Konflikti Kiinan merellä

Mistä päättelet että konflikti olisi varmasti tulossa?

Kukaanhan ei voi tulevaisuudesta sanoa varmasti, mutta:

BEIJING -- Chinese President Xi Jinping will employ force to unify Taiwan with China by 2027, an influential Chinese academic who advises Beijing on foreign policy told Nikkei.
Jin Canrong, a professor in Renmin University's School of International Studies, notes that the People's Liberation Army already has a posture superior to that of the U.S. to deal with a contingency involving Taiwan.

He is known as one of China's most vocal hawks, and his online comments are followed by many.

Xi has set Taiwan unification as a goal but has not indicated a timeline. Jin said: "Once the National Congress of the Communist Party of China is over in the fall of 2022, the scenario of armed unification will move toward becoming a reality. It is very likely that the leadership will move toward armed unification by 2027, the 100th anniversary of the PLA's founding."

This echoed a view expressed in March 2021 by Adm. Phil Davidson, the since-retired commander of the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, who told the Senate Armed Services Committee with regard to Taiwan: "I think the threat is manifest during this decade -- in fact, in the next six years."

 
Kukaanhan ei voi tulevaisuudesta sanoa varmasti, mutta:

BEIJING -- Chinese President Xi Jinping will employ force to unify Taiwan with China by 2027, an influential Chinese academic who advises Beijing on foreign policy told Nikkei.
Jin Canrong, a professor in Renmin University's School of International Studies, notes that the People's Liberation Army already has a posture superior to that of the U.S. to deal with a contingency involving Taiwan.

He is known as one of China's most vocal hawks, and his online comments are followed by many.

Xi has set Taiwan unification as a goal but has not indicated a timeline. Jin said: "Once the National Congress of the Communist Party of China is over in the fall of 2022, the scenario of armed unification will move toward becoming a reality. It is very likely that the leadership will move toward armed unification by 2027, the 100th anniversary of the PLA's founding."

This echoed a view expressed in March 2021 by Adm. Phil Davidson, the since-retired commander of the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, who told the Senate Armed Services Committee with regard to Taiwan: "I think the threat is manifest during this decade -- in fact, in the next six years."


Xi:llä on parhaillaan toinen kausi päättymässä, syksyllä päätetään jatkosta eli pääseekö kolmannelle kaudelle. Yksi kausi on viiden vuoden mittainen joten jatkokausi 2022 tarkoittaisi että hänen kolmas kausi päättyy 2027. Mahtaako tuo haukka laskea sen varaan että Xi valitaan kolmannelle kaudelle ja tämä "hoitaa homman" sinä aikana?

Kommunistinen Kiina on perustettu 1949 joten minä olen arvaillut että tämä voisi olla heidän takaraja: "valtion yhdistäminen" ennen 100-vuotisjuhlaa.

Toisaalta jos uskotaan väestöennustetta niin heidän väestömäärä olisi ollut laskussa jo vuodesta 2018 lähtien. Voiko ikääntyvä ja vähenevä väestö toimia ajavana voimana hyökkäykselle? Enpä tiedä, heitä on mahdottoman paljon vaikka väestöennuste jatkaisikin nykyisellä tiellä (toki intialaisia tulee enemmän ja ero kasvaa vuosi vuodelta).

Tuo sotaharjoitus näyttää kyllä siltä miltä saarelle hyökkäyksen voisi kuvitella näyttävän: merisaarto ja sen jälkeen (jossain vaiheessa) maihinnousu. Merisaarto itsessään tekee saaren elämän vaikeaksi joten suuren riskin hyökkäys ei välttämättä olisi tarpeen - riippuu siitä millaisella voimalla merisaartoa lähdettäisiin murtamaan. Saarelle hyökkäys ei olisi mikään pikku juttu, Normandian maihinnousu muun muassa jäisi toiseksi operaation koossa. Kiina ei ole koskaan kokeillut mitään tuollaista, mahdoton sanoa miten se sujuisi. Venäjänkin piti vallata Ukraina muutamassa päivässä, ehkä parissa viikossa ja nyt on mennyt yli viisi kuukautta. Mikään ei koskaan ole niin helppoa kuin mitä voisi kuvitella.
 
Hyvä kirjoitus Taiwanin, Kiinan ja USA:n vahvuuksista ja heikkouksista eskalaatiossa. Sekä spekulointia miltä mahdollinen sota näyttäisi käytännössä sekä mitä tarkoittaisi Kiinan ja USA:n talouksille. Jos kiinnostaa pelkkä sotafantasia, se alkaa kappaleesta 'If war comes'.

Täältä sohvalta katsoen riskit ja sodan hinta ovat Kiinalle huomattavasti hyötyjä suuremmat. Mutta toisaalta, jos motiivina on kansallistunteellinen One China, ei silloin Pekingissä ehkä ajatella lyhyen aikavälin hyötyä.

Lukusuositus @WSJ. Alla kopioituna koko teksti maksumuurin varalta.



The Coming War Over Taiwan
With its global power at a peak and domestic problems mounting, China is likelier than ever before to make good on its threats.

The U.S. is running out of time to prevent a cataclysmic war in the Western Pacific. While the world has been focused on Vladimir Putin’s aggression in Ukraine, Xi Jinping appears to be preparing for an even more consequential onslaught against Taiwan. Mr. Xi’s China is fueled by a dangerous mix of strength and weakness: Faced with profound economic, demographic and strategic problems, it will be tempted to use its burgeoning military power to transform the existing order while it still has the opportunity.

This peaking-power syndrome—the tendency for rising states to become more aggressive as they become more fearful of impending decline—has caused some of the bloodiest wars in history. Unless the U.S. and its allies act quickly, it could trigger a conflict that would make the war in Ukraine look minor by comparison.

From ancient times to the present, once-rising powers have taken up arms when their fortunes faded, their enemies multiplied, and they felt they had to lunge for glory or lose their chance forever.

No one can say we didn’t see it coming. Just this week, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi paid a high-profile visit to Taiwan, and Beijing responded by encircling the island with several days of live-fire military exercises. For the past decade, China’s factories have churned out ammunition and put warships to sea faster than any country since World War II. The People’s Liberation Army (PLA) regularly practices missile strikes on mock-ups of Taiwanese ports and U.S. aircraft carriers, and PLA vessels and aircraft menace Taiwan’s territorial waters and airspace several times a week. The regime has issued bloodcurdling threats toward the island and countries that might come to its aid. “Those who play with fire will perish by it,” Mr. Xi told President Joe Biden last week. Senior U.S. officials warn that China might attack Taiwan in the next half-decade, possibly even in the next 18 months.

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House Speaker Nancy Pelosi poses for photographs with Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen, Taipei, Taiwan, Aug. 3

Beijing’s belligerence might look like the mark of an ascendant superpower. But the reality is more complex. China isn’t so much a rising state as a peaking power, one that has acquired fearsome coercive capabilities—and soaring power ambitions—but now faces worsening challenges at home and abroad.

Such a combination of aspiration and anxiety can be explosive. From ancient times to the present, once-rising powers have taken up arms when their fortunes faded, their enemies multiplied, and they felt they had to lunge for glory or lose their chance forever. Fast-growing countries have responded to economic slumps with reckless expansion. Revisionist states that find themselves cornered by rivals often use force to break the ring. The ghastliest wars of the last century were started not by rising, optimistic powers but by countries—such as Germany in 1914 or Japan in 1941—that had crested and begun to decline. Now China is following this arc—an exhilarating rise followed by the prospect of a hard fall.

Thanks to decades of rapid growth, China boasts the world’s largest economy (measured by purchasing power parity), navy by number of ships and conventional missile force. Chinese investments span the globe, and Beijing is pushing for primacy in crucial technologies. Chinese leaders are dreaming some very big dreams: They want to absorb Taiwan, make the Western Pacific a Chinese lake and carve out a vast economic empire across the global south—all part of the “national rejuvenation” that will return China to its former place as the most powerful country on Earth. In the West, pundits breathlessly warn that Beijing will soon be number one.

Look closer, however, and China’s future doesn’t seem so bright. Once-torrid growth had already slowed dramatically before Covid-19 compelled the government to lock down major cities indefinitely. Water, farmland and energy resources are becoming scarce. Thanks to the legacy of its one-child policy, China is approaching demographic catastrophe: It will lose 70 million working-age individuals over the next decade while gaining 120 million senior citizens. And whereas the outside world once aided China’s rise, now advanced democracies are kicking Chinese firms out of their financial markets, strangling China’s tech giant Huawei, boosting military spending and creating multilateral coalitions to check Beijing’s expansion. Mr. Xi may tout the rise of the East and the decline of the West, but behind the scenes, Chinese government reports paint pessimistic pictures of slowing growth at home and surging anti-Chinese sentiment abroad.

In the long term, China’s woes will make it less competitive. It probably can’t outpace America in a superpower marathon, let alone America plus its allies. But in the near-term, we should expect a more dangerous China—one that gambles big to reshape the balance of power before its window closes.


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The Taiwanese military conducts exercises, July 27, New Taipei City, Taiwan.

Taiwan is the most likely target of this anxious expansion. Reclaiming Taiwan would eliminate a government whose very existence disproves the Chinese Communist Party’s claims that Chinese culture is incompatible with democracy. It would give Beijing a commanding position in the Western Pacific and terrify U.S. allies like the Philippines and Japan. Not least, it would cement Xi Jinping’s legacy as a leader on par with Mao Zedong.

For decades, a confident, rising China was content not to force the issue, seeking to gradually lure Taiwan back through peaceful means. Today, though, the prospects for peaceful unification are fading fast. Most Taiwanese don’t want to be ruled by a genocidal dictatorship. Popular support for unification has nearly disappeared while support for incremental moves toward independence has doubled since 2018.

But between now and the end of the decade, China has a tantalizing opportunity to secure unification by force. Mr. Xi’s reforms of the PLA—meant, among other things, to make it capable of taking Taiwan—are nearly complete. China is rapidly deploying missiles, aircraft, warships and rocket launchers that can pummel Taiwan; it is assiduously rehearsing large-scale amphibious assaults.

Mr. Xi has repeatedly said that the task of ‘liberating’ Taiwan cannot be passed down for generations.

Meanwhile, U.S. military power is about to dip. The mid-2020s will witness the mass retirement of aging U.S. cruisers, guided-missile submarines and long-range bombers, leaving the U.S. military with hundreds fewer missile launchers—the key metric of modern naval firepower—floating and flying around East Asia. While Washington, Tokyo and Taipei are all undertaking much-needed defense programs focused on denying Chinese hegemony in Asia, those efforts won’t bear fruit until the early 2030s. Mr. Xi has repeatedly said that the task of “liberating” Taiwan cannot be passed down from generation to generation. In the mid- and late 2020s, he’ll have his best chance to accomplish that mission.

If war comes, it is likely to feature the massive application of force. Beijing could theoretically try to coerce Taiwan into unification with a more limited operation, such as an air-sea blockade or the seizure of Taiwan’s small offshore islands. Yet none of these options can guarantee Taiwanese capitulation, and all of them would give Taipei, Washington and other democracies time to mount a punishing response. To achieve its goals, China has to go big and brutal from the start.

Its war plan could well involve a surprise missile and air attack against Taiwan and U.S. military bases in the Pacific, strikes on the satellite communications that underpin the American way of war and a wave of sabotage and assassinations within Taiwan—all as prelude to a massive airborne and amphibious invasion.

Both U.S. and Taiwanese forces could be crippled as the PLA rushes toward its objectives. Even if America avoids rapid defeat, the nightmare scenario currently envisaged in Ukraine—direct clashes between the U.S. and a nuclear-armed great power—would be the reality at the outset. A Sino-American war could escalate rapidly because it will involve technologies that work best when used first, including cyberattacks, hypersonic missiles and electronic warfare. The side that is losing might decide to use low-yield nuclear weapons to turn the tide or force its opponent into submission.

The economic fallout would also be horrendous. Vital waterways would become shooting galleries; the world might find itself cut off from the more than 90% of cutting-edge semiconductors that are manufactured in Taiwan. According to the RAND Corporation, one year of fighting would reduce America’s gross domestic product by 5% to 10% and China’s by 25% to 35%. A global depression would be all but guaranteed.

American officials aren’t blind to the problem, but Washington—thanks to a mixture of inertia, distraction and simple denial—isn’t racing to address it. President Biden has pledged, albeit ambiguously, to defend Taiwan from Chinese attack. Speaker Pelosi has joined a growing list of lawmakers to visit Taiwan. The Pentagon calls China its “pacing challenge.” Yet such symbolic gestures will amount to cheap and provocative talk if not backed by a strong and resilient defense—something the U.S. and Taiwan currently lack.

American forces in the Pacific are still concentrated at large bases, principally on Guam and Okinawa, that are highly vulnerable to missile attacks. The U.S. defense budget has loads of money for future capabilities that might materialize in the 2030s but won’t help win a war over Taiwan in this decade. Washington has, rightly, committed tens of billions of dollars in aid to Ukraine yet struggles to find a fraction of that to fund the Pacific Deterrence Initiative, meant to make U.S. forces in the region more resilient and powerful. The fact that China faces an ugly long-term trajectory won’t be much consolation if Beijing nonetheless thrashes Washington and Taipei in the coming fight for dominance of the Western Pacific.

But the situation isn’t hopeless. Amphibious assaults are devilishly difficult, and a full-on invasion of Taiwan would be one of the largest amphibious assaults in history. It would require the PLA to surge hundreds of thousands of troops across the turbulent Taiwan Strait and to seize an island whose geography—mountains, dense jungles, crowded urban environments—is a defender’s dream. A smart, committed defender could turn this operation into a bloody nightmare for invading forces. And doing so doesn’t require defying the laws of physics; it just requires moving—now—to make an invasion look all-too-daunting for even a risk-prone peaking power.

First, the Pentagon can turn the Taiwan Strait into a deathtrap for attacking forces by stocking up on tools that are ready or nearly ready today. This means positioning hordes of missile launchers, armed drones, electronic jammers and sensors at sea and on allied territory near the strait. Instead of waiting for a Chinese assault to start and then surging missile-magnet aircraft carriers into the region, the Pentagon could use what is, in essence, a high-tech minefield to decimate China’s invasion forces and cut their communications links. These diffuse networks of munitions and jammers would be difficult for China to eliminate without starting a regionwide war. They could be installed on virtually anything that floats or flies, including cargo ships, barges and aircraft.

The U.S. also needs to ensure that its military doesn’t have a glass jaw. To prevent China from wrecking forward-stationed American forces at the start of a conflict, the U.S. must scatter those forces across dozens of small operating sites in East Asia. The few big bases that remain must be outfitted with hardened shelters, robust ballistic missile defenses and fake targets to absorb Chinese missiles. Hanging tough also requires dramatically ramping up production of key munitions, so that America has adequate stockpiles and active production lines when the shooting starts. In short, Washington must deprive Beijing of any hope of landing a knockout blow—and thereby confront it with the prospect of a long, grueling war that could threaten the CCP’s hold on power at home.


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A Taiwanese pilot participates in an Air Force drill in Chiayi, Taiwan, Jan 5.

Another priority is for Washington to help Taiwan help itself. Taipei has smart plans to stock up on mobile missile launchers, mines and radars; harden its communications infrastructure; enlarge its army and ground-force reserves; and otherwise prepare to inflict sky-high costs on an aggressor. But Taipei isn’t implementing these plans fast enough. If Taiwan doesn’t pick up the pace, there is nothing the U.S. can do to save it. If Taiwan redoubles its efforts, however, then America should provide money, hardware and expertise to make the island a tougher target.

The U.S. can help by donating ammunition and sensors, subsidizing Taiwanese procurement of missile launchers and mine layers, matching Taiwanese investments in vital military infrastructure and expanding joint training on crucial defense missions. American special operations forces can help Taiwan prepare for a lethal insurgency against Chinese occupiers, the threat of which may help deter an invasion in the first place. Just as important, Washington can undertake more complex exercises with Taiwan’s military—and quietly station larger contingents of trainers and special operations forces on the island—to ensure that the two countries can act as a real alliance if a conflict ignites.

The U.S. also needs to exploit the enemy’s weaknesses. Because the PLA hasn’t fought a major war since invading Vietnam in 1979, it hasn’t tested its modern command-and-control processes under fire. By developing the ability—through cyberattacks and related means—to inject confusion into military communications networks, the Pentagon can make Chinese officials wonder how glitchy their forces will be in combat. And by rehearsing a distant blockade of Chinese energy imports, America can threaten to turn any protracted conflict into an economic disaster for Beijing.

Finally, the U.S. must make China realize that a Taiwan war could go big as well as long. The more friends America can bring into the fight, the less appetizing that fight will look to Beijing.

The PLA may talk big about crushing Japan if Tokyo helps Washington in a crisis, but it can’t relish the prospect of fighting a global superpower and its mightiest regional ally. The Indian and Australian navies could help Washington choke off Beijing’s oil imports as they transit the Malacca Strait. Key European powers—especially the United Kingdom and France—can contribute submarines or surface combatants; more important, they can impose painful technological and economic sanctions. Sanctioning China obviously would be more difficult than sanctioning Russia—which is why America and its allies need to plan these punishments now, before a crisis starts.

If Washington can credibly promise to turn a fight over Taiwan into a showdown between China and the world’s most advanced democracies, that is a strategic price even Xi Jinping might not want to pay. Indeed, the best way to avoid a looming war in Asia is to make clear that Beijing cannot win at anything like an acceptable cost.

The crisis over Speaker Pelosi’s visit is just the beginning. The U.S. is entering the most crucial phase of its rivalry with China, when the risk of war is highest and decisions made, or not made, will reverberate for decades. America can win a protracted competition against a formidable but faltering China, but only if it braces now for the very real possibility of a dramatic attack on Taiwan.

Mr. Brands is the Henry Kissinger Distinguished Professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies and a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. Mr. Beckley is associate professor of political science at Tufts University and a nonresident senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. This essay is adapted from their new book, “Danger Zone: The Coming Conflict with China,” which will be published by W.W. Norton on Aug. 16.
 
Viimeksi muokattu:
China has sent 22 fighter jets across the “median line” running down the Taiwan Strait on Thursday, according to Taipei’s defence ministry.

The Ministry of National Defense said “air defense missile systems” were deployed to track the jets and radio warnings were broadcast, according to an update on its website.

The median line is an unofficial but largely adhered to border that runs down the middle of the Taiwan Strait, separating China and Taiwan. It is rare for military jets to cross it.

Over the last two years, Beijing has increased its military incursions into Taiwan’s air defence identification zone (ADIZ).

The ADIZ is not the same as Taiwan’s territorial airspace but includes a far greater area that overlaps with part of China’s own air defence identification zone and even includes some of the mainland.

The vast majority of China’s ADIZ flights occur off the southwestern edge of Taiwan. However, in recent days, there has been a significant increase in the number of median line incursions after Beijing announced massive military drills to protest US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to the island territory this week.

Of the 49 incursions Taiwan reported on Wednesday and Thursday, 44 involved Chinese aircraft crossing the median line.
The Nato secretary general, Jens Stoltenberg, has said that China has no reason to overreact after US politician Nancy Pelosi visited Taiwan. Reuters quotes his saying:

The visit of Nancy Pelosi is no reason for China to overreact or threaten Taiwan or to use threatening rhetoric. The US and other Nato allies have paid visits with high-ranking officials to Taiwan regularly over the years, and therefore this is no reason for China to overreact
Taiwan’s defence ministry confirmed that 11 Chinese Dongfeng ballistic missiles had been fired in waters around the island today.

The last time that happened was in 1996. Taiwan officials said the drills violated UN rules, invaded its space and threatened free air and sea navigation.

In response to Taiwan’s protests against the military drills, Reuters reports that China’s Beijing-based Taiwan Affairs Office said: “Our punishment of pro-Taiwan independence diehards, external forces, is reasonable, lawful.”
Taiwan’s de facto ambassador to the US, Hsiao Bi-khim, has said on social media that “China’s irresponsible and dangerous behaviour has jeopardised regional peace. Taiwan will resolutely defend ourselves.”
The Associated Press has spoken to a couple of residents of Taiwan about the Chinese military drills.

“Everyone should want money, not bullets,” joked one, referring to recent troubles in the economy. 63-year-old Lu Chuan-hsiong had been out enjoying his morning swim. He said he was not worried. “Because Taiwanese and Chinese, we’re all one family. There’s a lot of mainlanders here, too,” he said.

Those who have to work on the ocean were more concerned. Chou Ting-tai, who owns a fishing vessel, said “It’s very close. This will definitely impact us, but if they want to do this, what can we do?”
 
Kiitokset kaikille foorumilaisille ja erityisesti ctg tilanteen aktiivisesta seuraamisesta. Ei itse juuri nyt ehdi ja jaksa aihetta muualta seuraillakaan.

Jos homma leviää sodaksi asti niin yhdessä Covid-19 ja Ukrainan sodan kanssa se merkitsee kyllä epookin muutosta. WW2, Kylmäsota, vak(p)auden aika 1990-2020, WW3. Alamme siis olla uuden ajan kynnyksellä. PRC taloudellisen luhistumisen lumipallohan on jo hitaasti vierimässä vieden kiinteistöalan ja finanssisektorin mukana reaalitalouden aloja alkaen terästeollisuudesta.

Tuosta viimesestä 63-vuotiaan taiwanilaisen kommentista että olisivat yhtä perhettä PRC kanssa sanoisin että jos invaasio alkaa niin mahtaakohan mieli muuttua kun uutiset ensimmäisestä paikallisesta butchasta tulee esiin. Taiwanin ja kommunistisen Kiinan sota kun on jatkoa Kiinan sisällissodalle ja ne tuppaa olemaan erityisen raakoja. Kyllä CCP osaa NKVD tyyppiset likvidaatiot "vapauttamillaan" alueilla. Uiguurialueilta on jo paljon näyttöjä puhdistuksista. Ei kannata taiwanilaisen antautua aivopestyille komukoille, muuten tullee samankaltaista jälkeä kuin Ukrainassa.
 
Viimeksi muokattu:
Jotenkin myös tuntuu, ettei näissä ulkomaisissa analyyseissä oteta tarpeeksi hyvin huomioon Kiinan ja PLA:n heikkouksia, pelkästään länsimaiden. Näinköhän on yhtään vähemmän korruptoitunut kuin Venäjän asevoimat? Toimintakyky tositilanteessa on varmaan aika paljon matalampi kuin miltä paperilla näyttää.

Kiinassa vaikuttaa sama kulttuuri kuin monessa muussakin diktatuurissa, eli johtajille ei kerrota koko totuutta, vaan se mitä halutaan kuulla. Valehdellaan pelastaakseen oma nahkansa.
 
Jotenkin myös tuntuu, ettei näissä ulkomaisissa analyyseissä oteta tarpeeksi hyvin huomioon Kiinan ja PLA:n heikkouksia, pelkästään länsimaiden. Näinköhän on yhtään vähemmän korruptoitunut kuin Venäjän asevoimat? Toimintakyky tositilanteessa on varmaan aika paljon matalampi kuin miltä paperilla näyttää.

Kiinassa vaikuttaa sama kulttuuri kuin monessa muussakin diktatuurissa, eli johtajille ei kerrota koko totuutta, vaan se mitä halutaan kuulla. Valehdellaan pelastaakseen oma nahkansa.

Luulen että Kiinan ja Venäjän vahvuudet ja heikkoudet ovat pitkälti samat

-tärkein vahvuus on suuret määrät kaikkea, tosin Kiinan osalta modernia kalustoa on toki selvästi enemmän

heikkouksia:

-valehtelun kulttuuri ja massiivinen korruptio, ei voida olla varmoja todellisesta tilasta ennen kuin ne oikeasti koeponnistetaan
-armeija ei ole joutunut oikeaan sotaan hyvin pitkään aikaan, mikä on todellinen suorituskyky taktiikan ja strategian osalta?
-maan kyky kestää pitkää sotaa (Kiina on riippuvainen ulkomaista ja kaupasta paljon enemmän kuin Venäjä, toki sama veitsi leikkaa molempiin suuntiin)

Tässä on hyvä mutta erittäin pitkä kirjoitus Puolan suunnalta, hän kirjoittaa asiasta monelta eri kantilta mutta erityisesti talouden osalta:

https://www.krzysztofwojczal.pl/geo...ededniu-kryzysu-nie-uderza-na-tajwan-analiza/

Liian pitkä lainattavaksi, mutta jos käännöstyökalu löytyy niin kannattaa ainakin vilkaista, jos ei jopa lukea kokonaan (jos kiinnostaa).

Tosin hänkin lainaa Kiinan virallisia väestölukuja:

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Tämä on se virallinen totuus: Kiinan väestömäärä lähtee laskuun vuoden 2030 tienoilla.

Yi Fuxian on väittänyt jo vuosien ajan että Kiinan väestönlaskennassa valehdellaan merkittävästi eivätkä todelliset numerot vastaa todellisuutta. Hän julkaisi tästä kirjan jo vuonna 2007 nimeltä "Big country with empty nest" ja on kirjoittanut asiasta sen jälkeen tiuhaan. Hänen teesi on että todellisuudessa väestömäärä lähti laskuun jo vuonna 2018. Olen myös lukenut että Kiinan virallisissa väestönmittauksissa olisi valehdeltu vähintään viimeisen 10 vuoden ajan eli numerot suurempia kuin todellisuus. Jos muistan oikein, niin tarkoittaisi sitä että "väestöpyramidin" jo valmiiksi kapea alaosa on todellisuudessa vielä kapeampi:


Michael Pettis kirjoittaa myös paljon Kiinasta: https://twitter.com/michaelxpettis

Yksi kuvaaja työikäisten määrän muutoksista (ennuste) - tästä olen lukenut että todellisuus on kuvaajaa pahempi Kiinan osalta: työikäisten osuus olisi laskenut jo aikaisemmin JA miehet jäävät eläkkeelle 60 vuotiaina, tehdastöitä tekevät naiset 50 vuotiaina, konttoritöistä 55 vuotiaina. Yritykset eläkeiän korottamisesta ovat epäonnistuneet. Kritiikin mukaan tämä kuva on siis hieman liian positiivinen. HUOM: kuvassa on ainoastaan normalisoitu työikäisten määrä ko. maan vuoden 2015 tasoon, eikä vertailla suoraan määriä toisiinsa. 40% kiinalaisten nykymäärästä on silti suuri numero, mutta käyrä kertoo silti että heidän maata tulee koskemaan merkittävät muutokset. Toki kun ennustetaan 2 100 vuoteen asti niin asioita voi muuttua. Väestönkasvun osalta ennustaminen on kuitenkin helpompaa kuin monen muun asian osalta: olisi kovasti yllättävää jos jokin kehittynyt maa yhtäkkiä onnistuisi esim. tuplaamaan syntyvien lasten määrän ja ylläpitämään tätä vuodesta toiseen.

Yhdysvaltain osalta ennuste kertoo että väestörakenne tulisi pysymään kohtuullisesti samana eli syntyvien ja kuolevien osuudet eivät ole pahasti vinksallaan.
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^eikö sota perinteisesti lisää syntyvyyttä viimeistään sen jälkeen ;) ei kiina jää odottamaan että nuorien sotilaiden määrä vähenee vuosi vuodelta. hatuista kiinni.
 
The Chinese government’s top diplomat Wang Yi walked out before the start of a gala dinner of foreign ministers at a meeting in Cambodia on Thursday and was seen leaving the venue in a vehicle, witnesses said.

Wang Yi waved to media as he entered a holding room for the dinner then walked out of the venue, without giving a reason, according to Reuters journalists.

Two witnesses working at the venue told Reuters Wang Yi was seen leaving in a vehicle.

The dinner was attended by more than a dozen foreign ministers including US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Japan’s Yoshimasa Hayashi, and senior diplomats of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean).
Japan’s foreign minister Yoshimasa Hayashi has also called for an “immediate stop” to China’s military exercises.

“China’s actions this time have a serious impact on the peace and stability of the region and the international community. I once again demand the immediate stop of these military exercises,” Hayashi told reporters.

His comments came after the Japanese defence minister said five Chinese ballistic missiles fired during the exercises were “believed to have landed within Japan’s (exclusive economic zone)“.
Australian foreign minister Penny Wong has called for de-escalation in the Taiwan Strait and warned against the risk of miscalculation.

“All parties should consider how they can contribute to de-escalating current tensions,” Wong told Agence France Presse.

“One of the risks the region is concerned about is the risk of miscalculation.”

Wong will join the Asean Regional Forum (ARF) on Friday, a 27-member body set up to discuss security issues.
“China has chosen to overreact and use the speaker’s visit as a pretext to increase provocative military activity in and around the Taiwan Strait,” White House spokesperson John Kirby told reporters, Reuters reports.

Kirby called China’s actions part of a “manufactured crisis” and added that Beijing was attempting to alter the regional power balance.

“It’s also a pretext to try to up the ante ... and to actually try to set a new status quo, to get to a new normal where they think they can keep things at,” Kirby said.

“And my point coming out here today was making clear that we’re not going to accept a new status quo.

“The temperature’s pretty high,” Kirby said.

Tensions “can come down very easily by just having the Chinese stop these very aggressive military drills and flying missiles in and around the Taiwan Strait”, he said.
Kirby confirmed earlier reports that the Pentagon had delayed a scheduled test launch of a nuclear-capable ballistic missile to avoid stoking tensions.

“We do not believe it is in our interests, Taiwan’s interests, the region’s interests, to allow tensions to escalate further,” Kirby said.

“As China engages in destabilizing military exercises around Taiwan, the United States is demonstrating instead the behavior of a responsible nuclear power by reducing the risks of miscalculation.”
But he said the US navy’s USS Ronald Reagan carrier taskforce would remain in the area. According to a Chinese military-backed research group, South China Sea Probing Initiative, the Reagan was about 600 miles (1,000km) due east of Taiwan on Wednesday.

Kirby said the carrier group has been ordered by the Pentagon to “remain on station in the general area to monitor the situation.”

“We will not be deterred from operating in the seas and the skies of the Western Pacific consistent with international law, as we have for decades, supporting Taiwan and defending a free and open Indo-Pacific,” he added.
 
A source in Taiwan has given an anonymous briefing to Reuters, which reports that “around 10 Chinese navy ships crossed the median line and remained in the area on Friday morning, and about 20 Chinese military aircraft briefly crossed the median line.”

As yet there has been no official confirmation from the Taiwan ministry of defence on the number of incursions.
Japan’s prime minister Fumio Kishida has called for the “immediate cancellation” of China’s military exercises aimed at the Taiwan strait.

Speaking to the media after meeting with US politician Nancy Pelosi in Tokyo, Kishida said that he told her “we have called for the immediate cancellation of the military drills”, which he described as a “serious problem that impacts our national security and the safety of our citizens”.

Reuters quotes US ambassador to Japan, Rahm Emanuel, who was with Pelosi earlier, as saying “It is clear that the US-Japan alliance will stand strong, shoulder-to-shoulder, to defend our interests and our values.”

In a news conference after meeting Kishida, Pelosi told reporters:

We have said from the start that our representation here is not about changing the status quo in Taiwan or the region. The Chinese government is not pleased that our friendship with Taiwan is a strong one. It is bipartisan in the House and in the Senate, overwhelming support for peace and the status quo in Taiwan.
US secretary of state Antony Blinken has warned again that China’s “provocative” actions risk a serious escalation and could destabilise the region.

Speaking at a news conference on the sidelines of the ASEAN Regional Forum meeting, Blinken told the media that the US has repeatedly told China that it did not seek a crisis. Blinken said that Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan was peaceful, and that “there was no possible justification for what they have done” in response.

The secretary of state said that the US would stick by its allies in the region.

He also said that the US would not be provoked by China’s actions, and that US forces would fly, sail and operate wherever international law allows. He vowed that the US would continue to make maritime transits of the Taiwan Strait, and also said that the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan would stay in the area.
Taiwan’s defence ministry says its military has dispatched aircraft and ships and deployed land-based missile systems to monitor the situation, as China conducts large-scale military drills in zones surrounding Taiwan.

Multiple Chinese vessels and aircraft crossed the Taiwan Strait median line on Friday morning the defence ministry said, which described China’s military activities as “highly provocative”.

Taiwan’s military will prepare combat readiness but will not ask for a war, the defence ministry added.
 
The danger with escalation is that it is hard to pull back.

Now that US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has managed to visit Taiwan - the highest-ranking American official to do so in 25 years - won't others want to do the same in the future?

Now that China has held major live fire exercises of such a scale, so close to Taiwan, why not do that again? Each time Chinese fighter jets fly nearer to the island or in greater numbers, a new standard of "normality" is established. So, if the People's Liberation Army (PLA) doesn't fly as close next time, what message is it sending?

Not so long ago, Beijing's plan with Taiwan involved engagement. Young people from the mainland were backpacking around the breakaway province claimed by China, and businesses from Taiwan were popping up all over China.

However, the approach under Chinese President Xi Jinping has become much more belligerent, with ever more pressure being applied on Taipei.

Those with more militaristic tendencies in the upper echelons of power here must have secretly welcomed the visit by Ms Pelosi. It has provided an ideal excuse to ramp up the war games around Taiwan in preparation for what they see as the inevitable day when it will be seized by force.

The biggest challenge perhaps for regional stability is that everyone's public position on Taiwan is ridiculous. It's like a giant game of pretend which is becoming harder to maintain.

China pretends that Taiwan is currently part of its territory, even though the island collects its own taxes, votes in its own government, issues its own passports and has its own military.

The US pretends it is not treating Taiwan as an independent country, even though it sells it high-tech weapons and, occasionally, a high-ranking politician visits on what looks very much like an official trip.

It's apparent that it would take nothing for this flimsy show, designed to guarantee the status quo, to fall apart.

The danger for the world is that there are those in Beijing who would like to see it fall apart.
 
Taiwan's Ministry of National Defense confirmed it was hit by a DDoS attack on Wednesday in what has been an eventful week for the island nation, US-Sino relations, and semiconductors.

The ministry said the network was attacked around 23:40 with connection restored by 00:30 local time on Thursday. Cabinet spokesperson Lo Ping-cheng said work on heightening cyber defenses was underway.

The DDoS attack on the Ministry of Defense followed a separate one on Taiwan's presidential website on Tuesday.

The cyber incidents come after China sent 27 aircraft into the Taiwan air defence identification zone (ADZ), and conducted live fire exercises by sea in six zones around the island as a show of force designed to reinforce its assertion that US speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi's visit was a provocative act designed to encourage Taiwanese independence.

Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council has called the behavior "bellicose and provocative."

International norms allow relations with Taiwan that stop just short of formally recognising it as a sovereign nation, a nod to China's insistence the island territory is a rogue province that illegitimately defies Beijing by practicing democratic self-governance.
 
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