China Goes Global

For a few months we have been beaten with the predictions of China and its attempts to go global that is why we have to spend millions upon millions to make Taiwan feel safe and all of our South China Sea allies to the tune of millions upon millions.

But my question is….Is China truly trying to expand globally?

We are told by all the defense department experts that they are moving in that direction….but are they truly?

(Keep in mind this is not my opinion but that of someone who disagrees with the hype)

New York Times published a guest essay by Craig Singleton, a fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, entitled “China’s Military is Going Global.” Singleton argues that Beijing is well on its way to building a globe-spanning network of “strategic strong points along China’s major trade, energy, and resource routes” that pose a dire military threat to the United States.

Allegedly using the structure of the Chinese Belt and Road Initiative of commercial infrastructure projects, Beijing’s supposedly new “under the radar” strategy is seen as directly challenging Washington’s ability to carry out critical overseas military missions, including the defense of Taiwan.

In response to this expanding threat, Singleton calls for Washington to devise a strategy designed to “pre-emptively” neutralize China’s moves, including “incentives or punishments” directed at host governments.

It is surprising that the New York Times saw fit to publish such an essay, since it is replete with distortions, exaggerations, and speculations. There is no question that China’s overseas military-related activities merits close examination, especially when they take place in sensitive areas. But such an examination requires a careful parsing of actual facts, with clear distinctions made between proposed plans, actual undertakings, commercial versus military (and non-military security) purposes, and the likely military benefits for China that might ensue from a particular location or operation.

Instead of observing such requirements, Singleton plays fast and loose with the evidence, subtly caveating his statements with weasel words like “might,” “may,“ “could,” “suggests,” “suspected,” etc. Nonetheless, almost every conceivable possible, current, or emerging overseas Chinese commercial, scientific, or security “presence” is labeled as part of a deliberate, coordinated, military-centered strategy to “reshape the global military landscape” in Beijing’s favor and hence to threaten the U.S.

In reality, China has thus far established only one actual, operating overseas military base, on the horn of Africa, in Djibouti, and is probably establishing a naval facility in Cambodia. But there are real limits to how far China can go in duplicating such places. As Isaac Kardon of the Carnegie Endowment has pointed out, China has no formal military alliances (beyond the dubious case of North Korea) and is unlikely to acquire any in the foreseeable future, a fact that imposes major constraints on its ability to establish serious military bases. Few if any countries wish to commit to housing full-fledged, sizeable military facilities that could project Chinese military power across their region and, in the process, invite an American response.

https://responsiblestatecraft.org/china-military/

I believe they are posturing and I think Taiwan is an excuse to waste more money that is needed here in our home.

If they attack Taiwan then maybe I will see things differently but right now I think we have enough involvement in world situations.

I Read, I Write, You Know

“lego ergo scribo”

7 thoughts on “China Goes Global

  1. No matter what they do there is nothing that we or anybody else can do about it… so let us get our noses out of it– but let us not be courting another Pearl Harbor scenario either.

  2. It seems inevitable to me that China might try to take back Taiwan, but I doubt it has any ideas of physical ‘world conquest’ beyond trying to get their hands on some valuable minerals on the African continent and to sell cheap stuff to all potential foreign markets.
    Best wishes, Pete.

  3. Yes, China is absolutely “going global”. They’re shrewd, I’ll give them that. And they play the long game. Our media doesn’t even mention this, but one only has to look at the Asian and African countries that are essentially economically owned by China. In a way that our ‘imperialism’ could have never dreamed of. Some TV shows, like Firefly……that depict a future where a diluted form of Chinese is the lingua franca. Prescient.

    1. I think that the article was more about throwing troops in every country….Japan was a dominating economic force in the 70s were they going global? Few want to remember the strangle hold Japan had on the world decades ago. chuq

  4. It isn’t so much the military expansion, although that’s becoming concerning, as it is commercial expansion, especially in less than wealthy countries. They’ve been building massive highway and shipping facilities all over the place, with third world countries running up massive amounts of debt owed to China for the work that they can’t afford to pay off without bankrupting themselves. Many of these areas have scarce resources like cobalt, lithium reserves, rare earths, etc. So the thinking goes that since these countries owe China so much money they can’t ever pay off, China is going to get exclusive rights to those resources, or at least sweetheart deals that will cut out other competitors.

    1. Sounds like a sound plan rather direct invasion….you know the US should try it instead of giving bombs and stuff we might be better off. chuq

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