Konflikti Kiinan merellä

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The Philippine Navy frigates BRP ‘Gregorio del PIlar,’ left, and ‘Ramon Alcaraz’ sail with the U.S. Navy destroyer USS ‘John S. McCain.’ U.S. Navy photo

The Philippine Navy is too small for its country. The archipelago nation sits between two major strategic chokepoints in the Western Pacific, and China is muscling ever more into the South China Sea and into Manila’s exclusive economic zone.

But the Philippines can do little, as it has one of the weakest, rustiest navies in the region.

That is slowly changing — very slowly. The Philippines is not capable of building a navy to stand up to China in a war. But it is forming a naval force which can fight, and that might be enough to deter Chinese intrusions to a limited extent.
https://warisboring.com/manila-is-u...-ships-to-fight-china-61578bed5ff6#.75minyicl

The Philippines’ defense budget is small, and the United States handed the cutters down through the Excess Defense Articles program, making them practically free. (It would cost the U.S. Coast Guard more to scrap the ships than give them away.) The Philippines only pays for the upgrades.

Another reason — when Manila first bought the frigates, they immediately became the biggest, toughest ships in the Philippine Navy. This makes them a relative improvement. Furthermore, Manila needs every vessel it can get, and Chinese adventurism in the South China Sea doesn’t always come armed with long-range, ship-killing missiles.

Certainly, China sends warships into the region. But Beijing also relies on a growing, unofficial “maritime militia” of fishing vessels to block Philippine ships from approaching the constellation of Chinese-controlled rocks and reefs inside Manila’s economic zone.

A third ex-American rust bucket is a significant boost — and intimidating enough when heading on an intercept course toward a creaky, fishing boat that is covertly acting in the service of China’s territorial ambitions.

The frigates are worth it. Just don’t expect them to survive in a war.
 
Viimeksi muokattu:
China has completed production of the world's largest amphibious aircraft, state media has said, the latest effort in the country's program to wean itself off dependence on foreign aviation firms.

The state-owned Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC) unveiled the first of the new planes, dubbed the AG600, Saturday in the southern port city of Zhuhai, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

The aircraft, which has a maximum range of 4,500 km (2,800 miles), is intended for fighting forest fires and performing marine rescues, it said.

At around the size of a Boeing 737, it is far larger than any other plane built for marine take off and landing, Xinhua quoted AVIC's deputy general manager Geng Ruguang as saying.

However, its wingspan is considerably smaller than that of the H-4 Hercules, known as the Spruce Goose, which was designed in the 1940s to carry Allied troops into battle. It is regarded as by far the largest seaplane ever built although it only ever made one flight, in 1947.

The Chinese plane, which is targeted at the domestic market, will be "very useful in developing and exploiting marine resources," the article said, adding that it could be used for "environmental monitoring, resource detection and transportation".

Beijing is currently locked in disputes with several of its neighbours, including Japan, Vietnam and the Philippines, over the rights to develop economic resources in waters off its shores.

The AG600 could potentially extend the Asian giant's ability to conduct a variety of operations in the South China Sea, where it has built a series of artificial islands featuring air strips, among other infrastructure with the potential for either civilian or military use.

Xinhua said AVIC has received 17 orders for the plane so far.

China is seeking to develop its own aviation sector to reduce dependence on and even challenge foreign giants, such as European consortium Airbus and Boeing of the United States, though analysts say it could take years.

Despite a history of delays and problems, China's aviation industry has made rapid progress in the last year.

In June, the Chinese-made ARJ21 -- which stands for Advanced Regional Jet for the 21st century -- made its first commercial flight, when Chengdu Airlines flew one from its home base to Shanghai, and the country's military began using its homegrown Y-20 heavy transport plane earlier this month.

It rolled out the C919, China's first domestically developed narrow-body passenger plane, in November last year.
http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/China_builds_massive_seaplane_state_media_999.html

The US will continue naval patrols in the disputed South China Sea, Washington's National Security Adviser Susan Rice told Chinese representatives during a series of meetings in Beijing, a senior American official said Tuesday.

Rice is among the highest-level US officials to visit China since an international tribunal this month rejected its vast territorial claims in the strategically vital region -- infuriating Beijing and fuelling tensions with Washington.

Her trip was intended to prepare for a visit by President Barack Obama to a G20 summit in Hangzhou in September.

But the question of how to deal with the festering issue, in which Washington has played a prominent role, cast a long shadow over the talks, which included a meeting with President Xi Jinping.

In recent months Washington has sent naval vessels close to reefs and outcrops claimed by Beijing to assert the principle of freedom of navigation, sparking anger in China which has built a series of artificial islands in the area capable of supporting military operations.

In her meetings with top diplomatic and military officials, Rice told her counterparts that "those operations are lawful. They will continue", according to a senior US official, who asked for anonymity to discuss the sensitive subject.

The issue was not directly raised with Xi, he said, describing the conversation as "incredibly positive", although "there was a very clear recognition that we face a number of challenges".

In general terms, he said, "both sides were very clear with one another".

"There's no room for ambiguity," he added. "That kind of clarity... promotes stability and reduces the risk of miscalculation."

- 'Risk of miscalculation' -

A tribunal at the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague on July 12 denied the legal basis for Beijing's claim to nearly all of the sea, parts of which are also claimed by neighbouring nations.

Beijing rejected the ruling as "waste paper" and asserted its right to declare an Air Defence Identification Zone controlling flights over the area.

Rice "stressed the importance of all parties taking steps to reduce tensions. To avoid taking actions that... could raise the risk of miscalculation", the official said.

Instead, Rice called on Beijing to use the ruling as an opportunity to "reinvigorate diplomacy" in the region, he added.

In remarks before the meetings Monday, Fan Changlong, vice chairman of China's Central Military Commission warned that ties between the two powers could easily fray.

"We should be honest with ourselves that deep down in this relationship we're still faced with obstacles and challenges," he said, adding that military ties had been "impacted by some complicated and some sensitive factors".

"If we do not properly handle these factors it will very likely disturb and undermine this steady momentum of our military-to-military relationship," he warned.

Beijing objects to an agreement by Washington and Seoul to deploy a US missile defence system to South Korea.

Rice told Fan the move was "purely a defensive measure" and "not aimed at any other party other than North Korea and the threat it poses," the official said.
http://www.spacewar.com/reports/US_tells_Beijing_sea_patrols_will_continue_official_999.html
 
Less than three weeks on since the International Court of Arbitration in the Hague dealt a devastating blow to the legal basis of China's expansive claims in the contested South China Sea, Beijing appears to be claiming victory.

And with it, an increasingly aggressive posture towards Australia for calling on China to respect international law.

Over the weekend, China's state media took delight in quoting American news reports that the US strategy in response to the arbitration ruling was "failing".

This belief, seemingly recognised in both Beijing and Washington, stems from a recent high level summit in which China managed to manipulate the outcome in its favour.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-08-01/china-turns-defeat-into-victory-in-south-china-sea/7676260

Over the weekend, in an extraordinarily bitter attack, the Communist Party's unofficial jingoistic tabloid Global Times penned a lead editorial denouncing Australia as a "paper cat" with an "inglorious history" that is often mocked by others.

Beijing says a joint statement issued by Australia, the US and Japan last week calling for China to abide by the Arbitration ruling was a failure because few other nations publicly backed that stance.

The strongly worded editorial follows a specific denouncement of Foreign Minister Julie Bishop two weeks ago by the Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang.

Comments she had made were singled out in a Dorothy Dixer question from a Chinese journalist, giving the Foreign Ministry spokesman an opportunity to warn Australia must "carefully talk and cautiously behave".




Another sign of Chinese pressure since the court decision was seen through a small but well-organised protest in Melbourne from some members of the Chinese community, calling on Australia to back China's rejection of the ruling.

"I think the editorials of Global Times are not exactly the Chinese Government's position, but in a way it does reflect the displeasure of the Chinese Government", said Shi Yinhong, an international relations professor at Renmin University.

"Australia's stance on the arbitration along with Australia's general attitude towards the United States and freedom of navigation exercises is [prompting] the Chinese Government and public opinion to look at whether Australia is really an ally of the United States in the South China Sea dispute," he said.

Some online comments have even called for a Chinese tourism boycott of Australia.
 
Laitan nyt tännekin.

Flight information screens at Vietnam's two main airports were hacked over the weekend to spout pro-Chinese propaganda.

AP reported that the public address system of Hanoi's Noi Bai airport and the Tan Son Nhat airport, which serves Ho Chi Minh City, were also hacked on Friday evening.

The hackers used the systems to make digs against Vietnam and the Philippines over a long-running territorial dispute against China involving disputed regions of the South China Sea. Authorities took the hacked systems offline.

Vietnam Airlines was also hacked (most likely defaced) around the same time, according to local reports.

Vietnamese transport minister Nguyen Nhat played down the significance of the attacks by saying neither the security of the airport nor its air traffic control systems was affected, according to local news outlet VnExpress.

From a technical perspective what happened in Vietnam is not that different to incidents where US traffic signs have been defaced by prankster hackers to warn of a looming zombie apocalypse. Weak passwords, insufficient or no encryption and a lack of network segmentation are probably behind the Vietnamese pwnage, El Reg's security desk would venture to suggest. Audio announcement systems can also be vulnerable.

For example, three years ago pranksters managed to hack a TV emergency alert system in Montana to broadcast an on-air audio warning about the supposed start of a zombie apocalypse.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/08/01/vietnam_flight_info_hack/
 
The Global Times said Australia was "an ideal target for China to warn and strike" if it ventured into the contested waters.

The hardline nationalist newspaper warned "Australia Will Learn its Lesson" for supporting a ruling by the international arbitration tribunal at The Hague opposing Beijing’s historical claims to the South China Sea.

Beijing denounced the decision and has refused to abide by the tribunal’s findings arguing that the court lacked requisite jurisdiction because China never submitted to such arbitration
http://www.express.co.uk/news/world/695967/South-China-Sea-dispute-Australia

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Perhaps the most significant portion of the Permanent Court of Arbitration's July 12 500-page unanimous ruling on the South China Sea is the decision on Mischief Reef.

According to the ruling, the reef and everything on it legally belongs to the Philippines. This is in spite of China's reclamation of approximately 5,580,000 square meters of land, and the construction of a 9,800-foot runway, radar nests, and what some experts have speculated is a soon-to-be naval base.

According to the ruling, Mischief Reef falls within the exclusive economic zone of the Philippines and lies approximately 129 nautical miles from Palawan and 51 nautical miles from Nanshan Island, which is occupied by the Philippines.

However, within a day of the PCA's decision, China landed a civilian aircraft on the disputed reef for the first time.
http://uk.businessinsider.com/mischief-reef-flashpoint-south-china-sea-2016-8?r=US&IR=T
 
F-Secure on paljastanut edistyneen verkkohyökkäyksen, jonka tavoitteena vaikuttaisi olleen Etelä-Kiinan meren hallintaa koskevan kiistan osapuolien vakoilu.

F-Securen mukaan NanHaiShuksi nimetty haittaohjelma oli kohdistettu sekä valtiollisiin että yksityisen sektorin toimijoihin. Merkittävimpiä kohteita ovat olleet Filippiinien oikeusministeriö, marraskuussa 2015 pidetyn APEC-kokouksen eli Aasian-Tyynenmeren yhteistyöfoorumin järjestävät tahot ja iso kansainvälinen lakifirma.

F-Securen selvityksen perusteella etäyhteydellä toimivan haittaohjelman käyttö on osunut ajallisesti yksiin Kiinan ja Filippiinien välisen kiistan ja siihen liittyvän oikeudenkäynnin vaiheiden kanssa. Hyökkääjien pyrkimyksenä oli saada haltuunsa tietoja haittaohjelman saastuttamilta koneilta.

Kohdennettu verkkohyökkäys
Haittaohjelmaa levitettiin huolellisesti muotoiltujen sähköpostien avulla. Yhtiön mukaan vaikuttaisikin siltä, että kohteet oli tarkasti valittu, sillä viestit muun muassa sisälsivät kohdeorganisaatioille ominaisia termejä. Varsinainen haittaohjelma oli piilotettu sähköpostin liitetiedostoon.

F-Securen tutkijat epäilevät haittaohjelman olevan kiinalaista alkuperää kahdesta syystä: Ensinnäkin haittaohjelman koodi ja rakenne viittaavat tutkijoiden mukaan siihen, että haittaohjelman kehittäjät toimivat Kiinassa. Toisekseen kohteena olevat organisaatiot liittyvät Kiinan hallitukselle tärkeisiin aiheisiin.

– Sen lisäksi, että kaikki haittaohjelmien kohteena olevat organisaatiot liittyvät [Etelä-Kiinan meren kiistaan ja Kiinan ja Filippiinien välisiin oikeustoimiin] jollakin tavalla, myös haittaohjelman ilmaantuminen on tapahtunut kronologisessa järjestyksessä välimiesmenettelyn uutisten tai tapahtumien kanssa, toteaa kyberturvallisuuden asiantuntija Erka Koivunen F-Securelta.
http://yle.fi/uutiset/suomalaisyhti...n_haittaohjelman__alkuperamaana_kiina/9073638
 
With the televised demonstration of China's latest system of intercepting incoming ballistic missiles during the intermediate stage of their flight, it looks like the People's Republic is poised to become the second country after the US to deploy a missile shield.

In an interview with Sputnik, Vasily Kashin, a Moscow-based military expert, said that in their effort to develop what may be dubbed HQ-19, the Chinese may possibly be working closely with Russia, whose S-500 Prometey missile defense system, now under development, and the strategic missile system A-235 Nudol, which is currently undergoing trials, will be able to shoot down incoming warheads even before they enter the atmosphere.

The long-range A-235 missile will have a range of up to 1,500 km and will be able to carry a nuclear warhead which will dramatically improve its ability to shoot down enemy warheads.

"What really matters here is just how many such missile defense systems China will be able to deploy and who they are going to be used against. The modern US ballistic missiles are either land or sea-based intercontinental ones the ATACMS short-range Chinese missiles will hardly be able to deal with," Kashin said.

As for Japan, Kashin said that even though it has no ballistic missiles of its own, Tokyo, with its advanced space program, could have no problem developing such missiles.

Taiwan shuttered its ballistic missile programs back in the 1990s, relying instead on cruise missiles.

South Korea's Hyunmoo ballistic missiles have limited range and pose no real threat to China.

"The deployment of a limited missile defense system will give the Chinese an edge over regional powers, like Iran, Pakistan, India and North Korea, capable of building medium-range missiles and eventually relatively primitive types of ICBMs. And it will also come as a potent means of containing the imaginary missile threat by India," Kashin added.

With the new system in place, China will also be able to shoot down US spy satellites.

Vasily Kashin said that even though the publicized tests of China's new missiles defense system were apparently meant as Beijing's answer to the deployment of US THAAD missiles in South Korea, it would hardly be able to effectively counteract the American missile shield, primarily due to the obvious US edge in the number of nuclear warheads.

"China's most probable answer to the emergence of THAAD in South Korea could be the deployment of its newly developed cruise missiles to destroy the Americans' THAAD system during the initial stage of an armed conflict," Vasily Kashin said in conclusion.

The United States and South Korea announced plans in July to deploy a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) anti-missile system, ostensibly to counter threats from North Korea, but the move received immediate condemnation from Russia and China, who view the installation as a veiled attempt by Washington to undermine Beijing and Moscow's mutual nuclear deterrent.

Moscow immediately joined Beijing in warning the United States that the deployment would have "irreparable consequences."
http://www.spacewar.com/reports/China_Mulls_Ramping_Up_Its_Missile_Defense_With_Russia_999.html
 
When he is not on his farm in the high country of south-east New South Wales, Hans Berekoven is an amateur marine archaeologist recovering artefacts from a shipwreck for a Malaysian museum.

He said during one trip, he had been harassed by a Chinese Coast Guard vessel that had been stationed off Luconia Shoals for the past few years

The shoals are a cluster of reefs and a tiny island called the Luconia Breakers, 84 nautical miles off Malaysia's Borneo coast.

"They were trying to push us out. When we arrived there and started diving, they would up-anchor and sort of circle around us, sometimes really close. It was a sort of gentle intimidation," Mr Berekoven said.

China, Taiwan, the Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei all have competing claims over the South China Sea.

The dispute has been a major flashpoint in the region, with accusations of China building artificial islands and damaging reef systems.

An international tribunal recently ruled China had violated the Philippines' economic and sovereign rights as defined by the United Nations Law of the Sea Convention.

Since 1947, China has claimed a vast area of islands in the South China Sea, including the Luconia Shoals.

Professor Clive Schofield, an authority on marine jurisdictional issues, said that at 84 nautical miles from the Borneo coast, the Luconia Shoals were clearly on Malaysia's continental shelf, and well within Malaysia's 200 nautical mile exclusive economic zone (EEZ), as defined by the Law of the Sea Convention.

"So if there's any jurisdiction and rights over the feature [the Luconia Shoals], then they are Malaysian and not Chinese," Professor Schofield said.

Mr Berekoven said he was angered by damage he alleged was being caused by the China Coast Guard vessel anchoring on the reef.

"She's got a massive anchor chain. Every time the wind changes or the current changes that big anchor chain is just making a hell of a mess of that reef," he said.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-08-08/malaysian-flag-rasing-causes-south-china-sea-incident/7679024

Beijing said over the weekend that it flew bombers, fighter jets and other military aircraft over contested areas of the South China Sea recently, an announcement that came as former Philippine President Fidel Ramos prepared to head to China for preliminary talks aimed at settling the territorial dispute.

The office of Mr. Ramos, who was appointed last month by President Rodrigo Duterte as special envoy to resolve the dispute following an international tribunal’s ruling against China’s claims, confirmed that he would travel to Beijing on Monday.

China’s air force said on Saturday that several of its aircraft, including H-6K bombers and Su-30 fighter jets, had completed a patrol of airspace above two land formations in the South China Sea—the Spratly Islands and the Scarborough Shoal—where Beijing’s claims overlap with Manila’s.

It was the second time China had announced an air patrol in the area since July 12, when an international tribunal in The Hague ruled against China in a case brought by the Philippines.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/philipp...a-monday-for-south-china-sea-talks-1470565429
 
Australia's government has preliminarily blocked Chinese and Hong Kong bidders from taking a controlling stake in the country's largest electricity network, citing worries over national security.

In a statement to the media, the Australian Treasurer Scott Morrison has said the foreign investment proposals from Chinese and Hong Kong bidders "were contrary to the national interest."

China's State Grid Corp and Hong Kong's Cheung Kong Infrastructure Holdings were attempting to buy a 50.4% controlling stake in Ausgrid, which is New South Wales's electricity distribution network - the largest in the country.

Neither has commented so far on the blocking of this sale, but undoubtedly the reaction in Chinese media will be one of outrage.

Australia's move comes as the UK has postponed approval for the Hinkley Point nuclear power project, in which China's General Nuclear Power Corporation will have a minority stake, on similar concerns.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-37043119
 
Pitkä kattava analyysi Kiinan meristrategiasta Etelä-Kiinan merellä. Kannattaa lukea.

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The Chinese guided-missile destroyer ‘Xian’ during the Rim of the Pacific 2016 exercise. U.S. Navy photo

Is Beijing Preparing to Wage a ‘People’s War’ in the South China Sea?
China’s leaders might have to — or risk a backlash at home
by JAMES HOLMES

Last week China’s defense minister, Gen. Chang Wanquan, implored the nation to ready itself for a “people’s war at sea.” The purpose of such a campaign? To “safeguard sovereignty” after an adverse ruling from the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea.

The tribunal upheld the plain meaning of the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea, ruling that Beijing’s claims to “indisputable sovereignty” spanning some 80–90 percent of the South China Sea are bunk.

A strong coastal state, in other words, cannot simply wrest away the high seas or waters allocated to weaker neighbors and make them its own. Or, at any rate, it can’t do so lawfully. It could conceivably do so through conquest, enforced afterward by a constant military presence.

Defenders of freedom of the sea, consequently, must heed Chang’s entreaty. Southeast Asians and their external allies must take such statements seriously — devoting ample forethought to the prospect of maritime combat in the South China Sea.

That’s the first point about a people’s war at sea. A clash of arms is possible. Statesmen and commanders in places like Manila, Hanoi and Washington must not discount Chang’s words as mere bluster.

Indeed, it’s doubtful China could comply with the UNCLOS tribunal’s ruling at this stage, even if the Chinese Communist Party leadership wished to. Think about the image compliance would project at home.

For two decades now, Beijing has invested lavishly in a great navy, and backed that navy up with shore-based firepower in the form of combat aircraft, anti-ship missile batteries, and short-range warships such as fast patrol craft and diesel submarines.

Party leaders have regaled the populace with how they will use seagoing forces to right historical wrongs and win the nation nautical renown. They must now follow through.

It was foolish to tie China’s national dignity and sovereignty to patently absurd claims to islands and seas. But party leaders did so. And they did so repeatedly, publicly and in the most unyielding terms imaginable. By their words they stoked nationalist sentiment while making themselves accountable to it.

They set in motion a toxic cycle of rising popular expectations. Breaking that cycle could verge on impossible.

If Beijing relented from its maritime claims now, ordinary Chinese would — rightly — judge the leadership by the standard it set. Party leaders would stand condemned as weaklings who surrendered sacred territory, failed to avenge China’s century of humiliation despite China’s rise to great power, and let jurists and lesser neighbors backed by a certain superpower flout big, bad China’s will.

Aircraft Carriers Could Be Obsolete in the 2030s Even With F-35s
That is, if flattops continue to lack long-range strike capabilitieswarisboring.com

No leader relishes being seen as a weakling. It’s positively dangerous in China. As the greats of diplomacy teach, it’s tough for negotiators or political leaders to climb down from public commitments. Make a promise and you bind yourself to keep it. Fail to keep it and you discredit yourself — and court disaster in the bargain.

Like any sane leadership, Beijing prefers to get its way without fighting. Fighting, though, could be the least bad of the options party leaders have left themselves. Quite the predicament they’ve made for themselves.

Which leads to the second point. Judging from Chang’s words, small-stick diplomacy has run its course. Small-stick diplomacy was about deploying the China Coast Guard and fellow nonmilitary sea services to police waters Beijing claimed. It depicted China’s sovereignty in the South China Sea as a fact, and dared woefully outmatched rivals to reverse that fact.


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The Chinese destroyer ‘Haikou’ during the Rim of the Pacific 2014 exercise. U.S. Coast Guard photo
Left unopposed, de facto Chinese sovereignty — a near-monopoly on the use of force within borders sketched on the map — would have become entrenched over time. Once it became the new normal, it might even have taken on an aura of legitimacy among seafaring states.

The UNCLOS tribunal struck China’s approach a grievous blow, collapsing the quasi-legal arguments underlying small-stick diplomacy. The tribunal’s decision makes it clear that Chinese maritime forces operating in, say, the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone are invaders or occupiers — not constables.

If Beijing can’t get its way through white-hulled coast-guard vessels, that leaves military force. Sovereign states deploy law-enforcement assets to police what is rightfully theirs. They deploy military forces to fight for things that are in dispute. Chang’s warlike talk implies that Beijing has abandoned the softly, softly approach and has tacitly admitted Southeast Asia constitutes a contested zone.

And the lingo he employs matters. “People’s war” is a Maoist phrase used to convey certain martial ideas. Mao Zedong’s Red Army waged people’s war to seize contested ground from Japanese invaders and Chinese Nationalists. It appears China now sees the South China Sea in similar terms — as an offshore battleground where rivals must be overcome by force.

But not by military force alone.

Buy ‘Red Star over the Pacific: China's Rise and the Challenge to U.S. Maritime Strategy’
Beijing won’t withdraw the coast guard, maritime enforcement services, or the fishing fleet — an unofficial militia — from embattled waters. They will stay on as part of a composite whole-of-government armada. But the People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) and Air Force will figure more prominently in the force mix.

In the days of small-stick diplomacy, the naval big stick posed an implicit threat from over the horizon. Philippine or Vietnamese mariners knew the China Coast Guard had backup if they defied it. In all likelihood, Chinese commanders will flourish the big stick more promiscuously in the future — rendering the threat overt and visible rather than latent and unobtrusive.

Here’s the third point. A people’s-war-at-sea strategy will confront a motley coalition in which outsiders — America, maybe joined by Japan or Australia — supply the bulk of the heavy-hitting combat power. The Philippines is lopsidedly outgunned. Vietnam has pluck and a formidable military, but it can hardly stand up to the northern colossus without help.

The coalition’s curious makeup would furnish Beijing opportunities for a coalition-breaking strategy.

China might reckon that any conflict in the South China Sea would be a “war by contingent” for the United States, a war in which Washington fixes the size of a force dispatched to support regional allies and instructs the commanders of that force to do the best they can with the resources they have.


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The littoral combat ship USS ‘Coronado’ transits in formation with the Chinese destroyer ‘Xian’ in July 2016. U.S. Navy photo
Such strategies are excellent for troublemaking but seldom decisive in themselves. Lord Wellington, for instance, led a contingent ashore in Iberia in 1807. The expedition gave Napoleon a “Spanish ulcer,” a nagging commitment on a new front. Yet Wellington never kidded himself that he would win a continent-spanning war with a modest expeditionary force augmented by partisans and the Royal Navy.

Such an approach, in other words, would betray half heartedness on Washington’s part. After all, America would have embarked on an open-ended enterprise in a distant theater off the opponent’s shores without any real thought of victory. Half heartedness kills in such ventures.

People’s war is about outlasting stronger foes under circumstances like these. If the weaker contender is a China, endowed with sizable reserves of hard power to tap, then that contender needs time. Its armed forces protract the campaign, both to gain time to muster more strength and to wear away at enemy combat strength.

In short, China could win even if it remains weaker than America in the aggregate. The PLA could narrow or reverse the balance of forces in the theater — overpowering the U.S. contingent at the place and time that truly matter.

China’s Fishing Militia Is a Military Force in All But Name
It’s time to unmask Beijing’s third navywarisboring.com

It could dishearten Washington. U.S. leaders might despair of sustaining the undertaking indefinitely. Or, China could outlast America — inflicting numerous tactical losses over a long time, and thus driving the price tag of preserving freedom of the seas higher than U.S. leaders are willing to pay. If America goes home, the venture collapses.

How, in operational and tactical terms, can PLA commanders bring this about? By hewing to their own warmaking traditions.

China is politically and strategically predictable in the South China Sea yet operationally and tactically unpredictable. Politically and strategically predictable because party leaders painted themselves into a corner with domestic constituencies. Tactically unpredictable because that’s how Chinese forces have fought since the age of Mao.

Indeed, “active defense,” the concept whereby Mao codified his ideas about people’s war, remains the heart of Chinese military strategy.

Just ask Beijing. To oversimplify, the conceit behind active defense is that a weaker China can lure a stronger pugilist into overextending and tiring himself before delivering a punishing counterpunch. Conjure up the great Muhammad Ali’s Rumble in the Jungle in your mind and you get the idea.


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A Chinese marine fires his QBZ-95 rifle during an exercise on the destroyer ‘Xi’an’ in July 2016. U.S. Navy photo
If the rope-a-dope approach works on a grand scale, Chinese forces can inflict tactical defeats that enfeeble the foe over time. Active defense, then, is all about harnessing tactical offense for strategically defensive campaigns.

To prosecute it, Chinese commanders seek out isolated enemy detachments they can assault on “exterior lines,” encircling and crushing them. The cumulative effect of repeated tactical setbacks wears down the strong — and could prompt their leadership to question whether the endeavor is still worth its hardships, perils, and costs.

If not, cost/benefit logic will prod U.S. leaders toward the exit — and China will prevail even without an outright victory over allied forces.

U.S. and allied mariners and airmen, accordingly, must study China’s martial traditions, gleaning insight into how offshore active defense might unfold in the South China Sea.

If you’re Beijing and have built up a seagoing militia, an impressive coast guard, Asia’s biggest indigenous navy, and a sizable arsenal of land-based weaponry to influence events at sea, how do you alloy those components into a sharp combat implement — and consolidate control over a semi-enclosed sea?

Essaying some foresight into these matters now could pay off handsomely if China tries to put Chang’s — and Mao’s — strategic concept into practice.

Speaking of whom, a final bit of advice from Mao Zedong. Chang deployed China’s traditional lexicon, centered on people’s war, to describe how Beijing may transact business in Southeast Asia. But bear in mind that a strategy of the weak was expedient for Mao, not his strategic preference. He was writing for a China that was flat on its back, wracked by civil war and foreign invasion.

It could do little else. But the goal of active defense — of people’s war — was to make the Red Army the stronger antagonist. Once Maoist forces reversed the force imbalance, they meant to unleash a counteroffensive and win on the conventional battleground.

This is not Mao’s China. It’s already a brawny economic and military power, and would be fighting on its own ground. Today’s PLA enjoys far more offensive options than did Mao’s Red Army. Rather than revert to pure people’s war on the Maoist pattern, PLA commanders could pursue a mix of small- and big-unit engagements against the U.S.-led coalition.

People’s war, then, could start to look awfully like conventional marine combat if Beijing believes the military balance and the trendlines favor China.

By all means, let’s review China’s way of war, discerning what we can about Chinese warmaking habits and reflexes. But these are not automatons replaying the Maoist script from the 1930s and 1940s.

How they might transpose Maoist doctrine to the offshore arena — and how an unruly coalition can surmount such a challenge — is the question before friends of maritime freedom.

James Holmes is Professor of Strategy at the U.S. Naval War College and co-author of Red Star Over the Pacific. The views voiced here are his alone.

https://warisboring.com/is-china-pr...n-the-south-china-sea-7d7445b9a7f3#.iwfzqg8kt
 
Japan will develop a new land-to-sea missile as part of plans to beef up its defence of remote southern islands, as tensions with China increase over the disputed territory, a report said Sunday.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...-missile-as-tensions-with-china-mount-reports

Tokyo plans to deploy the weapon, which reportedly will have a range of 300km (190 miles) on islands such as Miyako in Okinawa prefecture, the top-selling Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper said, without citing sources.

The range will cover the disputed island chain, the Yomiuri said, adding that the deployment is expected by 2023.

Officials at the Defence Ministry could not be reached for comment.

“In light of China’s repeated acts of provocation around the Senkaku islands, Japan aims to increase deterrence with improved long-range strike capability,” the newspaper stated.

The missile will be developed by Japan and will use solid fuel, the Yomiuri said, referring to the technology that allows for weapon’s long-term storage and capacity to be launched at short notice.

Japan also protested in June after it said a Chinese navy frigate sailed close to territorial waters near the islands for the first time.

Tensions over the islands have been a frequent irritant and strained bilateral relations, though tensions had markedly relaxed over the past two years as the countries held talks.
 
The upgraded combat features on board the flagship of the South China Sea fleet impress Western defense analysts, as Beijing threatens to aggressively defend the disputed territories.

China has completed a major weapons upgrade for their Shenzen destroyer, which will return to operations with the People's Liberation Army Navy's (PLAN) fleet in the South China Sea amid brewing tensions over the disputed territory, IHS Jane's Defence Weekly reported.

The missile system of the Shenzen, Beijing's only Luhai-class destroyer, was upgraded to a 32-cell vertical launch platform capable of firing medium-range HHQ-16 surface-to-air (SAM) missiles with a range of 19 nautical miles and a maximum speed of 2,148 mph (3457 kph). Defense analysts say the system is comparable to the powerful Russian Gollum/Shtil-2 missile system.

Other combat characteristics added to the ship include four 37 mm twin anti-aircraft guns with two Type 1130 close-in weapon systems, along with upgraded surface and air search radars. The ship's radar system has also been augmented to remove a blind spot in the previous system's visible range.

The 6,000-ton destroyer, commissioned in 1999, is unique among modern destroyer classes, as it uses a steam propulsion system and doubles as a helicopter hangar, with space allowing for the landing and takeoff of up to two helicopters.

Prior to the upgrades, the Shenzen served as Beijing's flagship in the South China Sea, but it remains uncertain whether it will currently remain in the position of the People's Liberation Army Navy's command ship.

Significant upgrades to what was already China's most lethal destroyer come as Beijing faces increasing pressure to relax its claims over oil rich South China Sea territories, through which some 40% of the world's shipborne commerce travels each day.

The recent ruling by the Hague-based Permanent Court of Arbitration is challenged by China, saying that the Hague does not have the jurisdiction to decide upon the case. According to Beijing's interpretation, China would have had to jointly submit to the dispute for the court's decision to be enforceable.

Despite China's explanation, Beijing faces growing pressure from the West, as well as from regional rivals Japan and Australia, that analysts worry could push the regime of Xi Jinping into a corner, increasing the threat of hostilities.

China has warned its people to be prepared to go to war over the South China Sea territory and has further engaged in aggressive statements against both Japan and Australia - the latter of which fell prey to an op-ed by the state-run People's Daily calling for a military assault on the country.

Since that time, China has deployed combat patrols into the South China Sea and has ramped up its naval war exercises, joined by the Russian Navy, with both countries offering a counterpoint to the increasingly aggressive posture of the Western defense establishment.
http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Bei...uth_China_Seas_Most_Lethal_Destroyer_999.html
 
1*7vFJdWZvZ6WSXph5Z1oLkA.jpeg


Talk about unusual. On Aug. 10, the U.S. Air Force announced it had sent its B-2 Spirit stealth bombers to join older, non-stealthy B-52 Stratofortresses and B-1 Lancers on Guam.

It’s an extraordinary show of force in the Pacific region, because for the first time ever, America has based all three heavy bomber types on the island at once.

Deborah Lee James, the Air Force secretary, described the deployments as providing a “valuable opportunity for our bomber crews to integrate and train together, as well as with our allies and partners through the region in a variety of missions.”

But James did not elaborate on just how unusual the arrangement actually is, nor did she expand on any deeper possible reasons for basing Spirits, Lancers and Stratofortresses at the same base at same time — all within striking distance of China and North Korea.
https://warisboring.com/b-1-b-2-and...-a-huge-show-of-force-9f17fca08bcb#.t5bqalsz0
 
BEIJING, Aug 17 (Reuters) - China and a grouping of Southeast Asian nations aim to finish by the middle of next year a framework for a code of conduct to ease tension in the disputed South China Sea, state media said on Wednesday.

Since 2010, China and the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) have been discussing a set of rules aimed at avoiding conflict among rival claimants in the busy waterway.

Last month, an arbitration court in the Hague ruled that China had no historic title over the South China Sea and had breached the Philippines' sovereign rights there. The decision infuriated Beijing, which dismissed the court's authority.

But Beijing has been keen to get diplomacy back on track since.

Meeting in northeastern China, the two sides agreed to get the framework for the code of conduct done by mid-2017, and also approved guidelines for a China-ASEAN hotline for use during maritime emergencies, the official China Daily said.

They also agreed that a pact on unplanned maritime encounters, signed in 2014 by countries in the region, applied to the South China Sea, the newspaper added.

Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin said documents on the hotline and unplanned encounters would be presented for final approval to leaders in Laos next month at a meeting between China and ASEAN members, the paper said.

"There is another achievement - we reached broad consensus on pushing forward the negotiations on a code of conduct for the South China Sea," it quoted Liu as saying.

"All sides agreed to raise the frequency of the negotiations in a situation without interference, and seek to finish a draft framework of the code of conduct by the middle of next year," he added.

This is the third meeting on the code this year.

"It shows that as the situation in the South China Sea is getting more and more complicated, especially with the interference of external forces, ASEAN countries and China have realised that we have to grasp the key to the South China Sea issue in our own hand," Liu said.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/re...ete-framework-South-China-Sea-rules-year.html

Hailing India for keeping 'neutral stand' over the South China Sea issue despite pressure from the US and Japan, state-run Chinese media on Wednesday said there are some contradictions and frictions between the two nations but the overall bilateral relations have been developing smoothly.

"When it comes to security, after the final award of the South China Sea arbitration was announced, the Indian government has kept a neutral stance despite the pressure from Washington and Tokyo," an article in the state-run Global Times said.
http://www.dnaindia.com/india/repor...ina-sea-says-ties-developing-smoothly-2245998
 
_90815476_mediaitem90815475.jpg


A Malaysian oil tanker carrying 900,000 litres of diesel has been hijacked and taken to Indonesian waters, Malaysian maritime officials say.

The MT Vier Harmoni was reportedly sailing from Tanjung Pelepas port in Malaysia on Monday when it was seized.

The Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency (MMEA)'s director tweeted that the ship was now believed to be off the Indonesian island of Batam.

Its cargo is reportedly worth about 1.57m ringgit ($392,795; £300,000).

The identity of the hijackers is not yet known.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-37103871
 
No, helvetti. Kiina näyttää auttamattomasti ajautuvan "suur" konfliktiin naapureiden kanssa. Onko tämä tarkoituksella?

Japan lodged a fresh diplomatic protest with China on Wednesday, accusing the country of again sending its coast guard ships into waters surrounding contested islands in the East China Sea.

The two countries are locked in a long-running dispute over the uninhabited islets and tensions over them have been a frequent irritant between the countries.

Tokyo has lodged at least 32 protests through diplomatic channels since August 5 over what it says have been 29 intrusions.

Those sparked Kenji Kanasugi, foreign ministry chief of Asia-Pacific affairs, to phone Guo Yan, minister at the Chinese embassy in Japan, the Japanese ministry said in a statement.

"Despite Japan's repeated strong protests, the Chinese side has continued to take unilateral actions that raise tensions on the ground, and that is absolutely unacceptable," Kanasugi told Guo, according to the foreign ministry statement.

Kanasugi also called the intrusions a "violation of Japan's sovereignty" and are "unacceptable".

The vessels left after being warned off by the Japan Coast Guard, officials said.

Ships of the two countries regularly play cat and mouse in the waters but Japan says that Chinese activity has suddenly picked up this month, with local media speculating it is related to a secretive annual summer gathering of top Chinese leaders at a seaside resort east of Beijing.

China is also involved in maritime disputes in the South China Sea and it reacted angrily last month to a UN-backed tribunal ruling that its claims over most of the vital trade artery were invalid.

Japan has called on China to adhere to the decision and the two countries have clashed at recent regional summits and high-level meetings over the issue.

Japan's measures over the east China Sea islands have included summoning China's ambassador to the foreign ministry for a diplomatic dressing down as well as lodging protests via its embassy in Beijing.

The Japan Coast Guard on August 8 said it caught sight of 15 Chinese coast guard ships in waters near the islands -- the highest number ever spotted in the area.

Japan also protested in June after it said a Chinese navy frigate sailed close to its territorial waters near the islands for the first time.
http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Japan_protests_more_Chinese_ship_intrusions_999.html
 
!!!! Tuo labra on tasan tarkkaan se syy miksi Kiina haluaa nuo vedet itselleen. He tietävät mitä siellä on ja he luultavasti ovat suunnittelemassa isoa pysyvää syvänmeren tukikohtaa kiinan meren pinnan alle.

China plans to build a huge sea lab 3,000 meters (9,800 feet) below the surface of the South China Sea. This project is part is China’s thirteenth five-year economic plan, and it is ranked two in the country’s top 100 science and technology priorities. The purpose of this project is to help China find minerals in the waters…but it may also have military purposes.

Only a little information is available for the public as of the moment.

The platform will be movable, as noted in the recent presentation by the Ministry of Science and Technology. The deep-sea station is spearheaded by China Shipbuilding Industry Corporation. It will have a dozen crew on board and could stay underwater for about a month.

So. Just how feasible is this? Well, general location faces both geological and technical challenges, such as frequent occurrence of typhoons. The area is estimated to have around 125 billion barrels of oil and around 500 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.China already spent 1.42 trillion yuan ($216 billion) on research and development in 2015. So they are investing big in the project.

Notably, China previously proved that they can live up to their deepsea ambitions by setting a world record when they sent their submersible Jiaolong to descend 7 kilometers (23,000 feet) into the Indian Ocean.

Interestingly, the “Underwater Great Wall Project,” a network of sensors to help detect US and Russian submarines, has also been proposed.
http://futurism.com/chinas-planning-a-massive-sea-lab-10000-feet-underwater/
 
South China Sea disputes are turning worse. Last week, Philippines’ President Rodrigo Duterte had a loud and clear message for China: Stay away from our territory or else it could be a “bloody” confrontation.

Philippines’s warning comes shortly before China hosts the G20 Leaders’ Summit in the eastern city of Hangzhou on 4-5 September, and one week after a Japan Times editorial revealed that China has set a “red line” for Japan in the South China Sea. China warned Japan “not send Self-Defense Forces to join U.S. operations that test the freedom of navigation in the disputed South China Sea.

Philippines and China’s “hardcore” diplomacy is bad news for the economic integration of the region and bad news for investors in the countries involved in the disputes. A military confrontation would disrupt the economic integration and growth of the region and hurt the global economy — most notably China, which needs a market frontier for its manufacturing products.

So far financial markets fixated on central bankers’ easy money have ignored the escalation of the South China disputes. The Philippines’ market is up double digits over the last twelve months, while the Japanese and the Chinese markets are roughly flat.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/panosmo...na-over-south-china-sea-dispute/#3828855b3535

Last week, reports in the Japanese press, citing diplomatic sources, noted that China’s envoy in Tokyo had sent a strong message to Japan about its involvement in the South China Sea. According to Kyodo News Agency, Amabassador Cheng Yonghua had told a Japanese official that should Japan’s Maritime Self-Defense Force join up with U.S.-led freedom of navigation operations (FONOPS) in the South China Sea, Japan would have cross a “red line.”

Asked about these reports at a recent press conference, a spokesperson for China’s Ministry of Defense did not walk back the strong language. “We are firmly opposed to Japanese attempts to send its self-defense forces to join the so-called Freedom of Navigation operations by the U.S. in the South China Sea,” Colonel Wu Qian, spokesperson for the Chinese Ministry of National Defense, remarked.

Reiterating China’s previous position on Japan’s involvement in the disputes in the South China Sea, Wu added that “Japan is not a concerned party in the South China Sea issue, and has no right to intervene in relevant disputes.” Addressing the possibility that China would use military force to respond to Japan’s participation in FONOPs, Wu added that “The Chinese armed forces are firm in its resolve and determination to safeguard the sovereignty, territorial integrity and maritime interests and rights of the country, and will resolutely deal with various threats and challenges.”

Japan and the United States held their first bilateral naval drill in the South China Sea in October 2015, the same week that the U.S. Navy held its first FONOP by sailing the USS Lassen, a guided-missile destroyer, within 12 nautical miles of Subi Reef and other nearby features in the Spratly Islands. Since then, the United States has conducted two other FONOPs: One in January 2016 in the Paracel Islands and another in early May 2016 in the Spratlys. Keeping with the pace of previous FONOPs, the U.S. Navy should be due to stage another operation soon in the South China Sea.

The possibility of Japan, or other countries, including Australia, participating in U.S.-led FONOPs has increased in the aftermath of a July 12 award in a case filed by the Philippines against China on maritime entitlements in the South China Sea. In that decision, a five-judge tribunal at the Hague-based Permanent Court of Arbitration unanimously ruled that China’s nine-dashed line claim in the South China Sea held no meaning under international law, among other findings.

Interestingly, the Chinese position on Japan’s participation in the South China Sea may unwittingly concede that the United States has legitimate interests in the sea. In the aftermath of U.S. FONOPs in the South China Sea, Beijing has said that Washington’s actions threatened its sovereignty and harmed regional peace, but it hasn’t rejected the notion of the U.S. having legitimate interests in the South China Sea in the way that it seems to have rejected a role for Japan. For instance, after the May FONOP, a Chinese foreign ministry statement noted that the “U.S. places its interests above international law,” acknowledging that the United States did have interests in the South China Sea.

The bilateral context may help explain this difference. China’s warnings to Japan this summer come as the East China Sea, where the two countries dispute the sovereignty of the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands, heats up. China has recommended that Washington refrain from diplomatically intervening in efforts between China and Southeast Asian claimants to resolve and manage the South China Sea disputes. With its largely rhetorical denouncements of U.S. FONOPs, China may be acknowledging a legitimate U.S. interest as a superpower.

Like so many aspects of China’s signalling on the South China Sea, there’s a degree of ambiguity in the different treatment meted out to the United States and Japan. What’s clear, however, is that Beijing’s “red line” warning to Tokyo is likely here to stay.
http://thediplomat.com/2016/08/chin...an-on-south-china-sea-fonops-is-here-to-stay/
 
Japan's defense ministry requested a record budget on Wednesday, with funds for an anti-ship missile system to defend islands at the center of a territorial dispute with China.

Tokyo is determined to defend the uninhabited islets in the East China Sea — administered by Japan as the Senkakus but claimed by China as the Diaoyus — as Beijing steps up its claim.

The ministry announced it is seeking 5.168 trillion yen ($50.12 billion) in spending for the fiscal year starting April 2017, up 2.3 percent from the initial budget for the current fiscal year. If approved by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's cabinet, it would be the fifth straight year the government sets a record defense budget, as regional tensions remain high.

The proposed budget calls for Japan to develop land-to-ship missiles as well as air-to-ship missiles for patrol planes. The new land-to-ship missile system is expected to have a range of 300 kilometers (190 miles), far enough to reach the vicinity of the disputed islands, the Yomiuri Shimbun daily reported earlier in August.

The ministry declined to confirm the range of the missile.
http://www.defensenews.com/articles/japan-eyes-record-defense-budget-to-develop-anti-ship-missiles

Could South Korea have a more compelling reason to build a missile shield?

It lives in trepidation of nuclear attack. A hostile and erratic North Korea has threatened several times to consume Seoul in a “sea of fire.” Just this month, Pyongyang successfully launched a missile from a submarine, having conducted five nuclear tests to improve its warheads.

Yet Beijing has castigated South Korea’s decision to deploy what’s called Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, a U.S. antiballistic-missile system, viewing it as part of a wider American plot to encircle China. Rolling it out on China’s doorstep, says the Chinese ambassador to Seoul, could destroy bilateral relations “in an instant.” Thus the South Korean government is apparently faced with an unpalatable choice: It can either take steps to protect its own people from nuclear Armageddon, or preserve cordial relations with its giant neighbor and largest trading partner, but not both.

It’s a black and white, with-us-or-against-us approach, an example of what one of the region’s top diplomats, Singapore’s ambassador-at-large Bilahari Kausikan, calls China’s passive-aggressive diplomacy in East Asia.

As Mr. Kausikan described it in a public lecture earlier this year, China’s strategy involves setting up false dilemmas for countries in the region.

The message to smaller countries is plain. If they stand up for themselves—especially when they do so in cooperation with America—they place at risk the benefits of Chinese trade, investment and aid. This is how China seeks to convince its neighbors that they have no option but to defer to its wishes. Ultimately, what China wants is regional pre-eminence.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/chinas-passive-aggressive-diplomacy-1472542960
 
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