- ZHANJIANG, China -- When
the flagship of the U.S. Navy's 7th Fleet came into view on a recent Monday
afternoon, a Chinese naval band onshore quickly began playing as two rows
of Chinese sailors snapped into formation and workers hurriedly finished
tacking down a red carpet.
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- The command ship, the Blue Ridge, answered with music
from its own band and raised a Chinese flag below Old Glory.
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- But the most apt symbolism in the stagecraft of the ceremonial
visit came when the two navies staged a tug-of-war - evoking their emerging
competition in East Asia.
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- While the American military is consumed with wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan, global terrorism, and the threat of nuclear proliferation
in North Korea and Iran, China is presenting a new and strategically different
security concern to America in the western Pacific, as well as to Japan
and Taiwan, Pentagon and military officials say.
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- China, these officials say, has smartly analyzed the
strengths and weaknesses of the American military and focused its growing
defense spending on weapons systems that could exploit the perceived weaknesses
in case the United States ever needs to respond to fighting in Taiwan.
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- This rapid military modernization is the major reason
President George W. Bush has warned the European Union not to lift its
arms embargo against China.
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- A decade ago, U.S. military planners dismissed the threat
of a Chinese attack against Taiwan as a 160-kilometer infantry swim. Now,
the Pentagon believes that China has purchased or built enough amphibious
assault ships, submarines, fighter jets and short-range missiles to pose
an immediate threat to Taiwan and to any American force that might come
to Taiwan's aid.
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- Even the most hawkish officials at the Pentagon do not
believe China is preparing for an imminent invasion of Taiwan. Nor do analysts
believe China is any match for the United States military.
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- But as neighboring North Korea is erratically trying
to play the nuclear card, China is quietly challenging America's reach
in the western Pacific by concentrating strategically on conventional forces.
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- "They are building their force to deter and delay
our ability to intervene in a Taiwan crisis," said Eric McVadon, a
former military attachÈ at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing. "What
they have done is cleverly develop some capabilities that have the prospect
of attacking our niche vulnerabilities."
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- Japan, America's closest ally in East Asia, and China's
rival for regional dominance, is also watching China's buildup. Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi echoed Bush by warning Europe against removing the arms
embargo. A think tank affiliated with Japan's Defense Ministry criticized
China's increased military spending and warned it was rushing to prepare
for possible conflict with Taiwan - an assertion China sharply denied.
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- The growing friction between Japan and China, fueled
by rising nationalism in both countries, is just one of the political developments
exacerbating tensions in East Asia.
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- In March, China passed a controversial new "anti-secession"
law authorizing a military attack if top leaders believe Taiwan moves too
far toward independence - a move that brought hundreds of thousands of
people in Taiwan out in protest last month.
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- China's most recent military white paper also alarmed
U.S. policymakers because it mentioned the United States by name for the
first time since 1998. It stated that the American presence in the region
"complicated security factors."
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- China, meanwhile, blamed the United States and Japan
for meddling in a domestic Chinese matter when those two countries recently
issued a security statement that listed peace in Taiwan as a "common
strategic objective."
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- "The potential for a miscalculation or an incident
here has actually increased, just based on the rhetoric over the past six
months to a year," one U.S. intelligence analyst in Washington said.
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- At the welcoming ceremony for the Blue Ridge here at
the hometown of China's South Sea Fleet, the American commanding officer,
Captain J. Stephen Maynard, and his Chinese counterpart, Senior Captain
Wen Rulang, sidestepped questions about the anti-secession law and military
tensions.
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- Wen, Asked about China's military buildup and how America
should view it, praised the U.S. Navy as the most modern in the world.
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- "As for China," he said, "our desire is
to upgrade China's self-defense capabilities."
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- But in China's view, self-defense involves Taiwan, which
it regards as a breakaway province and which the United States has, by
treaty, suggested it would help defend. In 1996, when China fired missiles
in warning over the Taiwan Strait prior to Taiwanese elections, President
Bill Clinton responded by sending a battle group to a position near Taiwan.
Then, China could do nothing about it. Now, analysts say, it can.
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- In fact, U.S. carriers responding to a crisis would now
initially have to operate at least 800 kilometers, or 500 miles, from Taiwan,
which would reduce the number of jet fighter sorties they could launch
and cut their loiter time in international airspace near Taiwan.
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- This is because China now has a modernizing fleet of
submarines, including new Russian-made nuclear subs that can fire antiship
missiles from a submerged position. America would first need to subdue
these submarines before moving ships close to Taiwan.
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- China launched 13 attack submarines between 2002 and
2004, a period when it also built 23 ships that can ferry armored vehicles
and troops across the 160-kilometer-wide strip of water to Taiwan.
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- "Their amphibious assault ship building alone equals
the entire U.S. navy shipbuilding since 2002," said an intelligence
official in Washington. "It definitely represents a significant increase
in overall capacity."
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- In the worse-case scenario for a Taiwan crisis, any delay
in U.S. carriers reaching the island would mean that the United States
would initially depend on fighter jets and bombers stationed on Guam and
Okinawa, while Chinese forces could use their amphibious ships to traverse
the narrow Strait. Some U.S. military analysts believe China could now
defeat Taiwan before America could arrive at the scene.
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- Thom Shanker reported from Washington.
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