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China's scary asymmetry(Interesting Column)
Rediff.com ^ | 19 April 2006 | Claude Arpi

Posted on 04/20/2006 5:40:19 PM PDT by Marius3188

Fifty years ago, China invaded Tibet. What was the first task of the 'Liberation's Army'? 'To defend the western borders', Mao stated.

On the ground, it meant building new roads leading to India (including the Aksai Chin road on Indian territory). The same roads were used 12 years later to invade India. The Chinese always plan years in advance.

The 'beyond Taiwan policy' [mentioned in the first part of this article] brings to my mind the railway line scheduled to reach Lhasa, the Tibetan capital in July 2006. In February 2001, the 1,118-kilometer railway stretch from Golmud (the current terminus of the Qinghai-Tibet railway) to Lhasa received the final approval from the Chinese State Council. Since then, work has been undertaken on a war-footing by the Chinese ministry of railways.

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The arrival of the train will open new vistas for the PLA. It will allow the Chinese generals to open a new ballistic missiles theater in a very short time and will facilitate a rapid redeployment in case of need. Firepower could be directed to India in a much more effective manner using the railway to transfer missiles to launching silos hidden in the Himalayan region.

In a China Brief of the Jamestown Institute a couple of years ago, William Triplett described some of the rail advantages for the tactical and strategic new potentialities of China defense program: 'With this railroad in place the PLA will have excellent hiding places for its new rail-mobile ICBM, the DF-31A. If the PLA follows the Russian lead and rail-bases its ICBMs, each missile train could carry up to thirty nuclear warheads capable of destroying any strategic target in Japan and many in Western United States.'

This is all the more true for the Medium Range and the Short Range missiles; the extension of the rail track to Lhasa can be seen as the most important change in the Himalayan region since the building of strategic roads in Tibet in the '50s.

The missile launch brigades based in Datong and Wulan near Xining (Qinghai Province) could then easily be transferred to the Lhasa region. India would suddenly become 1,000 km closer for the Medium and Short Range missiles.

These 'details' are not mentioned in the Pentagon report as Washington is not too much bothered about India's interests. One has to admit that Delhi itself does not seem bothered about the train reaching Lhasa. After all, the relationship between India and China is said to have improved so greatly since the UPA is in power and according to many, the time has come to think positively.

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While the 2005 report outlines '…China's national and military strategies, progress and trends in its military modernization, and their implications for regional security and stability', the grave threat caused by the train to India's security and the change of military balance brought by it to the Tibetan plateau is mentioned nowhere. The train is also not mentioned in the QDR, obviously it is not a security threat for the US.

In December 2004, an interesting White Paper on defense was published by the Chinese government. When reading it for the first time, I could not grasp a concept mentioned several times by its acronym RMA (Revolution in Military Affairs). This theory made full sense only after I read one of the most scary books on military affairs.

Unrestricted Warfare is written by two extraordinarily brilliant senior colonels belonging to the People's Liberation Army. The Literature and Arts Publishing House in Beijing published the research of Colonels Qiao Liang and Wang Xiangsui.

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Qiao and Wang started their fascinating research with the US's success against Saddam Hussein's army during the Gulf War of 1990-1991. In fact, Unrestricted Warfare is a war manual detailing how a nation like China can face the technologically advanced US army, overcome this advantage and defeat the enemy.

The book came to the notice of the CIA after the September 11 attacks, because several times in Unrestricted Warfare China's military planners suggest ways in which terrorists (bin Laden is specifically mentioned), could wage a new, unrestricted war against America.

In their foreword, the editors of Unrestricted Warfare point out the authors' 'advocacy of a multitude of means, both military and particularly non-military, to strike at the United States during times of conflict.'

Blending ancient martial arts theory and the knowledge of the high-tech era, the authors explain how the strong can be defeated by the weak through merciless unconventional methods: 'the first rule of unrestricted warfare is that there are no rules, with nothing forbidden.'

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They say: 'Whether it be the intrusions of hackers, a major explosion at the World Trade Center, or a bombing attack by bin Laden, all of these greatly exceed the frequency bandwidths understood by the American military… This is because they have never taken into consideration and have even refused to consider means that are contrary to tradition and to select measures of operation other than military means.'

The mention of bombing the WTC resulted in US security agencies translating the book and circulating it widely.

The Chinese White Paper on Defense put it thus: 'The forms of war are undergoing changes from mechanization to informationalization... Confrontation between systems has become the principal feature of confrontation on the battlefield. Asymmetrical, non-contiguous and non-linear operations have become important patterns of operations.'

After reading Unrestricted Warfare I understood the meaning of RMA, or asymmetric warfare.

One chapter speaks of 'Ten Thousand Methods Combined as One: Combinations That Transcend Boundaries'. It is the art of combining different elements of these various forms of warfare. What are these forms?

Terrorism is of course mentioned the most often, but it is just one of the many ways of unconventional warfare identified by Unrestricted Warfare. To cite a few others:

* financial warfare. Financial war is a form of non-military warfare which is just as terribly destructive as a bloody war, but in which no blood is actually shed. * psychological warfare (spreading rumours to intimidate the enemy and break down his will); * smuggling warfare (throwing markets into confusion and attacking economic order); * media warfare (manipulating what people see and hear in order to lead public opinion along); * drug warfare (obtaining sudden and huge illicit profits by spreading disaster in other countries); * network warfare (venturing out in secret and concealing one's identity in a type of warfare that is virtually impossible to guard against); * technological warfare (creating monopolies by setting standards independently); * fabrication warfare (presenting a counterfeit appearance of real strength before the eyes of the enemy); * resources warfare (grabbing riches by plundering stores of resources); * economic aid warfare (bestowing favour in the open and contriving to control matters in secret); * cultural warfare (leading cultural trends along in order to assimilate those with different views); * international law warfare (seizing the earliest opportunity to set up regulations); * environmental warfare (weakening a rival nation by despoiling natural environment).

This last point reminds me of the recurrent floods of the Sutlej (and the breaching of the dam on the Pareechu river). Despite an official agreement with the PCR, Delhi has been unable to prevent or even monitor such recurrences.

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Another type of warfare (not mentioned by the authors) could be added: demographical warfare which has already been 'successfully' experimented by Beijing in Xinjiang, Inner Mongolia and Tibet (and by Bangladesh in Assam).

The authors send a spine-chilling warning: 'When people begin to rejoice in the reduced use of military force to resolve conflicts, war will be reborn in another form and in another arena'.

It is perhaps time for the Indian 'thinking' generals to reflect in a more asymmetrical way.

While keeping a friendly attitude towards its neighbours, they should start surveying ways to counter these new forms of war which are not different from the ones taught by Sun Tzu in his Art of War over 2000 years ago or by Mao Zedong more recently.

This book makes interesting reading in the newly perceived threat coming from China and the recent QDR. The main debate on the separation of the nuclear and civilian facilities will probably continue to rage in India and analysts as well as political parties will be divided on the extent of compromise to be offered to President Bush.

This will probably overshadow the second point of the US plan: to use Delhi to counter the rise of China. The QDR makes it clear that the US objective is to: 'dissuade any military competitor from developing disruptive or other capabilities that could enable regional hegemony or hostile action against the United States or other friendly countries and it will seek to deter aggression or coercion.'

It is where India is needed, because for Washington, 'Should deterrence fail, the United States would deny a hostile power its strategic and operational objectives.'

Washington will need a base and a 'strategic partner' to fight its proxy war. Delhi has to be cautious not to be enticed by the United States in the nuclear business: there is no free meal from the superpower, and though China might be the major threat for India in the years to come, Delhi does not have to fight on behalf of others.

In the meantime, China has strongly protested against the QDR for 'playing up the China military threat.'

A foreign ministry spokesman said that China has lodged a serious representation to the US: 'The QDR …irrationally criticized China's normal defense construction.' He added that the move 'interfered in China's internal affairs and could mislead public opinion'.

But this does not change the problem.

Concluded


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: asymetricalwarfare; asymmetricalwarfare; asymmetry; china; india; warfare

1 posted on 04/20/2006 5:40:21 PM PDT by Marius3188
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To: Marius3188

These are the people who wrote and study Sun Tzu. All is fair in war, especially if they don't have to risk their lives.
The Chinese are allies by trade and enemies in any arena.


2 posted on 04/20/2006 5:47:11 PM PDT by HumanitysEdge (http://calc.homeip.net/humanedge.html)
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To: HumanitysEdge

Isn't there a massive communist insurgency going on in India right now?


3 posted on 04/20/2006 6:00:30 PM PDT by Pikachu_Dad
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To: HumanitysEdge

Sounds like they translated John Boyd's theory of combat


4 posted on 04/20/2006 6:12:01 PM PDT by Palm Beach Pilot
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To: HumanitysEdge
The Chinese are allies by trade and enemies in any arena.

The Chinese conquer by hegemony when not at conventional war.( Spratly Islands, Tibet, and now Buthan) According to Sun Tzu,conventional war is a last resort when all of the assymetrical prosecution fails or the other side(s) attack conventionally. And when conventional war is pursued, it is done ruthlessly and swiftly, most often using the element of surprise.

US strategy is to attempt to conquer the commmunist system through magnetizing priovate enterprise within China. That race has been on since Nixon made his historic outreach to China. Was that a mistake? Politically China and Russia are political adversaries to the West on the Iran issue.

5 posted on 04/20/2006 6:12:58 PM PDT by Candor7 (Into Liberal Flatulence Goes the Hope of the West)
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To: Candor7

I thought it was interesting Hu gave Pres. Bush a copy of the Art of War as a gift.

I wonder if he was implying the Iraq war or a deeper meaning or threat..


6 posted on 04/20/2006 6:23:16 PM PDT by Marius3188 (Happy Resurrection Weekend)
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To: Marius3188
While keeping a friendly attitude towards its neighbours, they should start surveying ways to counter these new forms of war which are not different from the ones taught by Sun Tzu in his Art of War over 2000 years ago

Why is so much credence given to Sun Tzu? For thousands of years the Chinese spent their time warring within China. They couldn’t be bothered with the barbarians outside the Chinese realm other than to receive ambassadors who were to give tribute and kowtow before the Emperor. The Mongols kicked their asses in no time. Did Ghinghis Khan carry around a copy of, “The Art of War?” All the Chinese in China couldn’t remove the colonial European fleets. What happened to their supernatural oriental invincible warriors?

I recall the manual showing the Emperor how a disciplined army is made. He used court women at which he barked out dismounted drill commands. One laughed. He had her immediately executed. For the rest of the drill the remaining women followed orders. He told the Emperor these women were ready to fight to their death. This is his proof of a way to make an army?

Nicolli Machiavelli also wrote a book called the “Art of War.” He had no faith in command by fear. He recommended the leaders to recruit strong men from the countryside, farmers. City dwellers who were accustomed to leisure could best be used mounted on horses. Machiavelli analyzed the best practices of the Romans and offer modern insight to polish his views. Napoleon carried a copy with him constantly.

Why do authors from the Orient who think in non-western logic get too much lavish praise by the press and Western thinkers like Machiavelli get derided?

7 posted on 04/20/2006 7:13:14 PM PDT by LoneRangerMassachusetts (Illegal Aliens will take down the Democrats and Republicans and give rise a new American party)
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To: Marius3188

Also, the Kunming - Bangkok leg of the A3 Asian Highway will be completed in a few weeks. Of course, the Thai businessmen and UN ADB wonks think it's really neat because it will supposedly help "develop" Yunnan. Only "warmongers" like me dare to consider the obvious military utility of such a superhighway.


8 posted on 04/20/2006 7:25:31 PM PDT by GOP_1900AD (Stomping on "PC," destroying the Left, and smoking out faux "conservatives" - Take Back The GOP!)
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To: LoneRangerMassachusetts

Ghengis Khan was well versed in the Art of War by Sun Tzu. They won because China was weak, same goes with the western invasions. The fact is, China didn't practice the Art of War, which means, when you're stronger, you attack others - but that may change in the future.


9 posted on 04/21/2006 8:19:52 AM PDT by pganini
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To: Jeff Head; DarkWaters; Paul Ross

While the world sleeps, a new invasion route is opened ....


10 posted on 06/06/2006 12:56:53 PM PDT by GOP_1900AD (Stomping on "PC," destroying the Left, and smoking out faux "conservatives" - Take Back The GOP!)
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To: GOP_1900AD; tallhappy; Dr. Marten; Jeff Head; Travis McGee; ALOHA RONNIE; maui_hawaii; ...
This deserves emphasis:

Terrorism is of course mentioned the most often, but it is just one of the many ways of unconventional warfare identified by Unrestricted Warfare. To cite a few others:

* financial warfare. Financial war is a form of non-military warfare which is just as terribly destructive as a bloody war, but in which no blood is actually shed.

* psychological warfare (spreading rumours to intimidate the enemy and break down his will);

* smuggling warfare (throwing markets into confusion and attacking economic order);

* media warfare (manipulating what people see and hear in order to lead public opinion along);

* drug warfare (obtaining sudden and huge illicit profits by spreading disaster in other countries);

* network warfare (venturing out in secret and concealing one's identity in a type of warfare that is virtually impossible to guard against);

* technological warfare (creating monopolies by setting standards independently);

* fabrication warfare (presenting a counterfeit appearance of real strength before the eyes of the enemy);

* resources warfare (grabbing riches by plundering stores of resources);

* economic aid warfare (bestowing favour in the open and contriving to control matters in secret);

* cultural warfare (leading cultural trends along in order to assimilate those with different views);

* international law warfare (seizing the earliest opportunity to set up regulations);

* environmental warfare (weakening a rival nation by despoiling natural environment).

How explicit do the Chi-Comms in Beijing have to be that their policies are fully embracing the outlines of Unrestricted Warfare...and they are following this blueprint of covert warfare?

Isn't it interesting that outgoing Treasury Secretary Snowe refused point-blank to acknowledge the currency manipulation as "intentional" because of recent small price movements (still obviously highly managed)...when the evidence of INTENT is spelled out right here.

This Administration's policies increasingly look like a repeat of Neville Chamberlain's Appeasement to me. Refusing to acknowledge aggression...no matter how point-blank...

At the current rate of deluded wishful-thinking warping rational adult judgment...it is inevitable that the U.S. political establishment will not respond until it is too late, and only then SHeeple desperately try to clean house and put into power hard-core patriots again...but will find the U.S. industrial and military infrastructure crippled beyond repair, and technology and resource advantages hopelessly compromised to China.

11 posted on 06/07/2006 8:18:44 AM PDT by Paul Ross (We cannot be for lawful ordinances and for an alien conspiracy at one and the same moment.-Cicero)
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To: Paul Ross
Many very good points made. Your closing statements in post 11 unfortunately, points to State Department policies set in concrete. Only viewed from a one world government can this stuff make any sense to me. So many deep issues, so many I do not well understand but believe to have at least a sliver of, never seem to change, at least in recent times, after the liberal establishment took over DC to a large extent.
Today I feel like a real knuckle-dragger, brains in a fog due to a bit to much physical labor yesterday at my new job at Home Depot in garden dept.. So I will pass on trying to fire up any neuron nets. I'll just read the wisdom of some who know the score.
12 posted on 06/07/2006 8:47:44 AM PDT by Marine_Uncle (Honor must be earned)
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To: Marius3188; Jeff Head
"The 'beyond Taiwan policy' [mentioned in the first part of this article] brings to my mind the railway line scheduled to reach Lhasa, the Tibetan capital in July 2006."

I wonder how long before it reaches Tehran?

13 posted on 06/07/2006 8:51:47 AM PDT by editor-surveyor (Atheist and Fool are synonyms; Evolution is where fools hide from the sunrise)
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