrence as the Chinese know that the 32,000 US troops in South Korea cannot be used to deter them.
So why waste the money?
Putting our troops in new bases on the west coast of Japan would do FAR more to discourage China (as we could use them to respond to anything the Chinese would do). Not to mention that the Japanese government has been looking (for some time now) for ways to move some of the US military presence off of Okinawa onto mainland Japan.
It would kill three birds with one stone; creating a real deterrence against China, easing the US military presence on Okinawa (which is a big headache for Tokyo), and it would still position our troops for a rapid reaction to any situation on the Korean peninsula.
All we'd need to do is pre-position our military equipment in the southern part of South Korea, away from any North Korean artillery bombardment. A quick ferryboat ride later, and an instant army division, ready to go. Assuming that the South Koreans did their job in maintaining the equipment.
Congress Demands Pentagon Report on China
By GOPAL RATNAM, Defense News, 7/08/2005
Ten U.S. lawmakers are demanding that the Pentagon submit its annual report on Chinese military capabilities to Congress as soon as possible.
In a July 1 letter to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, Rep. Randy Forbes, R-VA, and nine other members of the House of Representatives, both Democrats and Republicans, complain that the report due to Congress on March 1 every year hasnt been delivered yet.
Congress requires the annual report on the military power of the Peoples Republic of China to execute its constitutional responsibilities, the lawmakers wrote. Additional delay will impair Congress ability to perform those oversight duties.
Forbes is the co-chairman of the newly formed China caucus, created to focus Congress attention on Chinas rise as an economic and military power. Seven other signatories of the July 1 letter are also members of the caucus.
The National Defense Authorization Act of 2000 requires the Pentagon to submit an annual report of its assessment of Chinese military capabilities.
"The annual DoD China Military Power report required by Congress is not yet ready for release, but we expect to be completed with it soon, one defense official said July 7.
The official said a team of intelligence experts within the Pentagon is preparing the report by drawing on several in-house and outside resources.
In recent weeks, senior Bush administration officials, including Rumsfeld and Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice, have raised questions about Chinas military modernization.
"Since no nation threatens China, one must wonder: Why this growing investment? Why these continuing large and expanding arms purchases?" Rumsfeld said in a June 4 address to a security conference in Singapore, organized by the International Institute for Strategic Studies.
COMMENT: Negroponte's DIA team...is sand-papering the language of some very deleterious developments to soft-pedal the conclusions...and avoid the inevitable national security budget & foreign policy implications: I.e., we need to stop treating China as a "trading partner" and start enforcing the "Trading with the Enemies Act".
And even with that change, we likely will still have to boost military procurement dramatically. Nuke the BRAC cuts now. Reverse course on all the strategic procurement holiday, and the submarine/bomber/ICBM drawdown. Start flying Project Looking Glass again.
Say hello to Cold War II. Let's pray it doesn't heat up too soon.
The Lesson? Thanks alot to the people who kept repeating blindly the religious dogma of trade that ....China will change.... They had no idea who they were dealing with.
Deng Xioaping: "It doesn't matter whether you call the cat black or white. So long as it catches mice."