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    Creepy Ass Cracka & Site Owner Ryan Ruck's Avatar
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    Default War With China?

    War With China?
    Illusions about the pacifying effects of trade go back more than a century.

    October 19, 2011

    ‘The two economies [the United States and China] are linked with each other and with the rest of the world in a manner unparalleled in history. This mutual dependence can be an immensely powerful deterrent, in effect a form of mutually assured economic destruction.” So concluded the RAND Corporation in a study released last week.

    A hundred years ago Norman Angell came to precisely the same conclusion. In his 1910 book The Great Illusion: A Study of the Relation of Military Power in Nations to Their Economic and Social Advantage, Angell outlined a world where the profitable pursuit of war is impossible because of the interdependence of national economies and the means of modern quick communications. Therefore, war had become “economically and socially futile.” Angell’s book was a tremendous bestseller and fed a widespread turn-of-the-century belief that growing world trade — it was the first era of globalization — would clearly lead to a hundred-year extension of the Pax Britannica.

    Angell’s utopian dream of universal peace through greater economic integration took hold in both Britain and the United States, despite the obvious evidence that the world was becoming progressively more dangerous. Growing global tensions were a result of the diplomatic failure of the established powers to make room at the table for two burgeoning new powers — Germany and Japan — that were pushing themselves onto the global stage. Japan, for instance, announced its arrival as a world power by annihilating the Russian navy. In fact it did so a few years before Mr. Angell published The Great Illusion. Germany, in an eerie similarity to what we are witnessing with the rapid growth of the Chinese navy, challenged the continuance of the general peace at the beginning of the 20th century by driving forward with a naval program aimed at contesting Britain’s command of the seas, something Britain naturally viewed as a mortal threat.

    In the end, Angell’s theory of “peace through economic integration” was exploded by Europe’s first suicide attempt in 1914. Still, utopian hopes and myths die hard. The dramatic evidence provided by the millions killed in World War I that Angell’s theory was a complete and utter failure did not stop him from releasing a new version of The Great Illusion in 1933, just in time for Hitler’s rise. Another version was published in 1938, on the very eve of World War II. Despite Angell’s unbelievably bad timing and the vacuity of his theories on political economy, he was still awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1933, primarily because of The Great Illusion.

    RAND’s study concludes: “We do not believe a China–U.S. military conflict to be probable.” Possibly cognizant of how economic integration has disastrously failed to stop previous conflicts, RAND qualifies its belief in a lasting peace built on overlapping economic interests by stating that its view is based on the judgment that the “United States will retain the capacity to deter behavior that could lead to a clash.” In other words, shared economic interests will guarantee the peace just as long as they are backed up by America’s overwhelming military might.

    Granted, a war with China does not appear on the immediate horizon. Unfortunately, there are too many possible flashpoints for the United States to become complacent. A nuclear-armed North Korea could collapse, or it could lash out so as to create a regional apocalypse before its final demise. Either event would draw both the United States and China into an unpredictable dynamic in which having a powerful American military force on hand remains the best guarantee of keeping or rebuilding the peace. Moreover, despite decades of walking a diplomatic tightrope, the Taiwan situation remains unstable and dangerous, as do increasing Sino-Japanese tensions over resource rights, increased military activity in the South China Sea, and a growing strategic rivalry with India.

    The rise of new powers always leads to a dangerous time in international politics. It does not necessarily have to lead to violence. For instance, the dominant power of the 19th century, Britain, was able to make room for America’s post–Civil War expansion without a major shooting war between the two. Still, throughout this time Britain maintained an unrivaled military supremacy.

    With a little luck and a lot of skill, Chinese and American diplomats will peacefully navigate the predictably treacherous waters ahead. In doing so, however, we must avoid putting too much faith in the chimera of an enduring peace built solely on ever greater economic integration. Economic contacts will, in time, help build the common bonds of trust that will allow disputes to be handled peacefully. In the meantime, it is worth remembering that the Pax Americana was not kept for five decades through our economic integration with the Soviets. It was kept by maintaining a powerful military that forced the Soviets to take a long contemplative pause before engaging in any military action.

    Jim Lacey is professor of strategic studies at the Marine Corps War College. He is the author of the recently released The First Clash and Keep from All Thoughtful Men. The opinions in this article are entirely his own and do not represent those of the Department of Defense or any of its members.

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    Default Re: War With China?

    China's Hu urges navy to prepare for combat





    Chinese President Hu Jintao on Tuesday urged the navy to prepare for military combat, amid growing regional tensions over maritime disputes and a US campaign to assert itself as a Pacific power.

    The navy should "accelerate its transformation and modernisation in a sturdy way, and make extended preparations for military combat in order to make greater contributions to safeguard national security," he said.

    Addressing the powerful Central Military Commission, Hu said: "Our work must closely encircle the main theme of national defence and military building."

    His comments, which were posted in a statement on a government website, come as the United States and Beijing's neighbours have expressed concerns over its naval ambitions, particularly in the South China Sea.

    Several Asian nations have competing claims over parts of the South China Sea, believed to encompass huge oil and gas reserves, while China claims it all. One-third of global seaborne trade passes through the region.

    Vietnam and the Philippines have accused Chinese forces of increasing aggression there.

    In a translation of Hu's comments, the official Xinhua news agency quoted the president as saying China's navy should "make extended preparations for warfare."

    The Pentagon however downplayed Hu's speech, saying that Beijing had the right to develop its military, although it should do so transparently.

    "They have a right to develop military capabilities and to plan, just as we do," said Pentagon spokesman George Little, but he added, "We have repeatedly called for transparency from the Chinese and that's part of the relationship we're continuing to build with the Chinese military."

    "Nobody's looking for a scrap here," insisted another spokesman, Admiral John Kirby. "Certainly we wouldn't begrudge any other nation the opportunity, the right to develop naval forces to be ready.

    "Our naval forces are ready and they'll stay ready."

    State Department spokesman Mark Toner said: "We want to see stronger military-to-military ties with China and we want to see greater transparency. That helps answer questions we might have about Chinese intentions."

    Hu's announcement comes in the wake of trips to Asia by several senior US officials, including President Barack Obama, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

    US undersecretary of defence Michelle Flournoy is due to meet in Beijing with her Chinese counterparts on Wednesday for military-to-military talks.

    Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao last month warned against interference by "external forces" in regional territorial disputes including those in the South China Sea.

    And China said late last month it would conduct naval exercises in the Pacific Ocean, after Obama, who has dubbed himself America's first Pacific president, said the US would deploy up to 2,500 Marines to Australia.

    China's People's Liberation Army, the largest military in the world, is primarily a land force, but its navy is playing an increasingly important role as Beijing grows more assertive about its territorial claims.

    Earlier this year, the Pentagon warned that Beijing was increasingly focused on its naval power and had invested in high-tech weaponry that would extend its reach in the Pacific and beyond.

    China's first aircraft carrier began its second sea trial last week after undergoing refurbishments and testing, the government said.

    The 300-metre (990-foot) ship, a refitted former Soviet carrier, underwent five days of trials in August that sparked international concern about China's widening naval reach.

    Beijing only confirmed this year that it was revamping the old Soviet ship and has repeatedly insisted that the carrier poses no threat to its neighbours and will be used mainly for training and research purposes.

    But the August sea trials were met with concern from regional powers including Japan and the United States, which called on Beijing to explain why it needs an aircraft carrier.

    China, which publicly announced around 50 separate naval exercises in the seas off its coast over the past two years -- usually after the event -- says its military is only focused on defending the country's territory.

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    Default Re: War With China?

    The Chinese have predicted they will be at war with us by 2015. They are attempting to fulfil their own "prophecy".

    Folks, we are going to have nukes fly if they get into it with us.

    Be prepared.
    Libertatem Prius!


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    Default Re: War With China?

    I again agree with Rick on this subject. Maybe I spend to much time reading the posts on this board, but I fully think the 2015 date may well be true. We seem to have already lost the economoic war. Transpose slanted eyes to "Red Dawn" and wait for the sthtf.

    On a side note, I wonder if it is too early to create a code so as to communicate with other members of the TAA when the day comes?
    "Still waitin on the Judgement Day"

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    Default Re: War With China?

    Now that is a brilliant idea Luke.

    Why didn't anyone else think of that?

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    Super Moderator and PHILanthropist Extraordinaire Phil Fiord's Avatar
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    Default Re: War With China?

    Interesting idea.

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    Default Re: War With China?

    China's Hu Reportedly Tells Navy to Get Ready for Military Combat


    Published December 13, 2011
    | FoxNews.com




    • AP
      Jan. 19: China's President Hu Jintao speaks before offering a toast during a State Dinner hosted by President Obama and first lady Michelle Obama in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington.


    As tensions grow over local maritime disputes and U.S. influence in the South China Sea, China’s president said Tuesday that its navy should “make extended preparations for military combat,” the AFP reported.
    President Hu Jintao told the Central Military Commission its navy should modernize in the interest of national security.


    The Chinese navy has grown in recent years from a coastal protection force to one spanning the globe, sending ships as far as the Caribbean on goodwill missions and into the Mediterranean to escort vessels evacuating Chinese citizens from the fighting in Libya.



    China said it is considering an offer from the Seychelles to host Chinese naval ships in the Indian Ocean island nation, highlighting the increasing global reach of a navy that recently launched its first aircraft carrier.


    The navy also began sea trials in August for its first aircraft carrier, the former Soviet Varyag, towed from Ukraine in 1998 minus its engines, weaponry and navigation systems. China says the carrier is intended for research and training, leading to speculation that it plans to build future copies.


    China's military expansion and strong assertions of claims to disputed territory have raised regional concerns, prompting many of China's neighbors to strengthen ties with the U.S. military that has traditionally predominated in the Asia Pacific.


    While Beijing has tried to assuage those concerns, it has also asserted its claims with patrols and other physical displays, and on Tuesday dispatched its largest coast guard cutter to the East China Sea.


    The 322-foot Haijian will visit Chinese rock outcroppings as well as a gas field claimed by China and Japan. There was no indication it planned to visit other islands that Japan controls but China claims.


    George Little, a Pentagon spokesman, downplayed Hu’s comments, saying China has the right to develop its military, according to the report. But he went on to say China should be transparent in the process.


    "We have repeatedly called for transparency from the Chinese and that's part of the relationship we're continuing to build with the Chinese military," Little said, according to the report.




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    Super Moderator and PHILanthropist Extraordinaire Phil Fiord's Avatar
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    Default Re: War With China?

    Remember when China said the Varyag was a purchase to become a casino? We all agreed that was a lie and what do you know.....

    http://www.foxnews.com/world/2011/12...rrier-on-move/

    Satellite Takes Picture of Chinese Carrier on the Move


    Published December 14, 2011 | FoxNews.com



    DigitalGlobe Inc., a commercial satellite company, said Wednesday that it took a photograph of China’s first aircraft carrier during a sea trial in the Yellow Sea, off the Chinese coast.


    The Pentagon did not confirm the image, but Stephen Wood, the satellite company’s director, said he’s confident about the Dec. 8 photograph due to the carrier’s location.
    Although China insists the carrier is intended for research and training, its use has raised concern about the country’s military strength and its increasingly assertive claims over disputed territory.


    While the development of carriers is driven largely by bragging rights and national prestige, China's naval ambitions have been brought into focus with its claims to disputed territory surrounding Taiwan and in the South China Sea.
    Taiwan, the self-governing island democracy claimed by China as its own, has responded to the growing Chinese threat by developing missiles capable of striking carriers at sea. An illustration at a display Wednesday of military technology in the capital Taipei showed a Hsiung Feng III missile hitting a carrier that was a dead ringer for the former Varyag.


    Over the past year, China has seen a flare-up in spats with Japan, the Philippines and Vietnam and had its relations strained with South Korea -- all of which have sought support from Washington, long the pre-eminent naval power in Asia.


    China defends its carrier program by saying it is the only permanent member of the United Nations Security Council that has not developed such vessels and that it has a huge coastline and vast maritime assets to defend. Beijing has also said its carriers would be employed in international humanitarian efforts, although the ex-Varyag's ski jump-style flight deck severely limits the loads its planes can carry.
    As the world's second-largest economy, China says it lags behind smaller nations such as Thailand and Brazil, as well as regional rival India, which have purchased carriers from abroad.


    While Chinese carriers could challenge U.S. naval supremacy in Asia, China still has far to go in bringing such systems into play, experts said. The U.S. operates 11 aircraft carrier battle groups and its carriers are far bigger and more advanced.
    The former Soviet Union started building the carrier, which it called the Varyag, but never finished it. When the Soviet Union collapsed, the carrier ended up in the hands of the Ukraine, a former Soviet republic.


    China bought the ship from the Ukraine in 1998 and spent years refurbishing it. It had no engines, weaponry or navigation systems when China acquired it.


    Beijing is believed to be years away from being able to launch and recover aircraft from it as part of a carrier battle group.


    The Associated Press contributed to this report.




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    Default Re: War With China?

    Definitely the Varyag, or whatever the Chinese have decided to rename her. Those deck markings are pretty unique.

    I don't claim to be a naval expert but, if I were to guess from the bow wake, it looks like it is moving at a pretty good clip.

    And I suspect that Fox piece is way off the mark with the statement that China is years from launching and trapping aircraft from it. That is almost a laughable statement. Why else would they launch it now unless they were ready for near term air operations. At the very least they will be operating helos from it.

    Let's not forget, satellite and ground pictures have been taken of on land training strips. Granted, they don't offer the exact experience of carrier landings such as sea chop, etc. but it gives them some form of practice.

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    Super Moderator and PHILanthropist Extraordinaire Phil Fiord's Avatar
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    Default Re: War With China?

    If my memory serves, it was you Ryan who posted many years back on this ship being claimed as a future Casino. We all agreed it was crap.

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    Default Re: War With China?

    Ha! Might have been.

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    Default Re: War With China?

    Here are your posts from 2005/2006 on the ACC, Ryan. Memory served. Note that the 2nd and 3rd links below are some of the earliest threads on TAA.

    http://www.transasianaxis.com/vb/sho...94&postcount=1

    http://www.transasianaxis.com/vb/sho...55&postcount=1

    http://www.transasianaxis.com/vb/sho...63&postcount=1

    I think you may have posted even earlier than 2005 over on AN regarding this topic.
    Last edited by Phil Fiord; December 15th, 2011 at 03:47.

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    Default Re: War With China?

    http://communities.anomalies.net/for...rue#Post214253

    There. 6/30/2005. In the old "China Threat" thread.

    Re: The China Threat
    Ryan Ruck

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    China Secretly Constructing an Aircraft Carrier
    quote:

    Hong Kong Economic Daily(Jing-ji-ri-bao) reports
    2005/06/30

    China recently completed the final design for an Chinese aircraft carrier, and start in early August to construct it in secret at Jiang-nan Shipyard, Zhang-xing Island near Shanghai, reported the June 29th issue of Hong Kong Economic Daily(Jing-ji-ri-bao,) quoting (Chinese) high-level military sources.

    Costing 3 billion yuan(390 million dollars), which takes up 3% of Chinese military budget, this carrier, due to be completed next year if everything goes well, has top speed 30 knots per hour and its maximal displacement is 78,000 ton. It is equipped with Russian engines and radars.

    It will carry 54 fighter planes and 13 anti-submarine helicopters, and the introduction of latest Russian fighters(Su-33) is also in the works. When it would be in service in 2008, it is expected to boost Chinese naval strength.

    The paper reports, "Zhang Guang-qin, vice minister of the Commission of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense, denied the rumor that a carrier is under construction. However, he emphasized it is the sacred duty of the Chinese navy to safeguard the country's sovereignty of territorial waters. It is in this context which they go for the construction of the carrier."

    (Song Ui-dal, reporting from Hong Kong)

    They will start building in August and finish in a year!! If this is true, that is unbelievable build time for an aircraft carrier! Imagine one 78k ton carrier per year at just this one shipyard!! I guess it shouldn't be so surprising though considering how fast they are building other ships (e.g. the previously mentioned stealth catamaran). And, all for just $390 million!

    I wonder though, what about that report which said they already had 3 other carriers under construction in covered gravings?

    In addition to that, Jeff Head posted an updated photo of the Varyag to that above linked thread:


    She sure is cleaning up real nice! She'll be ready for duty in no time… Uh… Casino duty that is…






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    Default Re: War With China?

    See. China lied. Big surprise.

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    Default Re: War With China?

    Well, that sure seems like an eternity ago!

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    Default Re: War With China?

    You know.... Fox is wrong. If *I* had an aircraft carrier, I'd be having planes land within a week.
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    At least there aren't planes on deck (yet): Satellite captures first picture of China’s aircraft carrier which it claimed is just for ‘research’

    By Daily Mail Reporter

    Last updated at 4:48 PM on 15th December 2011


    A satellite photo captured China's first ever aircraft carrier on the Chinese coast's Yellow Sea Thursday by a commercial U.S. satellite company.

    The aircraft carrier has generated intense international interest because of the open-ended possibilities the country may have for it as a future military power.

    Little on the ship had been said by China after purchasing it from Ukraine in 1998, spending years refurbishing it from one with no engines, weaponry or navigation systems, to one seen sailing last week.


    Caught: The Chinese aircraft carrier Varyag was seen sailing the Yellow Sea approximately 100 kilometers south-southeast of the port of Dalian, China by a commercial satellite image last week


    A DigitalGlobe analyst says they found the image Tuesday while searching through their satellite's photos.

    Stephen Wood, director of DigitalGlobe's analysis center, said he's confident the ship is the Chinese carrier because of the location and date of the photo. The carrier was on a sea trial at the time.

    More...


    China has said the carrier is intended for research and training, which has led to speculation that it plans to build future copies.

    The former Soviet Union was the first to start building the carrier, which it called the Varyag, but never finished it.


    Intentions: China has said the carrier is intended for research and training purposes but it could be operating for their Navy by the end of next year according to the U.S.

    GROWING MILITARY EFFORT

    Since January of 2011, China:

    • Sent its first aircraft carrier, the Varyag, on a maiden trial
    • Is developing an anti-ship ballistic missile
    • Tested the latest model of its next-generation fighter jet

    Past two years:
    China publicly announced around 50 separate naval exercises in the seas off its coast -- usually after the event

    In November of 2007:

    Dozen of warships of the South China Sea Fleet were deployed in competitive training to improve combat capability of the fleet

    In January of 2007:

    China demonstrated its satellite-killing capacity by firing a ballistic missile that destroyed an obsolete Chinese weather satellite
    When the Soviet Union collapsed, it ended up in the hands of Ukraine, a former Soviet republic who then sold it to China.

    China initially said little about its plans for the carrier but has been more open in recent years, said Bonnie S. Glaser, a China expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

    'It wasn't until the Chinese actually announced they were sending it out on a trial run they admitted, `Yes, we are actually launching a carrier,'' she said.

    China publicly announced two sea trials for the carrier that occurred this year, she said.

    The carrier's progress is in line with the U.S. military's expectations, said Cmdr. Leslie Hull-Ryde, a Defense Department spokeswoman.

    A Defense Department report to Congress this year said the carrier could become operationally available to the Chinese navy by the end of next year but without aircraft.

    'From that point, it will take several additional years before the carrier has an operationally viable air group,' Hull-Ryde said in an email.
    She declined to comment on the DigitalGlobe photo, saying it was an intelligence matter.

    DigitalGlobe, based in Longmont, Colo., sells satellite imagery and analysis to clients that include the U.S. military, emergency response agencies and private companies. DigitalGlobe has three orbiting satellites and a fourth is under construction.


    Timeline: The Chinese Navy, seen attending the sendoff of a separate missile destroyer in 2007, is said to be in line with the U.S. military's expectations

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    Default Re: War With China?

    Of course there are no planes "on deck". They have several below deck. I'd bet a lot of money on that one.

    Unless they are "concerned" they might sink or something. I have my doubts though.

    So, I'm betting they have probably at least 10 a/c under there to protect the carrier group. I would have a full complement with pilots.
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    Default Re: War With China?

    Companion Threads:


    China's spies are catching up

    David Wise, New York Times, Updated: December 12, 2011 11:33 IST



    In 1995, a middle-aged Chinese man walked into a C.I.A. station in Southeast Asia and offered up a trove of secret Chinese documents. Among them was a file containing the top-secret design of the American W-88 nuclear warhead that sits atop the missiles carried by Trident submarines.

    He told a story to the C.I.A. that was so bizarre it might just be true. He said that he worked in China's nuclear program and had access to the archive where classified documents were stored. He went there after hours one night, scooped up hundreds of documents and stuffed them into a duffel bag, which he then tossed out a second-story window to evade security guards. Unfortunately, the bag broke and the papers scattered.

    Outside, he collected the files and stuffed them back into the torn bag. Although many of the documents were of interest for their intelligence content, it was the one about the W-88 that roiled American counterintelligence most because it contained highly classified details about a cutting-edge warhead design.

    The United States had been producing small nuclear warheads for decades, and the Chinese were desperate to find out how to build miniaturized warheads themselves. China's military was, and still is, playing catch-up to the United States.

    China's success in obtaining the secret design of the W-88 is the most dramatic example of a fact that United States counterintelligence agencies have been slow to recognize: just as China has become a global economic power, it has developed a world-class espionage service - one that rivals the C.I.A.

    During the cold war, dozens of counterintelligence agents in the F.B.I. and the C.I.A. pursued Soviet and then Russian spies. The K.G.B. was seen as the enemy; China took a back seat. Only a handful of F.B.I. agents specialized in Chinese spy cases, and their work was not regarded as career-enhancing. Washington's ongoing failure to make Chinese espionage a priority has allowed China to score a number of successes in its espionage efforts against the United States.

    China's foreign intelligence service and its military intelligence agency actively spy on the American defense industry, our nuclear weapons labs, Silicon Valley, our intelligence agencies and other sensitive targets.

    In January, when Robert M. Gates, then the defense secretary, was visiting China, Beijing unveiled a stealth fighter jet, the J-20. The disclosure demonstrated that China had achieved a stealth capability, allowing it to conceal its planes, ships and missiles from radar - similar to the American stealth technology that China has been seeking to acquire by clandestine means for years.

    Later that month, an engineer who worked on the B-2 stealth bomber for Northrop Grumman was sentenced to 32 years in prison for passing defense secrets to China. In exchange for more than $100,000, he had helped design a stealth exhaust system for China's cruise missiles to make it difficult to detect and destroy them.

    And in August, reports attributed to American intelligence officials asserted that Pakistan had allowed Chinese experts to inspect the remains of the stealth helicopter that crashed during the May mission to kill Osama bin Laden. Although Pakistan and China denied the reports, Beijing would have a great interest in examining the tail of the Black Hawk helicopter, the part of the aircraft that was not destroyed by the Navy Seals team, to learn more secret details of American stealth technology.

    Meanwhile, the mystery of the leaked W-88 warhead design remains unsolved. At first, the American government suspected that Wen Ho Lee, a Los Alamos nuclear scientist, had leaked the W-88, but it produced no evidence that he had done so. He was held in solitary confinement for nine months, eventually pleaded guilty to one count of mishandling classified information and won an extraordinary apology from the federal judge who presided over the case.

    Misled by the Energy Department, the F.B.I. had chased the wrong person for three years. Finally, in 1999, Robert Bryant, then the bureau's deputy director, enlisted Stephen Dillard, a veteran counterintelligence agent, to head a major investigation of how China had acquired the design of the W-88.

    The inquiry was led by the F.B.I. and run by a task force of 300 investigators from 11 federal agencies, including the Defense Department, the C.I.A., the National Security Agency and the Defense Intelligence Agency. On Sept. 11, 2001, some of the investigators were killed when American Airlines Flight 77 was flown by terrorists into the Pentagon.

    But the investigation went on. Mr. Dillard's task force, operating out of public view, looked at the nuclear weapons laboratories, government agencies and defense contractors in California and several other states who had manufactured parts of the warhead. The F.B.I. interviewed the walk-in, who was by now living in the United States, but he could shed no light on the source of the document.

    Finally, after four years, the investigation ended with American intelligence agencies no closer to knowing how China obtained the secret design of the nuclear warhead. The answer remains locked up in Beijing.

    More than a decade later, China's spies continue to conduct espionage against military targets. Last year, a Pentagon official was sentenced to prison, the last of 10 people rounded up by the F.B.I., all members of a loosely connected Chinese spy network on the West and East Coasts that was run by Lin Hong, a spymaster in Beijing. The data that made its way to China included information on the Navy's Quiet Electric Drive, designed to make submarines harder to detect, the B-1 bomber and projected American arms sales to Taiwan.

    China has even penetrated the F.B.I. In 2003, Katrina Leung, an F.B.I. informant for two decades, was found to be working as a double agent for Beijing. Astonishingly, the two top F.B.I. agents in California responsible for Chinese counterintelligence were having affairs with Ms. Leung at the same time, allowing her to help herself to classified documents that were brought to her home by one of the agents.

    China's success in stealing American secrets will provide a continuing challenge to the spy catchers. And Washington's counterintelligence agents, accustomed to the comfortable parameters of the cold war and more recent battles against Al Qaeda, must rethink their priorities and shift their focus, resources and energy eastward to counter China's spies.

    If not, more secrets like the W-88 nuclear warhead will continue to find their way to Beijing.

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    Nikita Khrushchev: "We will bury you"
    "Your grandchildren will live under communism."
    “You Americans are so gullible.
    No, you won’t accept
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    outright, but we’ll keep feeding you small doses of
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    until you’ll finally wake up and find you already have communism.

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    ."
    We’ll so weaken your
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    until you’ll
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    like overripe fruit into our hands."



  20. #20
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    Default Re: War With China?

    China has even penetrated the F.B.I. In 2003, Katrina Leung, an F.B.I. informant for two decades, was found to be working as a double agent for Beijing. Astonishingly, the two top F.B.I. agents in California responsible for Chinese counterintelligence were having affairs with Ms. Leung at the same time, allowing her to help herself to classified documents that were brought to her home by one of the agents.
    Gives a whole new definition to the word "penetration" doesn't it?
    Libertatem Prius!


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