Posted on 09/04/2003 10:02:40 PM PDT by FreepForever
Informed diplomatic sources said Chinas authority is feeling increasingly uneasy towards the North Korean nuclear deadlock, as tension mounts. Beijing had secretly made military arrangement according to the N Korean crisis. 150,000 PLA Armies were sent to the Sino-Korean border to substitute the local Military Police (WuJing Budui) stationing there, in preparation for any possible American attack on N Korea.
This military maneuver on the Sino-Korean border was quietly made when the six-party talk was still taking place in Beijing. A total of three Field Army Groups (total 150,000 men) are now being deployed. According to PLA organization, one Field Army Group (YeZhan JunTuan) is equivalent to 50,000 men, consisting of 3 infantry divisions, 1 heavy-armor division and 1 artillery division.
Although the Military Police is also under the PLA, replacing the border forces with those with combat capability has more implications than strengthening the border control. This is not only to prevent a sudden flood of N Korean refugees. The more important task is: a contingency plan for a possible American attack on N Korea.
Once the Korean Peninsula situation lost control and the nuclear crisis cannot be solved through peaceful means, an Iraq war style massive air attack followed by ground troops advance is expected. The PLA forces at the border can avoid chaos and quickly seal the border.
After Hu Jintao took office, Chinas policy toward N Korea has experienced major change. According to the report, even if an American attack on N Korea becomes a reality, Chinas forces will abstain from joining the war. To prevent the possibility of war, China is working hard for a peaceful solution and tried not to posture herself as an opposition of America.
China and North Korea have signed a Sino-Korean Joint-Security Pact -- military aid must be provided when either side is under the military attack from a foreign force. To prevent getting involved in an American-Korean conflict, China is now reviewing the alteration of the terms of this treaty and has entered the deliberation stage.
China has got to convey a message to Kim Jong-Il: Do not expect China to continue with the Resist U.S. Aggression and Aid Korea (kangmei yuanchao) policy from 1950-53. Todays reality is: if a peaceful solution fails, Beijing will not send troops to N Korea to assist their fighting. Instead, they will send troops to close the border. They hope that this change of posture can tell Kim to stay in line with the Big Brother (China) and try to solve the stalemate with America with an earnest attitude.
Photo Caption: Hu Jintao is disgusted with Jiang Zemins Korean policy.
Chia Sent 150,000 Troops To Korean Border As Tension Mounts
Okay, I see, there's an n in there.
Let's see...A former great militaristic power, now experiencing economic hard times for a number of years - forbidden from producing weapons since the last war they lost...
Remind you of any other country?
"Australian PM Howard had secret tapes of China's tough talk on North Korea Posted by AmericanInTokyo to happygrl; TigerLikesRooster; dasboot; risk On News/Activism 09/01/2003 11:03 PM EDT #9 of 14 "Thank you happygrl. And, with a side note to TLR, dasboot and risk, I might also bring to your attention the recent activity by China on North Korea's northern border. What has been purposely happening over the last few weeks and months is that Beijing has moved to replace the armed policemen serving as border guards on the NK border, with REGULAR ARMED FORCES OF THE PEOPLES LIBERATION ARMY. By my sources I've checked with recently, the Chinese regulars being brought in by the PLA number nearly 100,000. This has been China putting the subtle pressure on Pyongyang to quit playing around and making nuclear provocations which China does NOT want to see happen. We are all anti-communists on this thread. But we cannot allow our anti-communism to become so doctrinaire, narrow and inflexible that it clouds objectivity and our capability in our analysis to be able to percieve East Asia policy and paradigm shifts we would have only dreamed about in the 1960s and 70s, with respect to China and North Korea. Believe me, these things are indeed going down and it is not just disinformation by Beijing to fool the United States. They are definitely starting to part ways with Kim Jong il."
"When you are near, you must appear to be far...."
Remind you of any other country?
These were not the factors that led to WWII. It was a culture of envy, collectivism, and servility that led to it.
Nein, mein herr. Und I am zertain zat hass not occurred to ze Chinese eizer...
Sort of like they did the last time the N. Korean regime fell? Of course, if that is the ultimate case...then the nubers will continue to grow.
I do not believe we can necessarily equate this to a good thing. It could well be that the Chinese are pressuring the N. Koreans to stop so much bluster that is causing so many ripples in the area. If they are doing that, it is to the achievement of their ultimate goals which are (at the very least) economic hegonomy in the region...meanig we lose out.
On the other hand, it could equally well be that they are either doing it for our consumption, or the Chinese are preparing in advance for things that they see coming as a result of that blustering. If they are preparing for that, then the impact to us is even sooner and more troublesome.
I do not trust either of them...deception, intrigue and feints are a way of life and a culture for their war making, and make no mistake, the econnomic side of this is viewed as warfare to them. It is a very dicey situation and one we cannot afford to misjudge in either direction.
We must stand firm against N. Korea and put a stop to their nuclear program...and we must seek the aid of Japan, the ROC and the Philippines IMHO in that stance. We must also find ways to apply more economic pressure on the Chinese as opposed to feeding their ambitions with the hard currency and manufacturing capability we are, without abandon, pumping into them now. In the end, China is the larger threat, particularly if we continue to finance their efforts, under their current regime, to become economically solvent by stripping ourselfves of economic and physical capability so it can be placed within their borders.
But that's just my opinion.
Excellent point...and it could all be engineered to that end from the beginning...bad cop (N. Korea), good cop (The PRC), all to achieve ends they may not have been able to without such a show.
But, as I said, it could also be geared towards other ends. We have to be very careful and I believe Bush and his people are trying to do just that. I just wish we could and would bite the bullet and put more pressure on the RPC itself.
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