Posted on 08/08/2005 7:29:02 PM PDT by Bald Eagle777
Russia and China hope to sign a massive arms deal after staging joint exercises for the first time
RUSSIA will show off its most modern bombers to its best military customer and China will have a chance to demonstrate that it is a force to be reckoned with when the giant neighbours hold their first joint military exercises this month. The decision to hold the drills off the east China coast in the Yellow Sea came after a disagreement over Beijings initial desire for the games to take place further south, opposite the island of Taiwan which it hopes one day to recover, by force if necessary.
Yesterdays announcement that 100,000 troops would mass from August 18 to 25 marked the culmination of years of rapprochement between countries that were once bitter enemies, which went to war in a minor territorial dispute in the 1970s, but now see themselves as strategic partners.
Their common interests include the sale of Russian oil to help to meet the energy needs of Chinas fast-growing economy as well as the strategic goal of showing the United States that other powers were rising in the East.
History has enabled them to leave behind old enmities. Shi Yinhong, Professor of the School of International Studies at Renmin University, Beijing, said: China needs to buy Russian military equipment and resources. For Russia, China is an important market and a source of hard currency.
Peace Mission 2005, involving army, navy, air force, marine, airborne and logistics units, will begin on August 18 near the Russian Pacific Fleet headquarters in Vladivostok, moving to the Yellow Sea and then to an area off the Jiaodong peninsula in the coastal Chinese province of Shandong. The exercises neither aim at any third party nor concern the interests of any third country, the Chinese Defence Ministry said.
Russian paratroops will jump on to the peninsula, while Russian ships will engage in amphibious landing exercises.
Air force exercises involving Sukhoi Su27 fighter aircraft and Tupolev TU95MSs and TU22M-3s will round out the drills, with long-distance bombing runs and cruise missile attacks. The exercises could also involve Chinas nuclear submarine fleet and antisubmarine warfare capability.
Analysts say there is little doubt that China is keen to send a message to the US. Not only is it gradually expanding its influence in Asia, eroding decades of dominance by Washington, but it also has the cash to go on a spending spree to update its military.
Russias TU160, TU95MS and TU22M3 strategic bombers and the improved Su27SM fighters will scream through the skies. It is not only their high-tech cockpits that Russia wants to show off. China may want to update its fleet of old, lumbering bombers with TU22M3s and TU95s capable of carrying long-haul nuclear-tipped cruise missiles. Russian nerves tingled when the European Union considered lifting its arms embargo on China earlier this year and since then Moscow has shown an interest in offering higher-technology arms to its top buyer.
The war games will involve a Russian airlift of an airborne unit to the training location by Il76 transport aircraft, launching a cruise missile to an imaginary target with TU22M3 medium-range bombers and bombing ground units with Su27SM fighters.
The two governments have invited observers from other governments in the six-nation Shanghai Co-operation Organisation, a security group led by Beijing and Moscow. The group, meant to combat separatism and Islamic extremism in Central Asia, includes Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan.
The show of strength is enough to shake Chinas neighbours, but may not go too far in tipping the balance of power in the Pacific. So China is relying on diplomacy as well to boost its influence, quietly eroding the pre-eminence of the United States in the process. Li Zhaoxing, the Chinese Foreign Minister, has had a helping hand recently from Condoleezza Rice, the US Secretary of State. She stayed away last week from an annual strategic forum involving the US, Japan and China in a meeting of South-East Asian nations. That left the stage to Mr Li, who dropped in to show Asia that China cared. The unspoken message was that Washington had seen fit to send only less-senior officials.
Vadim Solovyov, the Chief Editor of the Independent Military Survey, said: These exercises are a challenge to the US and its allies a new military alliance is forming. Now there is a unipolar world. Russia and China can make a second pole.
Russia needs the cash, and China wants the "goods", among many, many other factors.
This is not a good sign.
Considering Communist nations lack the ability to create wealth, their need for new economic infusion comes via expansion.
I'm a little more suspect of Russia at this point. We know what we have in China, but Russia isn't too different (in their goals) IMHOP.
Wow it's nice that Russia and China are gearing up to provide our boys with some much-needed target practice.
Just strategy? Or is it "the enemy of my enemy is my friend?"
Gotta wonder if some Chinese soldiers carrying the mystery
virus will infect and decimate both forces.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1399613/posts
Both nations already have the virus.
Didn't the SCUD missile come from Russia? Didn't Russia hen-peck the Afghani's?
If this article was supposed to scare me it didn't. Russia is poor as dirt and its a shame. I guess China doesn't trust its own people well enough to make its own weapons in its own factories.
They can structure this any way they want. We can still kick either - or both - of their butts.
Both of their militaries are decades behind us.
Seriously, this is kinda like Archie Bunker and Gloria Steinem doing a duet.
No point in grousing around the facts, eh?
The Avian flu should be the least of their problem. What they have to worry about is whether or not the chi-coms are infected with the Ebola Recombinant.
> We can still kick either - or both - of their butts.
Plus, Taiwan has mined the Straight with billions of
latent Alka-Seltzer tablets. As soon as the invasion
forces reaches mid-way ...
... fizzzzz ...
resulting in a drop in seawater density, and the
whole Chinese Navy goes under.
I agree.
They will lead with their Attack Small Submarines.
> The Avian flu should be the least of their problem.
> What they have to worry about is whether or not the
> chi-coms are infected with the Ebola Recombinant.
That's why I called it the mystery virus. That avian
flu thread I referenced has morphed into tracking
who knows what that's going on over there.
Even so, H5N1 avian is pretty nasty all by itself.
China-Russian alliance has been in the works since the US-led NATO war against Yugoslavia. The Clinton apologists like to claim that there was no downside to that war but always fail to mention that it was that war that pushed Russian and China into each others arms.
That it is.
Presumably Jane believes that Washington dominated Asia decades ago, right after America's leftist elites insisted upon abandoning Vietnam.
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