• Cold War Mentality, Cold War Foreign Policy, and Cold War Arms Race

    From ltlee1@21:1/5 to All on Fri Sep 15 06:50:19 2023
    -------------------------------------------------------------
    The Case for Urgency Against China
    Washington has spent years avoiding hard decisions; addressing the threat from China will necessitate a substantial reallocation of resources within the defense budget.
    by Alexander Velez-Green

    ... China’s increasingly capable threat sensors and post-processing capabilities, airborne early warning and control (AEW&C) aircraft, stealth fighters, and long-range air-to-air missiles might even allow Chinese air forces to see and shoot U.S.
    aircraft first effectively. U.S. forces might respond by taking advantage of better pilots, innovative concepts like “pulsed airpower,” or allied contributions like Australia’s E-7 Wedgetails, but they will still be limited by the aging U.S. AEW&C
    fleet, insufficiently long-range air-to-air missiles, and munitions shortfalls, especially at standoff ranges.

    America’s navy is also in trouble. China’s navy is the largest in the world and rapidly growing, with highly capable surface combatants and large fleets of paramilitary and civilian vessels available for amphibious operations, counter-targeting, and
    targeting. At the same time, China’s dense network of sensors and strike assets will make it harder for U.S. aircraft carriers and other ships to operate near Taiwan, limiting their ability to help blunt a Chinese fait accompli. U.S. submarine forces
    are still better than their Chinese counterparts. Still, they may be unable to fully capitalize on their qualitative advantage due to potential torpedo shortfalls and constraints on the number of attack submarines in the Indo-Pacific, especially in the
    initial period of war. Other munitions shortfalls and the ongoing retirement of guided-missile cruisers, guided-missile submarines, and attack submarines will further limit the Navy’s ability to deliver sustained firepower against Chinese targets. And
    things will get worse before they get better, with the Navy expected to shrink in the near term and recent testimony suggesting it may still struggle to resource a Taiwan fight in subsequent years.

    Things do not get easier outside of the air and naval domains. Space is widely recognized as a vital warfighting domain. However, according to public testimony, U.S. military space architecture is not resilient enough for a wartime environment and
    probably will not be until at least 2026. U.S. forces reportedly face a similar deficit in electronic warfare.
    ...
    All the while, the nuclear shadow is darkening. China is investing heavily in its nuclear forces, including theater nuclear forces that can be used for operational effect. This will exacerbate the operational difficulties facing U.S. forces.
    ...
    ------------------------------------------------------------- https://nationalinterest.org/feature/case-urgency-against-china-206790

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    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From ltlee1@21:1/5 to All on Sat Sep 16 06:28:26 2023
    On Friday, September 15, 2023 at 9:50:21 AM UTC-4, ltlee1 wrote:
    -------------------------------------------------------------
    The Case for Urgency Against China
    Washington has spent years avoiding hard decisions; addressing the threat from China will necessitate a substantial reallocation of resources within the defense budget.
    by Alexander Velez-Green

    ... China’s increasingly capable threat sensors and post-processing capabilities, airborne early warning and control (AEW&C) aircraft, stealth fighters, and long-range air-to-air missiles might even allow Chinese air forces to see and shoot U.S.
    aircraft first effectively. U.S. forces might respond by taking advantage of better pilots, innovative concepts like “pulsed airpower,” or allied contributions like Australia’s E-7 Wedgetails, but they will still be limited by the aging U.S. AEW&C
    fleet, insufficiently long-range air-to-air missiles, and munitions shortfalls, especially at standoff ranges.

    America’s navy is also in trouble. China’s navy is the largest in the world and rapidly growing, with highly capable surface combatants and large fleets of paramilitary and civilian vessels available for amphibious operations, counter-targeting,
    and targeting. At the same time, China’s dense network of sensors and strike assets will make it harder for U.S. aircraft carriers and other ships to operate near Taiwan, limiting their ability to help blunt a Chinese fait accompli. U.S. submarine
    forces are still better than their Chinese counterparts. Still, they may be unable to fully capitalize on their qualitative advantage due to potential torpedo shortfalls and constraints on the number of attack submarines in the Indo-Pacific, especially
    in the initial period of war. Other munitions shortfalls and the ongoing retirement of guided-missile cruisers, guided-missile submarines, and attack submarines will further limit the Navy’s ability to deliver sustained firepower against Chinese
    targets. And things will get worse before they get better, with the Navy expected to shrink in the near term and recent testimony suggesting it may still struggle to resource a Taiwan fight in subsequent years.

    Things do not get easier outside of the air and naval domains. Space is widely recognized as a vital warfighting domain. However, according to public testimony, U.S. military space architecture is not resilient enough for a wartime environment and
    probably will not be until at least 2026. U.S. forces reportedly face a similar deficit in electronic warfare.
    ...
    All the while, the nuclear shadow is darkening. China is investing heavily in its nuclear forces, including theater nuclear forces that can be used for operational effect. This will exacerbate the operational difficulties facing U.S. forces.
    ...
    ------------------------------------------------------------- https://nationalinterest.org/feature/case-urgency-against-china-206790

    The Gun and Butter Question:
    Given its trillion dollar interest burden, can the US increase its military budget ?


    For Global Military Expenditure 1949 to 2020 https://www.investopedia.com/thmb/iATgC6v8naFRQLEbOOSb5F7szg0=/750x0/filters:no_upscale():max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():format(webp)/military-expenditure-total-bbce1d9cdf114a4b8e921193158df794.png

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)