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Chinese Military,Political and Social Superthread

Here, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act from today’s National Post, is a related article by a reputable scholar:

http://www.nationalpost.com/story.html?id=645965
Malthus was right

Sally F. Zerker

National Post

Published: Friday, July 11, 2008

It may be time to bring Thomas Malthus back from the dead -- intellectually speaking. Believe it or not, the 18th-century thinker has a lot to say to us about problems that are here and now: population increase and the food needed to deal with it.

Malthus saw the 18th-century phenomenon of continuous population increase as a threat to human civilization. Left unchecked, be believed, populations would double themselves every 25 years, a growth rate that would quickly outstrip the available food supply. This Malthusian idea soon took on the mantra of certainty: Unlimited population growth could only end in disastrous famines and starvation.

This was a widely held belief throughout the 19th century and the early decades of the 20th century. Since the mid-20th century, however, Malthus' theories have lost credibility because the world has experienced (seemingly) unchecked population growth without the dismal result he predicted. Here we are in the first decade of the 21st century, with a world population of 6.6 billion --about six times what it was in Malthus' era -- and yet we're not starving. Malthus must have been wrong.

Or was he?

Until now, technological improvements have caused food supply to increase along with population growth -- something Malthus admittedly did not foresee. But as demand bumps up against supply, the green revolution may be over.

In recent months, food prices have risen dramatically and suddenly. In the past year, the price of wheat is up 120%. The cost of cooking oil, rice and other staples have doubled since January. For the 1.5-billion people who live on less than $2 a day, food typically accounts for almost all of their meager budget. Soaring food prices represent a calamity for these people, which explains

At current inflated prices, we can expect outright starvation in the poorer regions of the world why food riots have broken out across the globe.

A significant factor straining the food supply is the entry into the market of large middle-class populations in China and India -- people who want to live (and eat) like North Americans and Europeans. Higher incomes in these nations have resulted in increased consumption of meat, chicken and other protein foods, all of which strain grain supplies. (It takes four pounds of grain to make one pound of meat.) The formerly poor are no longer content to eat rice, bread and lentils.

During the 20th century, food production generally was not a restrictive factor on population growth. But that was during a period when only one-sixth of the Earth's inhabitants had incomes high enough to make them gluttons. This low ratio of rich to poor left enough of the pie for meager but sufficient distribution to the rest of the world.

In other words, the world seems to have avoided Malthus' dismal outcome only because the vast majority of humanity did not eat well. They were able to eat amounts sufficient to procreate and have their offspring survive, but not enough to enjoy the health-giving effect of a high protein diet.

That global social division between rich and poor is undergoing a shift, and it is one that has the potential for unleashing a massive humanitarian crisis. Malthus may yet be vindicated.

Sally F. Zerker is an economist, professor emeritus and senior scholar at York University.

I disagree.

The green revolution was all about science – the sorts of science that do not need trillion dollar budgets. In fact, agricultural science is, arguably, amongst the oldest of all – having its origins in the Neolithic period. (I guess physics always ‘wins’ – I’m guessing the lever, for example, goes all the way back to the Lower Palaeolithic.)

I have heard/read (but I cannot cite sources) that, right now, in 2008, in China, alone, there is more agricultural research and development underway than has been done in all of human history – everywhere.*

I’m also guessing that, if even 1% of that R&D is actually worthwhile, another green revolution is inevitable.

Malthus was wrong because he failed to assign a value to human ingenuity and progress and then factor that into h,is calculations. Prof. Zerker falls into the same trap: “things” are bad, right now, they may even get worse but, over the past 10,000+ years, we have demonstrated a consistent ability to solve problems and avert disasters. I see nothing in 21st century humanity to suggest that ability has, suddenly, disappeared.

----------
* I think that estimate was based on assigning some R&D value to everything from the domestication of the first goat around 11,000 years ago through to e.g. the invention of Roundupcirca 1970 and assigning related values to the work being done on (agriculture – broadly defined) by scholars (MSc and above) in China, right now. I have no way of knowing how valid those data might be. But, add India and Europe and America into that mix and imagine how much new work is being done!

 
The main problem with food isn't production, it is distribution.

Starvation in many parts of the world is a deliberate policy instituted by governments to repress potential opponents, or the inadvertent side effect of socialistic policies to "help the poor" (although it is hard to see who is being helped when these policies result in food shortages). Current examples of "a" are Zimbabwe and "b" are Venezuela.

To add to the misery is the subsidization of agriculture in the West. "We" produce "butter mountains" and "wine lakes", then try to dump them on the developing world, hurting third world farmers with cheap, subsidized food they can't compete against.

Taking government out of agriculture in the West would go a long way to improving the situation (not to mention relieving taxpayers of funding expensive and inefficient subsidies and making food cheaper for us as well!).

WRT who will have the largest GDP in 50 years is a mugs game, forecasting farther than five years in the future is dangerous because so many variables change the political and economic assumptions behind these forecasts. I am also sceptical based on demographic factors, the so called "China will get old before it becomes rich" argument and demographic and social turmoil caused by the "one child" program, although other factors can and will intrude over the next five to fifty years
 
Owners of US debt.
Source http://www.data360.org/dsg.aspx?Data_Set_Group_Id=1001

Graph
http://www.data360.org/dsg.aspx?Data_Set_Group_Id=1001
 
Pacific choke point? The Strait of Malacca is a venue for a great deal of the world's maritime trade and blocking it may hold an advantage of any potential aggressor; modern day pirates are not the only threat around that area.

Ian Storey, a scholar at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore, calls the South China Sea policy "China’s Malacca Dilemma."

On one hand, Beijing claims the waters from the island of Hainan south to the Indonesian island of Natuna as an internal sea, and has suggested that the United States withdraw from the region. A Chinese admiral suggested that the US and China split the Pacific, with China controlling the western half and the US moving to the east. Keating immediately stated explicitly that the US was in Asia to stay. On the other hand, China’s Navy, while modernizing, is still not strong enough to enforce its claim to the South China Sea and to ensure that the strait remains open for the ships plying the China trade and bringing in the bulk of the nation’s oil imports.

"At present, China lacks the naval power necessary to protect its sea-lanes," Storey wrote. "Beijing fears that during a national security crisis ships carrying energy resources could be interdicted by hostile naval forces. Any disruption to the free flow of energy resources into China could derail the economic growth on which the Chinese government depends to shore up its legitimacy and pursue its great power ambitions."

American Pretext?

Thus, China has "a vested interest in the elimination of transnational threats in the waterway," said Storey, "yet Beijing remains uneasy at the prospect of a greater role for external powers in securing the strait."

Some Chinese analysts have accused Washington and Tokyo of "using the threat of terrorism" as "a pretext to expand their naval presence in and around the strait." The Chinese have watched with concern as India has enhanced its presence in the area, especially the modernization of military facilities on the Andaman and Nicobar Islands at the strait’s northwest terminus.

Some in the Chinese commentariat have demonstrated worries that have "bordered on the paranoid," Storey said. One Chinese newspaper, he observed, recently condemned US Indonesia military cooperation as "targeting China" and aiming at "controlling China’s avenue of approach to the Pacific."

US strategy is to rely on Southeast Asian nations to take the lead in protecting the waterways. The supporting role of the US ranges from providing equipment and training, combined exercises, bilateral exchanges, ship visits, multilateral conferences, and planning sessions, to medical and humanitarian assistance.


>>LINK<<

Should be very interesting over the next 10-15 years once the PLAN has the capability to patrol the straits itself...
 
"Over time though individuals may find themselves to be out of sync with those they thought were liberals and come to identify themselves by some other label. They may become anarchists or libertarians.  In like manner Communists become socialists become social democrats.  Catholics become protestants and presbyterians become methodists.  Peoples beliefs are in constant flux.  Therefore any society based on beliefs can only be a temporary association."


Mr. Kirkhill,

While I agree with what you said about the ideas and beliefs of people and individuals being always in a state of constant flux, they do not necessarily evolve in the direction that you specified above. And there are certain individuals who stay true to their faith their whole lives because they are not easily influenced by whatever circumstances- positive or negative- that would otherwise cause weaker minds to change.

CougarDaddy:

On reading my quote the way that you apparently read it I can see how it might be taken as a statement of "progression".  In some historical sense I suppose that was the way that I meant it.  But I don't equate the historical progress, necessarily, with improvement or inevitability.  I quite take your point that not all individuals "progress".  Many do indeed hold fast to entrenched beliefs.  And indeed it isn't uncommon for the offspring of those that have "progressed" to "regress" to familiar, traditional beliefs and mores.

But enough digression....

Back to your regularly programming.
 
So are the various Southeast Asian nations now starting to pick sides- either China or the US and its other Allies? Interesting...

Thai massage for China's military muscle

LINK

--[excerpt]--

Last week, Thai Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej was in China for a four-day visit, his first since taking office after last December's elections. Samak, who is concurrently defense minister, met with Chinese Defense Minister Liang Guanglie and the two sides agreed to strengthen bilateral military ties.

Although Thailand has in recent years been wracked by political uncertainty, this has not impaired the close relationship between Bangkok and Beijing. Indeed, in the immediate aftermath of the September 2006 coup, the People's Republic of China, or PRC, moved to embrace the new military government while its treaty ally, the United States, looked on disapprovingly at the regression of Thai democracy.

As with other countries in Southeast Asia, Thailand seeks to balance the interests and influence of America and China. A central element of Bangkok's hedging strategy is to keep its military alliance with the US well lubricated, while at the same time expanding defense ties with China. Given the cozy relationship that has developed between Thailand and China over the past few decades, it is unsurprising that military-security links are among China's most well-developed in the region - second only to Myanmar, China's quasi-ally - and the Thai kingdom has chalked up some impressive firsts in the arena of Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)-China defense ties, including a groundbreaking agreement with Beijing in 2007 that outlined the parameters of future cooperation...
 
CougarDaddy said:
So are the various Southeast Asian nations now starting to pick sides- either China or the US and its other Allies? Interesting...

Interesting; I had no idea that the Chinese had good military relations with Thailand, but maybe I was thrown off by Thailand's use of Western military equipment.

Not mentioned are Thailand's relations with Vietnam, with which China's relations might be cordial, but not particularly friendly.  Is the situation analogous at all with China's backing of successive governments in Pakistan?
 
chanman said:
Interesting; I had no idea that the Chinese had good military relations with Thailand, but maybe I was thrown off by Thailand's use of Western military equipment.

Not mentioned are Thailand's relations with Vietnam, with which China's relations might be cordial, but not particularly friendly.  Is the situation analogous at all with China's backing of successive governments in Pakistan?

It is not that analagous from what I have read, though Thailand does also use Chinese equipment; its CHAO PHRAYA class Frigates were made in China (Type 52 and Type 53 JIANGHU class).

http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/sys/ship/row/plan/jianghu.htm

Moving on to other news, there has been a return to violence in China's predominantly Muslim province of Xinjiang in Western China; it is not surprising that Xinhua or CCTV would report this attack, since the CCP would probably want to paint the Uighur seperatists to the world as more terrorists in this current GWOT, especially with only days before the Olympics.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080804.wchinaraid0804/BNStory/International/home?cid=al_gam_mostemail

CHARLES HUTZLER

ASSOCIATED PRESS

August 4, 2008 at 1:42 AM EDT

BEIJING — Attackers rammed a dump truck into a patrol station in China's restive Central Asian border province Monday morning, tossing grenades in a raid that killed 16 officers and wounded more than a dozen others, the state-run Xinhua News Agency reported.
The attack in Xinjiang province was in an area where local Muslims have waged a sporadic rebellion against Chinese rule.
It came just four days before the start of the Beijing Olympics — an event that at least one radical Muslim group has vowed to attack.
The brief Xinhua account said the attackers drove the dump truck to get inside the paramilitary police compound in the Kashgar area and then exploded two grenades. A state television report gave a different version, saying the police were attacked while marching in front of a hotel while conducting morning drills.
Besides the 16 dead, another 16 armed policemen were wounded, the reports said.
Two of the attackers were arrested, Xinhua reported. It called the attackers "rioters" but did not further identify them.
Local government officials declined comment Monday. An officer in the district police department said an investigation was launched.
The exact location of the attack could not immediately be determined. Kashgar, or Kashi in Chinese, is the name of an oasis town that was once a stop on the Silk Road caravan routes and is also the name of the surrounding region that abuts Pakistan, Afghanistan and Kyrgyzstan.
A local Turkic Muslim people, the Uighurs, have chafed under Chinese rule, fully imposed after the communists took power nearly 60 years ago. Occasionally violent attacks in the 1990s brought an intense response from Beijing, which has stationed crack paramilitary units in the area and clamped down on unregistered mosques and religious schools that officials said were inciting militant action.
Chinese defence and police commanders have warned that radical Uighurs fighting for what they call an independent East Turkistan in western China pose the single greatest threat to the Olympics.
In recent months police claimed to have foiled a plot to explode a Chinese passenger plane and plans by terrorist cells to kidnap athletes, journalists and others involved in the Olympics.
One militant group, the Turkistan Islamic Party, pledged in a video that surfaced on the Internet last month to "target the most critical points related to the Olympics." The group is believed to be based across the border in Pakistan, with some of its core members having received training from al-Qaeda and the Pakistani Taliban, according to terrorism experts.
Terrorism experts and Chinese authorities, however, have said that with more than 100,000 soldiers and police guarding Beijing and other Olympic co-host cities, terrorists were more likely to attack less-protected areas.
 
China is courting allies (like all nations do), and most of the nations it courts have both resources the Chinese want and authoratarian governments which have no limits or scruples as to how they get those resources. This has been discussed a bit in Grand Strategy for a Divided America, particularly in these two articles:

So Popular and So Spineless By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN

Hugs For Thugs  Robert Kagan,  National Post  Published: Thursday, July 24, 2008

Potential American responses are discussed here: The United States building a 21rst Century alliance system

This has lots of implications for Canada; where do we stand in a world divided between the American West and increasingly powerful autocracies (China clearly wishes to be the leading power in this bloc, but Russia also has ambitions in these matters)? Where does the EU fit in, with its nominaly "free" society increasingly hemmed in by unreachable bureaucratic strictures and rules? How about South America? (Africa is a write off, and will become the cockpit for conflict as predatory nations fight for resources on the continent).

Looking at the behaviour of China over the years, it is quite clear that the hopes of people who thought "engagement" would liberate China or make it a partner in the global community were dashed, so what is our next move?


edit for spelling
 
Great (long) article from Spigel on line:

http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,569951,00.html

China's Summer of Living Dangerously
By Ullrich Fichtner

The Chinese Communist regime's had planned to stage the 2008 Olympic Games as a triumphant celebration of itself as a model of success. But anyone traveling through the country's provinces will encounter a crumbling realm threatened by forces released by its economic boom.

The man who can explain China is sitting in a private booth in an old teahouse in Beijing, holding court at an antique table with a laptop on it. Black and white photos hang on the walls and silk cushions adorn the benches. In the world outside, the Olympic Torch is making its way through the country and slowly approaching Beijing. The man says that the West is taking the easy route with China, despite its enormous complexity. "In this country, every movement takes place at the edge of an abyss."

Read the rest

 
Anjd another countervailing view of China's future progression. If this is accurate, then there is a danger waiting in the future as the Chinese people become bitter and vengeful as power and recognition slip away without their acsent to "Great Power" status:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/07/25/AR2008072502255_pf.html

A Long Wait at the Gate to Greatness

By John Pomfret
Sunday, July 27, 2008; B01

Nikita Khrushchev said the Soviet Union would bury us, but these days, everybody seems to think that China is the one wielding the shovel. The People's Republic is on the march -- economically, militarily, even ideologically. Economists expect its GDP to surpass America's by 2025; its submarine fleet is reportedly growing five times faster than Washington's; even its capitalist authoritarianism is called a real alternative to the West's liberal democracy. China, the drumbeat goes, is poised to become the 800-pound gorilla of the international system, ready to dominate the 21st century the way the United States dominated the 20th.

Except that it's not.

Ever since I returned to the United States in 2004 from my last posting to China, as this newspaper's Beijing bureau chief, I've been struck by the breathless way we talk about that country. So often, our perceptions of the place have more to do with how we look at ourselves than with what's actually happening over there. Worried about the U.S. education system? China's becomes a model. Fretting about our military readiness? China's missiles pose a threat. Concerned about slipping U.S. global influence? China seems ready to take our place.

But is China really going to be another superpower? I doubt it.

It's not that I'm a China-basher, like those who predict its collapse because they despise its system and assume that it will go the way of the Soviet Union. I first went to China in 1980 as a student, and I've followed its remarkable transformation over the past 28 years. I met my wife there and call it a second home. I'm hardly expecting China to implode. But its dream of dominating the century isn't going to become a reality anytime soon.

Too many constraints are built into the country's social, economic and political systems. For four big reasons -- dire demographics, an overrated economy, an environment under siege and an ideology that doesn't travel well -- China is more likely to remain the muscle-bound adolescent of the international system than to become the master of the world.

In the West, China is known as "the factory to the world," the land of unlimited labor where millions are eager to leave the hardscrabble countryside for a chance to tighten screws in microwaves or assemble Apple's latest gizmo. If the country is going to rise to superpowerdom, says conventional wisdom, it will do so on the back of its massive workforce.

But there's a hitch: China's demographics stink. No country is aging faster than the People's Republic, which is on track to become the first nation in the world to get old before it gets rich. Because of the Communist Party's notorious one-child-per-family policy, the average number of children born to a Chinese woman has dropped from 5.8 in the 1970s to 1.8 today -- below the rate of 2.1 that would keep the population stable. Meanwhile, life expectancy has shot up, from just 35 in 1949 to more than 73 today. Economists worry that as the working-age population shrinks, labor costs will rise, significantly eroding one of China's key competitive advantages.

Worse, Chinese demographers such as Li Jianmin of Nankai University now predict a crisis in dealing with China's elderly, a group that will balloon from 100 million people older than 60 today to 334 million by 2050, including a staggering 100 million age 80 or older. How will China care for them? With pensions? Fewer than 30 percent of China's urban dwellers have them, and none of the country's 700 million farmers do. And China's state-funded pension system makes Social Security look like Fort Knox. Nicholas Eberstadt, a demographer and economist at the American Enterprise Institute, calls China's demographic time bomb "a slow-motion humanitarian tragedy in the making" that will "probably require a rewrite of the narrative of the rising China."

I count myself lucky to have witnessed China's economic rise first-hand and seen its successes etched on the bodies of my Chinese classmates. When I first met them in the early 1980s, my fellow students were hard and thin as rails; when I found them again almost 20 years later, they proudly sported what the Chinese call the "boss belly." They now golfed and lolled around in swanky saunas.

But in our exuberance over these incredible economic changes, we seem to have forgotten that past performance doesn't guarantee future results. Not a month goes by without some Washington think tank crowing that China's economy is overtaking America's. The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace is the latest, predicting earlier this month that the Chinese economy would be twice the size of ours by the middle of the century.

There are two problems with predictions like these. First, in the universe where these reports are generated, China's graphs always go up, never down. Second, while the documents may include some nuance, it vanishes when the studies are reported to the rest of us.

One important nuance we keep forgetting is the sheer size of China's population: about 1.3 billion, more than four times that of the United States. China should have a big economy. But on a per capita basis, the country isn't a dragon; it's a medium-size lizard, sitting in 109th place on the International Monetary Fund's World Economic Outlook Database, squarely between Swaziland and Morocco. China's economy is large, but its average living standard is low, and it will stay that way for a very long time, even assuming that the economy continues to grow at impressive rates.

The big number wheeled out to prove that China is eating our economic lunch is the U.S. trade deficit with China, which last year hit $256 billion. But again, where's the missing nuance? Nearly 60 percent of China's total exports are churned out by companies not owned by Chinese (including plenty of U.S. ones). When it comes to high-tech exports such as computers and electronic goods, 89 percent of China's exports come from non-Chinese-owned companies. China is part of the global system, but it's still the low-cost assembly and manufacturing part -- and foreign, not Chinese, firms are reaping the lion's share of the profits.

When my family and I left China in 2004, we moved to Los Angeles, the smog capital of the United States. No sooner had we set foot in southern California than my son's asthma attacks and chronic chest infections -- so worryingly frequent in Beijing -- stopped. When people asked me why we'd moved to L.A., I started joking, "For the air."

China's environmental woes are no joke. This year, China will surpass the United States as the world's No. 1 emitter of greenhouse gases. It continues to be the largest depleter of the ozone layer. And it's the largest polluter of the Pacific Ocean. But in the accepted China narrative, the country's environmental problems will merely mean a few breathing complications for the odd sprinter at the Beijing games. In fact, they could block the country's rise.

The problem is huge: Sixteen of the world's 20 most polluted cities are in China, 70 percent of the country's lakes and rivers are polluted, and half the population lacks clean drinking water. The constant smoggy haze over northern China diminishes crop yields. By 2030, the nation will face a water shortage equal to the amount it consumes today; factories in the northwest have already been forced out of business because there just isn't any water. Even Chinese government economists estimate that environmental troubles shave 10 percent off the country's gross domestic product each year. Somehow, though, the effect this calamity is having on China's rise doesn't quite register in the West .

And then there's "Kung Fu Panda." That Hollywood movie embodies the final reason why China won't be a superpower: Beijing's animating ideas just aren't that animating.

In recent years, we've been bombarded with articles and books about China's rising global ideological influence. (One typical title: "Charm Offensive: How China's Soft Power Is Transforming the World.") These works portray China's model -- a one-party state with a juggernaut economy -- as highly attractive to elites in many developing nations, although China's dreary current crop of acolytes (Zimbabwe, Burma and Sudan) don't amount to much of a threat.

But consider the case of the high-kicking panda who uses ancient Chinese teachings to turn himself into a kung fu warrior. That recent Hollywood smash broke Chinese box-office records -- and caused no end of hand-wringing among the country's glitterati. "The film's protagonist is China's national treasure, and all the elements are Chinese, but why didn't we make such a film?" Wu Jiang, president of the China National Peking Opera Company, told the official New China News Agency.

The content may be Chinese, but the irreverence and creativity of "Kung Fu Panda" are 100 percent American. That highlights another weakness in the argument about China's inevitable rise: The place remains an authoritarian state run by a party that limits the free flow of information, stifles ingenuity and doesn't understand how to self-correct. Blockbusters don't grow out of the barrel of a gun. Neither do superpowers in the age of globalization.

And yet we seem to revel in overestimating China. One recent evening, I was at a party where a senior aide to a Democratic senator was discussing the business deal earlier this year in which a Chinese state-owned investment company had bought a big chunk of the Blackstone Group, a U.S. investment firm. The Chinese company has lost more than $1 billion, but the aide wouldn't believe that it was just a bum investment. "It's got to be part of a broader plan," she insisted. "It's China."

I tried to convince her otherwise. I don't think I succeeded.

pomfretj@washpost.com

John Pomfret is the editor of Outlook. He is a former Beijing bureau chief of The Washington Post and the author of "Chinese Lessons: Five Classmates and the Story of the New China."
 
"China is an island"; an interesting veiw on the geographic and demographic reality of China:

http://strangemaps.wordpress.com/2008/06/18/292-china-as-an-island/

292 - China As An Island
Filed under: Uncategorized — strangemaps @


China has land borders with 14 other countries – a world record*. And yet you should not think of China as particularly well-integrated with its neighbours. In fact, as shown in this dramatic map, you should rather consider China to be an island.

That stark image can be found illustrating this article on John Mauldin’s Outside the Box, a blog at Investors Insight, which is a website dedicated to ‘Financial Intelligence for the Informed Investor’. On his blog, Mr Mauldin hebdomadally profiles one of the many articles he reads each week, to challenge and stimulate investors to ‘think outside the box’. What follows is a very brief summary of the article he recently highlighted: ‘The Geopolitics of China’, taken from a series of Geopolitical Monographs by Stratfor.

The Chinese heartland, pictured here as the part of China above water, is favourable to agriculture and has traditionally held the bulk of the Chinese population (i.e. the ethnic Han, whom we think of as ‘the’ Chinese); Over a billion people live here, in an area half the size of the US. The heartland’s northern part is dominated by the Yellow River and speaks Mandarin, the southern part by the Yangtze River and by Cantonese.

Population pressure has always pushed China to expand into Tibet, Xinjiang, Mongolia and Manchuria. Another factor is the historical threat emanating from this non-Han ‘shell’ surrounding the Han heartland, for example from the nomad Mongol horsemen that have long threatened and occasionally dominated the sedentary, agricultural Han.

In the past, when the Chinese state was strong, it managed to conquer and rule these outlying areas, providing a defensive buffer for the heartland. When central authority was weak, these fringes broke off – leaving the heartland vulnerable to invasion. China is strong again, even up to the point where the fringes now are the target of large migrations of Han, much to the chagrin of the native peoples.

This Han-ification of the Chinese fringe does not necessarily imply that the Chinese have more contact with the countries beyond their borders. Only in three places are the Chinese borders naturally permeable: at the Vietnamese frontier, via the Silk Road, and near Russian Far East. Hilly jungles separate China from Laos and Burma, the Himalayas shield it from the Indian subcontinent, almost impassable deserts divide it from Central Asia and the forbidding expanses of Siberia have never appealed to Chinese expansionism (until now, as the Russians fear).

With the exception of the Ming dynasty’s sponsorship of admiral Zheng He’s naval expeditions (as far away as Sri Lanka, Arabia and Africa) in the early 15th century, China has never attempted to be a naval-based power – so for most of its history, China’s ports on the Pacific were hardly windows on the world either.

China’s relative isolation, combined with the size of its population (1 in every 5 humans is Chinese), means China is virtually impossible to subdue militarily (as the Japanese discovered to their disadvantage in the 1930s). It also means China can – and often has – turned its back on the world, existing in splendid isolation.

Its size and its penchand for autarkism dictate China’s three main geopolitical objectives:

maintain unity of the Han heartland;
maintain control over the non-Han buffer zone;
deflect foreign encroachment on the Chinese coast.

Clearly isolationist, these objectives also condemn China to poverty: as a densely populated country with limited arable land, China needs internatioal trade to prosper. The paradox is that prosperity will lead to instability. Prosperity will tend to be concentrated in the areas trading with the outside world (i.e. the coastal regions), creating economic tensions with the poorer interior. This might destabilise the Han heartland.

This is exactly what happened during an earlier ouverture towards the outside world, in the early 20th century. And this is why Mao’s revolution first failed in the coastal areas, and only succeeded after his Long March towards the poorer interior. Mao’s victory allowed him to reassert central control from Beijing (also over the buffer regions which had ‘drifted away’, such as Tibet). He also ‘re-isolated’ the country, in the process making everybody equally poor again.

In the late 1970s, early 1980s, Deng Xiaoping took the gamble of reopening China in order to make it prosperous again. He counted on Mao’s strong, centralised, single-party state system to keep the country together. Time will tell whether he was right, for the main threat to China’s geopolitical goals has again become the economic bifurcation of the Han heartland, with 400 million Chinese living in the relatively wealthy coastal areas, and 900 million in the often still desperately poor interior.

China is now less isolated than it once was – although its points of contact remain coastal rather than terrestrial, meaning the insularity portrayed in this map has not completely vanished. But what makes the Chinese leadership nervous is that its Deng-instigated preference for prosperity over stability is precariously linked to circumstances beyond Beijing’s total control: the health and growth of the global economy. What will happen if a global recession threatens the Chinese model? Will the fringe rebel, will the heartland fracture? Or will the center hold – if necessary by again choosing the stability of an isolationist, hardline dictatorship over openness and prosperity?

Many thanks to Eric Johnson for providing a link to this map.

* North Korea, Russia, Mongolia, Kazakhstan, Kirghizstan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar/Burma, Laos and Vietnam. China shares the world record with Russia, which also borders 14 countries: Norway, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Belarus, Ukraine, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, China, Mongolia and North Korea.
 
And so goes the passing of a man known in history as the man who held power in China between Mao and Deng Xiaoping.

However, Hua Guafeng was still very instrumental in Deng's return to power after his second purge, without whom we would not have seen the economically developed China we see today.

http://news.ph.msn.com/regional/article.aspx?cp-documentid=1634078

Mao's successor Hua Guofeng dead at 87: state media
Hua Guofeng, who succeeded Mao Zedong as chairman of China's ruling Communist Party and briefly ruled the country, died Wednesday at the age of 87, state media reported.


State television CCTV and the official Xinhua news agency said Hua -- one of the last of the revolutionary old guard -- died in Beijing from an unspecified illness.

Hua spent a brief period at the helm of the Communist Party after Mao's death in 1976, but was eased out of power a few years later by Deng Xiaoping, who introduced reforms that opened up China's economy.

An official statement quoted by Xinhua praised Hua as "an outstanding CPC (Communist Party) member, a long-tested and loyal Communist fighter and a proletarian revolutionary who once held important leading posts in the CPC and the government."

Delia Davin, professor emeritus of Chinese Studies at Leeds University, said he was someone "to whom history happened."

"He wasn't adequately strong, he should never have become Mao's successor, and then he was deposed very gently. It was rather a sad life," she said.

Born in north Shanxi province in 1921, Hua rose rapidly through the ranks under Mao's reign -- which began in 1949 -- from an obscure cadre in central Hunan province to premier in 1976 after the death of Mao's premier Zhou Enlai.

Davin, who was in Beijing at that time, said the news came as a surprise to most people as Hua was still relatively unknown at the time.

But he became party chief that same year after Mao's death, based on the Great Helmsman's simple remark, "With you in charge, I am at ease."

At one time, Hua was head of the party, the government and the armed forces, having courted the faction led by Deng in order to eject the notorious "Gang of Four" -- including Mao's widely-reviled widow Jiang Qing -- who were blamed for the excesses of the decade-long Cultural Revolution.

As such, he is credited with ending that turbulent time of power struggles and political instability in China.

But Deng then manoeuvered to oust Hua, who was determined to continue the Maoist line, and replaced him with younger men more attuned to his own ideas of economic reforms in top party and government posts.

In 1980, he was replaced as premier by Zhao Ziyang, and by Hu Yaobang as party chairman in 1981 -- two of Deng's proteges who were dedicated to economic reform.


"If you compared him with Deng Xiaoping, he didn't have the gravitas, the seniority that Deng had," Davin said.

At the 12th party congress in 1982, Hua's political fall culminated in him losing his politburo seat, but he remained as one of the members of the central committee.

He lost his seat on the central committee in 2002, but was invited to the 17th Party Congress last year as a special delegate.

But from the early 1980s, Hua stayed away from the public eye and it is not known what he thought of the changes that shook China in the decades that followed.


 
Here, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act from, respectively, the Globe and Mail and the Winnipeg Free Press, are two articles on the Olympics. The first displays some understanding of China, the second: none:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080823.wolympicssuccess23/BNStory/beijing2008/home
China's tour de force
Heavy-handed police controls, massive state resources and the muzzling of protesters helped ensure the Games were a triumph - for China and its Communist rulers

GEOFFREY YORK

Globe and Mail Update
August 23, 2008 at 8:07 AM EDT

BEIJING — When they gaze down at the 7,000 choreographed performers in the closing ceremony of the Beijing Olympics tomorrow, China's Communist rulers will allow themselves a quiet moment of satisfaction.

The bureaucratic men of the Politburo, who will oversee the dazzling martial-arts displays and opera singers from their air-conditioned seats at the Bird's Nest stadium, will know that their gamble paid off. The triumphs of the past two weeks have boosted their domestic power - and global influence - to greater heights than almost anyone had expected.

The Beijing Games were primarily designed as a spectacle for television - the smartest way to communicate the government's carefully shaped message of peace and power to a massive domestic and global audience. And it succeeded. These Olympics were the biggest broadcast event in world history, with a global television audience of at least 1.2 billion at its peak, according to the latest estimates this week.

The vast majority of the television coverage was glowingly positive. Record audiences kept sponsors happy around the world. "Can the Olympics get any better than this?" asked SportsBusiness Journal, a trade publication. "Ever again?"

This month, after the demise of a long-ruling party in Paraguay, the Chinese Communist Party became the most successful political party in the world today. It has dominated China for every moment of the past 59 years - longer than any other government in the world. (Even the totalitarian regime in North Korea was forced out of Pyongyang briefly during the Korean War.) After the overwhelming popularity of these Olympics among the 1.3 billion Chinese, there will be no loosening of the party's grip in the foreseeable future. The gold-medal bonanza and the overpowering mood of patriotism has swept everything before it.

"The Chinese leadership's popularity has certainly been enhanced," says Joseph Cheng, a political scientist at City University of Hong Kong who specializes in Chinese politics.

"The vast majority of Chinese people accepted that this was a very important chance to improve national solidarity and to show China's progress to the world. These goals have been reinforced, and the Chinese government has been quite successful at it."

President Hu Jintao and his Politburo colleagues knew that any number of potential disasters - terrorism, uncontrollable protests, suffocating smog or political boycotts - could have ruined their message. None of those fears were realized, largely due to relentless planning, heavy-handed police controls, some well-timed doses of good fortune (especially the smog-dispersing weather) and the media's predictable focus on feel-good athletic stories.

These have been the Potemkin Olympics, with China's social and political problems hidden behind a façade of spectacular architecture, cheerful volunteers and enthusiastic crowds.

In the end, the government's calculations were correct. There would be no serious repercussions for its crackdown on dissent. The world's politicians still beat a path to Beijing's door. None of the brief protests during the Games had any serious impact on the media. And thanks to massive state resources and centralized sports planning, China dominated the gold-medal table, crushing the United States and providing a daily diet of joyous news for its domestic audience.

One of the engineers of China's triumph was the filmmaker Zhang Yimou. Once the darling of the Western art-house crowd for his subtle portraits of Chinese peasants, he is now the master of the state-approved big-budget epic, often with patriotic pro-China messages. The famed filmmaker was the man chosen to orchestrate the glittering performances at the opening and closing ceremonies. He was candid in his explanation of Beijing's preference for vast spectacle - even at a human price that most other countries could not afford.

"I have conducted operas in the West, and it was so troublesome," he said in an interview with Southern Weekend, a Chinese newspaper. "They only work four-and-a-half days each week. Every day there are two coffee breaks. There cannot be any discomfort, because of human rights. ... We do not have that. We can work very hard, we can withstand lots of bitterness. We can achieve in one week what they can achieve in one month. Other than North Korea, no other country in the world can achieve this."

Mr. Zhang acknowledged that the Beijing Olympic ceremonies were inspired by North Korea's socialist tradition of mass gymnastics, where thousands of performers are synchronized in every tiny detail. "Their performances can be so uniform!" he said. "This kind of uniformity brings beauty. We Chinese can do it too."

This spirit of sacrifice and uniformity, he said, was hitched to one of China's greatest strengths: its ultramodern technology. And the rehearsals were supervised almost constantly by the Central Committee of the Communist Party. Dozens of senior party officials watched the rehearsals to approve every detail, Mr. Zhang said. "Our program had the highest level of political review since the founding of the People's Republic of China. Basically all reviews were from the Central Committee."

Political control, advanced technology, a spirit of sacrifice and solidarity, attention to the smallest detail - these were the ingredients of Beijing's Olympic triumph. They produced an astonishing 47 gold medals for China (with two days of competition still remaining), and they produced a show that captivated audiences around the world. It left little space for anyone who wanted to protest.

One of the very few Olympians who tried to protest against China's policies in Tibet was a Polish weightlifter named Szymon Kolecki. After winning a silver medal in his event, he shaved his head as a gesture of solidarity with Tibet's Buddhist monks. But because of strictly enforced rules that prohibit athletes from making political gestures, he was unable to tell anyone publicly about the reasons for his shaved head.

"I can't directly say why I did it," he told a Polish magazine. "But I will say that it's symbolic."

More than 40 Olympic athletes downloaded Songs for Tibet - an album containing songs that protested against China's handling of Tibet. But none of the Olympians could publicly disclose their names, because they could be expelled from the Olympics under the rules of the International Olympic Committee. Shortly after the downloading incident, China blocked access to Apple's iTunes website, where the album was available.

While the Olympic athletes had to stay silent on human-rights issues, a series of pro-Tibet demonstrations were held in Beijing by foreign activists who called for greater rights for Tibet. These protests, too, went largely unnoticed in China. The police swiftly broke up the protests, and the Chinese media did not report them.

With the protesters mostly silenced or censored, the enduring memory of the Beijing Olympics will be the deafening noise of China's flag-waving fans, screaming at victories and singing loudly to the national anthem. It has been an impressive display of patriotism and pride, and it helps rally the nation around the Communist Party's leadership.

One key question is how the party will choose to use this nationalism. What will it do with this massive pride in China's gold medals, this sense of victory for the party itself? Will it become a more self-confident and secure government, willing to relax and compromise and reform on some issues? Or will the Olympic victory be interpreted as proof of the correctness of the Chinese government's policies, proof that the status quo should be entrenched?

Mr. Cheng said that the Olympics is unlikely to lead to any significant reforms in China. "We don't see any sign by the Chinese leadership that it wants to establish genuine political reform. It's obvious that the party has no intention of accepting any diminution of its monopoly on power."

On the global stage, the Olympics is a huge breakthrough for China's prestige and national power. Some commentators are even calling it "the first moment of the post-American era."

But for many Chinese, the goal of the Olympics is simply to demonstrate China's rise to superpower status. For them, the gloating has already begun. "Soon the world will accept that China is a rich and strong country," said one Chinese blogger. "Foreigners will say, 'China is amazingly rich. It can afford things that even the developed countries cannot afford.' "

and


http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/subscriber/columnists/top3/story/4217175p-4809986c.html
Chinese are own worst enemies...
Giving western world all kinds of reasons to belittle their country

Randy Turner

Updated: August 23 at 08:32 AM CDT

BEIJING -- Their architecture is stunning, their organization makes a Swiss watch seem as accurate as the knockoffs they sell for peanuts in the manic city markets. Their politeness is to the point of suffocating.

Yet there's always this nagging, unnerving question that hangs like the smog that used to hang in the Beijing air before they ingenuously shut down half the city's automobiles, transport trucks and dozens of industrial factories.

And that is: What the hell are the Chinese thinking?

Seriously, for all the immaculate preparation, unimaginable dedication and commitment to these 2008 Summer Games, the Chinese -- at least, for an admittedly uneducated foreigner's point of view -- have at so many turns been their own worst enemies.

In fact, if this 29th Olympiad were a morality play on the pitfalls of obsession, it would rival anything Shakespeare could have penned.

Let's start with the dazzling Opening Ceremonies, a triumph of human vision and spectacle.

But wait. Turns out, that little pixie who supposed to have sang the opening hymn that night was, in fact, just another pretty face mouthing the words of a more plain child with the voice of an angel. That's not even OK for Ashlee Simpson on Saturday Night Live, much less the world's largest stage.

And then there was the pre-taped lighting of the footsteps leading to the stadium, a goosebump moment, which Chinese officials later admitted was pre-recorded in case the array of lights was obscured by smog.

Really? Out of a cast of 1.3 billion, they couldn't have found a cute little girl who could sing too?

And what of the heavy-handed approach to Tibetan protesters? Not only did Chinese police this week arrest a small clutch of six pro-Tibetan protesters waving flags near the National Stadium, they threw two Associated Press photographers into the paddy wagon, too. No questions asked.

Feeding frenzy

So naturally, each morning's press briefing, which includes International Olympic Committee and Beijing Organizing Committee of the Olympic Games spokespersons, has been nothing more than a feeding frenzy for Western journalists with an insatiable hunger to expose the Chinese as a totalitarian society which believes human rights are punches thrown in an Olympic boxing ring.

And they're getting all the fodder they could hope to desire.

Just this week, Chinese authorities arrested two elderly women, aged 79 and 77, for "disturbing the peace" and sentenced them both to one year of "re-education through labour." Although we're assured both women will serve their sentence without being incarcerated, the damage -- in terms of global public sentiment -- is beyond every penny of the mammoth $60 billion the Chinese have invested in these Games in order to present their best face to the world.

Why were the women arrested? Because they applied for a right to demonstrate to protest being forcibly evicted from their homes in 2001 to make way for Olympic construction.

We repeat: What the hell are they thinking?

Now there's reports surfacing again about the age of a Chinese gymnast who has long been suspected, but so far not proven, of being 14 years old. The required age for gymnasts is 16.

"Let's wait and see what kind of proof there actually is," cautioned Canadian Gymnastics President and CEO Jean Paul Caron to Canwest News Service. "If it does turn out to be true, I'd be very surprised that the Chinese would take that big a risk hosting the Games and them doing such a good job of welcoming the world. But you never know."

Still, do the Chinese, with their wealth of 86 medals, 46 of them gold, really need to be seen as bending the rules just to get one more? Again, the jury is out, but the obsessive posturing of the host nation -- whose top officials have publicly decreed that gold is the only medal worth winning -- only leads to more suspicion.

Honestly, if you'll pawn off a little girl to lip-sync because the real kid wasn't deemed attractive enough as a representation of China, then what won't you do?

Why not just let the pro-Tibetan protesters stage their demonstrations? Because it's not the protests that make the world's newsreels, it's the heavy-handed reactions from local police. That's what the world sees.

Responding to these issues on Friday, the Chinese Organizing Committee of the Olympic Games spokesman Wang Wei made a passionate speech about how many foreign journalists were ignorant of the Chinese and their ways.

"(So much) criticism in this room just reflects how biased some of the media are of China, how little they know of China," Wei said, during the daily IOC press briefing/interrogation.

Wei is correct. There is a lack of understanding of his country. Much ignorance and misinformation, frankly.

But how do you engage in changing that perception by arresting little old ladies and using a cute little girl as an aesthetic pawn?

And then fail to fess up.

Asked by an English journalist Friday if the world can trust what they see in the Closing Ceremony Sunday, a fair question given what has transpired, Wei replied: "I can assure that the Closing Ceremonies will be very nice looking, will be wonderful. I don't believe we would spend so much time and so much money of faking the ceremonies. It's not worth it."

In Beijing, truer words could never be spoken.

randy.turner@freepress.mb.ca/i]


York is broadly correct but the ruling Red Dynasty did not need the Olympics to cement its control over the people. The ‘dynasty’ – if not the Chinese Communist Party, itself – remains popular. Most Chinese people are, broadly, satisfied with their government – not pleased, not overly happy, but satisfied. There is a revolution, of sorts, underway at the local, town/district level: free (and seemingly fair) elections. The political centre in Beijing hopes, I’m guessing, that a degree of ‘freedom’ at the local level (where, as in Canada, most of the really, really critical decisions – for ordinary people – are made, and where the CCP is least popular) will stave off any concerted push for anything like the popular will at the provincial and national levels.

Turner simply fails, miserably, to understand either China or what the Chinese government’s aims were. Does he really imagine that anyone in the Central Committee of the CCP cares one wee tiny wit about what any foreigner or any Chinese thinks about “human rights” in China? If he does he is a bloody fool.

In a few hours the whole world will have forgotten, forever, about protests in Beijing, or the lack of same. The lip synching ‘incident’ is equally old, dead, news. If there is some truth in the gymnasts’ age ‘scandal’ the Chinese will sweep it under the international rug. The IOC will be, because it wants to be, quite unable to find any hard evidence of wrongdoing. “Chinese people,” the IOC will note, “often change their ages for perceived advantage. Records are often inconsistent. When dealing with 1,300,000,000 people, names are often identical – even amongst young female gymnasts. Small, young looking girls are common n China. The gold medals remain Chinese.” No one on the IOC or its staff has the courage to annoy China.

To demonstrate his near total lack of understanding of China and the Chinese, Turner asks: “Why not just let the pro-Tibetan protesters stage their demonstrations?” The answer is: “Because they (protests) are bloody rude!” The purpose of the Olympics is NOT about abusing China’s hospitality – as an overwhelming majority of Chinese people see it – by staging protests. Most Chinese people are not interested in our views on Tibet. In fact, since for most Chinese Tibet is an “internal matter,” they cannot even understand why we even have views on Tibet. The Chinese are, as York notes, proud of their multiple accomplishments in Beijing: organizational, artistic and athletic. They have invited the world to join them in celebrating their achievements. As far as most Chinese know that is what is happening. The Olympics, for most of those 1,300,000,000 Chinese and for the millions and tens of millions of overseas Chinese – including around a million in Canada, the 2008 Olympics go some way to erase the effects of a century of humiliation. They are happy; they neither know nor care about what we think beyond recognizing and admiring China’s accomplishments.

York (mostly) got it, Turner didn’t; too bad for those who read only the Turner article.
 
Are the Chinese closer to building a carrier than some have originally predicted?

Much of the attention on PRC’s aircraft carrier programme has been previously focused on the ex-Soviet Navy Admiral Kuznetsov class carrier Varyag, which was 70% competed when its construction stopped in 1992 and later bought by a Chinese company based in Macau for commercial purpose. The 67,500t vessel has been docked at the Dalian Shipyard in northern China since 2002, reportedly to be commissioned by the PLA Navy as a training carrier after its refurbishment finished. However, despite the completion of the hull restoration and removal of the scaffolding on the ship bridge in late 2006, the installation of weapons, electronics and propulsion has yet started. In fact, little activities onboard the vessel has been spotted since then, suggesting that the project may have been put on a halt.

At the same time, new details began to emerge on a possible indigenous aircraft carrier programme carried out by the CSSC Jiangnan Shipyard (Group) Corporation at its newly built Changxing Shipbuilding Base. Some sources suggested that the PRC is planning to build 1~2 medium-size (50,000~60,000t displacement) carriers at the Changxing facility, possibly based on the design of the Varyag. If this turns out to be true, the first Chinese indigenously-built aircraft carrier could be expected to join the PLA Navy service by 2015.

Changxing Shipbuilding Base

In 2003, China State Shipbuilding Corporation (CSSC) signed an agreement with the Shanghai City Council to relocate its subordinated shipyards from their current locations alongside the Huangpu River banks near city centre to Changxing, an Island off the coast of Shanghai. The purpose of the project was to provide valuable land spaces for Shanghai’s urban development, as well as to utilise the deep water coast of Changxing Island for construction of larger vessels.


Construction of the new Changxing Shipbuilding Base began in June 2005. In the first phase of the US$3.6 billion project, four large dry docks, nine outfitting piers, and two cargo piers have been built along a 3.8km coastline. The facility became the new home for the CSSC Jiangnan Shipyard (Group) Corporation, which has been relocated from city centre to make way for Shanghai Expo 2010. With the new facility in place, the Jiangnan Shipyard will expand its shipbuilding capacity from the current 800,000 deadweight tons (DWT) a year to 4.5 million by 2010. The relocation has been completed by mid-2008 and the first vessel built by the facility is expected to be delivered by 2009.

In the second phase of development, the other CSSC two subsidiaries, Hudong-Zhonghua Shipbuilding (Group) Corporation and Waigaoqiao Shipbuilding Corporation, will add more shipyards along Changxing island's 8km coastline. By 2015, CSSC is expected to have an annual capacity of 8 million DWTs, half of China's current production capacity. By then, Changxing is expected to have become the world's largest shipyard. Shanghai will also become the world's largest shipbuilding base, tripling its capacity to 12 million DWTs by 2015. PRC Government has called on China to become the largest shipbuilder in the world, and the Changxing base is the most important step forward in this plan.

The Changxing Shipbuilding Base also offers the capability to build large naval vessels including aircraft carriers. The largest dockyard in the facility is 580m in length and 120m in width, enough to build a Varyag-size carrier. In fact, a scaled mock up of the Cahngxing Shipbuilding Base displayed by CSSC has revealed an aircraft carrier in one of the facility’s dry docks.



Sino Defense
 
Building a carrier and operating one are two different matters entirely. Frankly I think its a waste of money and the resources could be applied elsewhere such as modernizing more of its armor force,buying more combat aircraft,more ships,subs, ect. Having just one carrier it would be very vulnerable.
 
China has a power shortfall.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2008/08/21/cnchina121.xml

"... The Daily Telegraph  is reporting that China's industrial heartland is facing crippling power shortages, with more than a dozen provinces already rationing electricity. The country is suffering from its biggest power crisis since 2004, when a 40-gigawatt shortfall left three quarters of China in the dark.

The proximate cause is a shortage of coal  ... More to the point, the actual cause is a highly regulated internal market which caps the prices of coal and electricity, making it difficult for companies to invest in new capacity - on top of a creaking infrastructure, leaving a shortage of rail transport to deliver coal where it is needed.

Anyhow, so serious has the situation become in China now that, in order to keep the lights burning in Peking, and the television cameras rolling, that other areas are being starved of power."
 
tomahawk6 said:
Building a carrier and operating one are two different matters entirely. Frankly I think its a waste of money and the resources could be applied elsewhere such as modernizing more of its armor force,buying more combat aircraft,more ships,subs, ect. Having just one carrier it would be very vulnerable.

I can see them catapulting one of the deck into the sea and the pilot coming onto the flightdeck saying: "Where's my plane?"  ;D
 
I’m a bit perplexed.

I’ve said, often enough to be tiresome I think, that:

• China and Russia are enemies – not just ‘not friends,’ they are real enemies and there are good and valid reasons for the enmity;

• China organized the SCO and invited Russia in partly to rub Russia’s nose in China’s assertion of its power and influence in the ‘Stans’; and

• China has consistently and rigorously defended the principle of non-interference in the internal affairs of sovereign  states.

Given all that, I still thought China would find a way to offer Russia a wee bit of support, some sort of diplomatic fig leaf. The aim, I thought, would be to keep the crisis boiling – to the long term detriment of both Russia and the West. Instead China led the other four SCO members in a condemnation of Russia.

Another thing to remember about the Chinese is that they ‘play the long game’ – they generally eschew short term gains.

For the last five years or so the Chinese have been, fairly consistently, thumbing their noses at the West and ‘playing nice’ with Russia. All of a sudden they turn their backs on Russia and give explicit support to George W Bush, John McCain and the NATO hardliners (a minority, to be sure, but an important one). I wonder: Why?

What makes it more valuable, in the long term, for China to dump Russia, suddenly, and ‘make nice’ with the West? What am I missing?
 
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