America and China are preparing for a war over Taiwan | The Economist


Marv Gandall
 

One of the most salient features of the war in Ukraine is how it is serving as a pretext for stagnant Western economies to boost growth through massive rearmament programs. The twin bogeys to secure public support for diverting social expenditures to military spending are Russia and China, each portrayed as aggressive authoritarian regimes threatening European and Asian democracies, beginning respectively with the conquest of Ukraine and Taiwan. 

The latest propaganda effort is this week’s cover story in the Economist, that reliable organ of ruling class opinion. Under the ominous heading of "America and China are preparing for a war over Taiwan” and an exhaustive examination of the military planning on both sides, it calculates the odds of a conventional war over Taiwan spiralling into a nuclear exchange. "Both sides fear that time is running out: America worries that China’s armed forces may soon become too strong to deter, while China frets that the prospect of peaceful reunification is evaporating”, it says. 

As during the Cold War with the Soviets, the Economist counsels that the best means of averting catastrophe is through an arms build-up sufficient to deter China from invading the island. “American officers speak of the prospect of war with a mixture of dread at China’s growing power”, it notes.“The risk of disaster is presumably rising as China expands its arsenal...whereas American defence spending is near an 80-year low as a share of GDP.”

The model for defending Taiwan is Ukraine, which appears to have emboldened the US and its allies about the prospects of winning a similar conflict with China. US officials claim China's ground forces are modelled on Russia’s battalion tactical groups which have struggled in Ukraine, and Taiwan as an island is harder to invade. “America draws solace from Russia’s failures in Ukraine, believing they have increased Mr Xi’s doubts about his ability to take Taiwan”, the Economist says, while worrying that “the year-long conflict in Ukraine is proof that an irredentist autocrat can miscalculate appallingly.” 

Consequently, it cautions that managing the current confrontation requires relieving the pressure on the PRC to invade if Taiwan "formally declares independence or if America deploys troops to Taiwan.”  Taking a page from the proxy playbook the US and its junior partners are employing in Ukraine, the Economist would restrict US forces to providing weapons, training, logistical, financial and intelligence support from afar while “exposing China’s preparations early, as it did with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and rallying an international coalition in opposition to preserve the precarious balance across the Taiwan Strait." 
 
"America must act with exquisite skill”, it concludes. “It needs to reinforce Mr Xi’s hesitation by strengthening itself, its allies and Taiwan, but not go so far that he thinks he must attack fast or give up on seizing Taiwan for ever.”

The Economist’s confidence in America’s “exquisite skill” in preparing for war in order to avert it is precisely how wars start, and this time the consequences it chillingly foresees resulting from miscalculation would be globally catastrophic, even short of a nuclear Armageddon.




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Charlie
 

Who imagines that The Economist is a big influence on U.S. imperialist planners? Quoting at length from this article is a backhanded ploy to:

 

·       overlook PRC expansionism. Check with the Philippines and Vietnam if you need examples.
·       peddle the notion that massive military spending boosts growth. Who believes that today? There is a reason why “American defence spending is near an 80-year low as a share of GDP.” (Meanwhile, the PRC just raised its military budget faster than inflation yet again.)
·       ignore the debate within the U.S. ruling class over the importance of giving priority to Taiwan versus other issues in the South China Sea, as well as ignore the unspoken vital question of what would happen to TSMC's huge chip foundries in Taiwan.

 

 


Vladimiro Giacche'
 

I suggest a new mission for [Marxmail]: 
we should campaign for boosting American military spending: with its tiny budget of only (over) $ 800 bn it’s definitely too low to counter the danger posed by China, with its huge budget of $ 252 bn. 
In terms of gdp ratio, Us “defence” spending it’s now pretty negligible with only 3,48% (2021 data). It was never at this low. Provided one excepts the years 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2016, 2017 and 2018, naturally.

VG 

Inviato da iPhone

Il giorno 11 mar 2023, alle ore 23:24, Charlie <charles1848@...> ha scritto:



“American defence spending is near an 80-year low as a share of GDP.” (Meanwhile, the PRC just raised its military budget faster than inflation yet again.)

 


Mark Baugher
 

On Mar 12, 2023, at 12:51 AM, Vladimiro Giacche' <vladimiro.giacche@...> wrote:

In terms of gdp ratio, Us “defence” spending it’s now pretty negligible with only 3,48% (2021 data). It was never at this low.
I think your concerns might be misplaced Vladimiro: 2022-2023 promises to be a banner year for key sectors of the US war industry with all the armaments being shipped to Ukraine to counter the Russian invasion. The worst thing that might happen to armaments producers this year is if Russia withdraws from their neighbor's territory and negotiates a settlement.

But then there is the China threat that some on this list have been studying for us (or you can just watch US cable news for pretty much the same message). In a particularly outrageous move, China reportedly has helped sponsor a peace deal between Iran and Saudi Arabia behind Joe Biden's back, a big threat to future sales in western Asia.

One threat to weapons production that won't materialize is the Republican effort in Congress to cut the budget. The number of US Congressional Representatives who are open to cutting the war budget can likely be counted on one's hands. US Republicans understand that the real threat is medical coverage for working people, the poor and indigent, not nuclear or biological war.

Mark


Vladimiro Giacche'
 

You’re right. I would add the threat posed by Mexico: they want nationalize lithium mines and - as I heard - are even seriously considering the possibility to join BRICS. A regime change is needed over there!!!

I also agree about Russia. No problem on this front, too: it takes two to tango…

V

Inviato da iPhone

Il giorno 12 mar 2023, alle ore 15:46, Mark Baugher <mark@...> ha scritto:



On Mar 12, 2023, at 12:51 AM, Vladimiro Giacche' <vladimiro.giacche@...> wrote:

In terms of gdp ratio, Us “defence” spending it’s now pretty negligible with only 3,48% (2021 data). It was never at this low.
I think your concerns might be misplaced Vladimiro: 2022-2023 promises to be a banner year for key sectors of the US war industry with all the armaments being shipped to Ukraine to counter the Russian invasion. The worst thing that might happen to armaments producers this year is if Russia withdraws from their neighbor's territory and negotiates a settlement.

But then there is the China threat that some on this list have been studying for us (or you can just watch US cable news for pretty much the same message). In a particularly outrageous move, China reportedly has helped sponsor a peace deal between Iran and Saudi Arabia behind Joe Biden's back, a big threat to future sales in western Asia.

Mark




Marv Gandall
 

Charlie unfortunately accepts at face value the talking points of US propagandists in relation to the "China threat”. But what is said for public consumption in order to sustain the US war economy is radically at odds with how the US military assesses for itself the current relationship of forces between the two sides. 

Some excerpts from an article in the USAF’s in-house Journal of Indo-Pacific Affairs published in December 2021 illustrates the huge power imbalance:

    • The United States outweighs China in terms of gross domestic product (GDP), technology, and military spending. China’s GDP is 15 percent of global GDP, compared to 24 percent of the United States.
    • The United States alone spends more on national defense than China, India, Russia, Saudi Arabia, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, Japan, South Korea, and Brazil combined. 
    • The United States has spent $19 trillion on its military since the end of the Cold War. This spending is $16 trillion more than China spent and nearly as much as the rest of the world’s combined expenditure during the same period.
    • The United States retains a technological edge in key areas like command, control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (C4ISR) and air, surface, and undersea weapon systems.

(It’s interesting to note that in discussing the huge gap in military spending, the authors observe that “an arms race will lead to an increase in China’s military spending, affecting its development goals.” This is precisely the strategy the US employed in the Cold War to help topple the Soviet Union. The analogy should not be stretched too far, however, since the resources available and development strategy of China significantly differs from that which existed in the former USSR.)

    • The US military can be deployed at short notice anywhere on Earth. The United States maintains strategic peace through military bases and defense alliances in Europe, the Middle East, and Asia.
    • The US military has 516 installations in 41 countries and bases in more than 80 countries. The United States spends $156 billion on 800 bases in foreign countries, while China’s defense budget is US$180 billion/year. The US military has bases in Italy, Diego Garcia, South Korea, Australia, Japan, Kuwait, and Qatar. Collectively they store a million pieces of weapon systems.
    • US military personnel are stationed in 160 countries and has operational ground troops in more than 15 countries. The USN has 31 fast combat supply ships with a total tonnage of 1.29 million tons, while the PLAN has only 12 supply ships totaling 330,000 tons. China lacks global reach, as it does not have foreign defense treaties or logistical bases abroad equipped with military stockpiles.
    • The US Navy (USN) has established maritime supremacy. It operates 11 carrier groups. The United States is in a familiar terrain in the Indo-Pacific, having fought during World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War. INDOPACOM accounts for 60 percent of USN, 55 percent of the US Army, and 40 percent of US Marine Corps. 
    • The United States has been fighting conventional and unconventional wars on every continent. The United States has war-fighting experience in World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, Panama, Grenada, the First Gulf War, Kosovo, Iraq, and Afghanistan. 
    • In the post–Cold War world, the United States achieved dominance thorough AirLand Battle. Now the United States is shifting its military assets to the Indo-Pacific as it prepares for a SeaAir Battle.
    • The number of Chinese warheads is roughly 200 and is expected to double over the next decade. By comparison, the United States has close to 4,000 superior nuclear warheads with 1,600 strategic weapons…
    • It is possible that China could target Guam with its small fleet of intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBM). However, the use of ICBMs will lead to massive retaliatory strikes by the United States leading to total annihilation of China’s military and economic centers of gravity. 
    • The USN Maritime Strike Tomahawk Cruise Missile Block V will destroy coastal cities like Shanghai, obliterating China’s hi-tech industries in a matter of hours...China’s nuclear policy is based on low-level deterrence, “minimum deterrence,” and its nuclear arsenal remains small and vulnerable.
    • People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Major General Zhang Shaozhong ranked Chinese military power in 2020 in the fifth place behind the United States, Russia, Britain, and France, while PLAN surface power was ranked in the eighth place behind Japan and India. The Peoples Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) was ranked seventh in the world, due to its lack of fourth-generation fighter planes and high-end drones. 
    • In General Shaozhong’s view, China will become the second-largest military power in the world only in 2049, when it celebrates its centennial anniversary.

Full: https://www.airuniversity.af.edu/JIPA/Display/Article/2870650/why-china-cannot-challenge-the-us-military-primacy/


Charlie
 

Thanks to Marv for letting the U.S. air force remind us  how big U.S. military power is. He should review British versus German arsenals in the run-up to World War One. He should read Adam Tooze's Wages of Destruction to learn how stretched the Nazi economy and arms buildup were in the run-up to World War Two. Strange thing, though, the Nazis went ahead anyway.

One can find U.S. military in-house assessments of what counts for the next several years: U.S. and China strengths and weaknesses in a war on Taiwan or in the South China Sea more broadly. Marv will find the assessments and scenarios nearly evenly matched. His litany of past U.S. global actions and sunk assets in global bases does not go far when it comes to understanding the antagonism between the established imperial power and the expansionist monopoly capitalist power.


Marv Gandall
 
Edited

On Sun, Mar 12, 2023 at 11:19 AM, Charlie wrote:
He should read Adam Tooze's Wages of Destruction
I have, and also highly recommend it. Same for Tooze’s The Great War, America and the Remaking of the Global Order, 1916–1931 and Crashed: How a Decade of Financial Crises Changed the World. 
 
Many on this list will also be interested Adam Hochshild’s latest, American Midnight, which I'm currently reading. It’s a detailed look at how the sweeping propaganda effort of the Wilson administration mobilized support for US participation in WW1. The parallels to the shaping of public opinion in favour of the current confrontations with Russia and China are striking. Hochschild also surveys the repression of the IWW, socialist, and pacifist movements, much of which will be generally familiar here, but which also contains a mass of new information gathered from official archives, mainstream and movement publications, and personal diaries and correspondene.