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ForeignPolicy

Pentagon Hyperventilates About China's Military 'Intentions'

By Amitabh Pal, The Progressive. Posted March 12, 2008.


A report accuses China of understating its military spending, which is a whopping one-fifteenth of the United States' defense budget.

The Pentagon is hyperventilating about China. It recently issued a report accusing China of understating its military spending and of not clearly stating its "intentions."

"China's military buildup has been characterized by opacity," David Sedney, deputy assistant defense secretary for East Asia, told reporters, and "by the inability of people in the region and around the world to really know what ties together the capabilities that China's acquiring with the intentions it has."

Excuse me while I laugh.

The proposed Bush military budget for the coming fiscal year is close to $600 billion. By some estimates, the United States is already spending close to a trillion dollars on defense if you take into account add-ons for Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as military-linked expenditure by other departments, plus debt incurred due to past Pentagon spending.

"Hardly anyone appreciates that the total amount of all defense-related spending greatly exceeds the amount budgeted for the Department of Defense," wrote Robert Higgs of the libertarian Independent Institute last March. "Indeed, it is roughly almost twice as large."

Higgs estimated the grand total as $935 billion, and Christopher Hellman of the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation calculated in October overall defense spending at $989 billion. No prizes for forecasting that we'll finally break the $1 trillion mark this year.

China, by comparison, is proposing to spend $59 billion in the coming year. And yet we have a Pentagon functionary complaining deadpan about its military intent.

True, China's double-digit defense spending increases are a matter of concern, primarily for its people, who get less in badly needed expenditure on basic needs such as health and education. (The United States under Bush has had sharp hikes in the budget, too, though, with a proposed 7.5 percent increase for the coming year.) And there's no denying that fact that China is a repressive regime with close ties to various other wretched governments, such as Burma and Sudan.

But this isn't a Manichean morality play. The U.S.-China rivalry is instead a strategic game about who can project power most forcefully. And, here, the United States has, by far, the upper hand. It has built a cordon around China with tens of thousands of troops in countries like Japan and South Korea to the east, close military partnerships with countries such as India and Indonesia to the south, and increasing ties to the "stans" in the West, including U.S. troops in Afghanistan. What would the U.S. reaction be if China had such close military ties with Canada and Mexico?

One factor primarily drives China's actions outside its neighborhood: commerce. This is the reason for the government developing ties with Latin American countries (an excuse for more fulmination among U.S. national security circles), and is also the explanation for its cozying up to the butchers of Sudan. Unlike the Mao era, when it tried to foment revolution throughout the developing world, China's is less an ideological campaign than a commercial one.

Ultimately, all the hyping about the Chinese threat tells us more about its arch-rival.

"Blinded by its own putative imperial glory and thinking of the world only in boxing-ring terms, Washington is the real wild card," John Feffer writes in The Nation. "In the contest for world leadership, the United States is the more likely one to come out swinging -- and end up knocking itself out."

Keep that in mind the next time you hear the security establishment frothing at the mouth about the supposed threat from the Middle Kingdom.

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: china, u.s., military build-up, afghanistan, pentagon



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China Would Be Wise
Posted by: rsmohio on Mar 12, 2008 11:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to concentrate on its economy in every aspect except the mulitary. The U.S. could not be foolish enough (one would hope) to launch any kind of military action against China. The only word that comes to mind when comtemplating that is 'suicide.' Looking at what happened in a country the size of Iraq should sober anyone who thinks action against China would be a sane idea. The sheer size and population of the country makes it a ridiculous thought. The Chinese should save some of their $59 billion and spend only what's necessary to maintain what they have. Don't take the imperial and militarist path that the United States is on. It could only lead to the ruination of their economy which is probably going to happen here eventually.

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» RE: China Would Be Wise Posted by: willymack
» RE: China Would Be Wise... Posted by: TagsNOLA
» RE: China Would Be Wise... Posted by: foreverhope
Let China alone, it will fend for itself.
Posted by: symcokid on Mar 12, 2008 4:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This USofA would be better served concentrating on it's own internal problems by leaving other countries alone. What are we proposing to do, station US troops in China too. We already have one million or so troops stationed in one hundred and twenty foreign countries as of this moment. I don't believe this world has ever seen such aggression as America is posing throughout the world, when will this madness end?

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Our coffins will come from China!
Posted by: carbon-based on Mar 17, 2008 7:23 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This story misses the real issues. $ comparisons are not entirely valid here. First, Chinas military dwarfs the US in sheer man power.. 7 million including paramilitary vs about 3 million for the US.

Much of our cost goes towards man power/mantenance..China's doesn't. They are building their military at a fairly rapid rate in numbers and capability - which is the real issue. And if the writer doesnt see that they have entirely missed the point.

Their trends are a reason for concern - much like Japans was before WW2. China has acquired an air craft carrier from russia - they have acquired some very capable destroyers and sub. They are developing their own classes of destroyers and subs. While it does not appear that they will eventually invade America, the concern is that they will be able to ultimately control the region and take us out - hence..war!

China is a very aggressive nation and is positioning itself as the major power in the region. They will ultimately block America from the region, leaving our allies exposed.- firing an anti satellite rocket is a huge provocation to other nations. Stealing US military technology is another major point of concern.

Look at the brutal regime they are..Tibet for example - and we are fueling this monster - our greed will ultimately be our downfall!

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