Affichage des articles dont le libellé est ballistic missiles. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est ballistic missiles. Afficher tous les articles

mardi 18 avril 2017

Chinese Duplicity

China defends North Korea trade after its trucks haul missiles
By MATTHEW BROWN

Chinese vehicles were seen towing ballistic missiles during a North Korea military parade

China defended its trade practices on Tuesday after Chinese vehicles were seen towing ballistic missiles during a North Korea military parade despite international sanctions against selling military hardware to Pyongyang.
Saturday's parade honoring North Korea's country's founder, Kim Il Sung, came amid heightened tensions over the country's nuclear ambitions. 
It featured a senior official, Choe Ryong Hae, warning of "all-out war" if North Korea is attacked.
Photos provided by the North Korean government showed the submarine-launched missiles being pulled by trucks bearing the logo of the Chinese company Sinotruk.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said China conducts "normal" business with its neighbor North Korea while adhering to sanctions imposed beginning in 2006 by the U.N. Security Council.
China accounts for an estimated 80 percent of North Korea's foreign trade, along with crucial food and fuel assistance.
A sales manager for a Sinotruck dealer, Zhongnanhai, said the company exports about 1,000 trucks to North Korea every year under contracts that specify the vehicles are designed and manufactured for civilian use.
Zhongnanhai sells the trucks to a dealer in the border city of Dandong before they are resold to North Korea, he said.
"We fully comply with the government regulations. If they are used by North Korea for military purpose, they must have been modified by the North Korean side," said the sales manager, who would give only his surname, Wang.
He added that his company has "no way to monitor and approve the use of the trucks by North Korea."
International observers have warned that over the past decade North Korea has become adept at circumventing the U.N. sanctions, particularly so-called dual-use equipment that has both military and civilian applications.
North Korea makes use of "weak transshipment regulations, falsified cargo declarations and shipping documents, reflagging and disguised materials to import banned materials," according to a 2015 report for the European Union Institute for Security Studies.

mardi 7 février 2017

Overpopulation Solution

China Is Practicing Missile Strikes Against U.S. Bases in Asia
By Kyle Mizokami

Are the United States and China set on a collision course that ends in war? 
White House advisor Stephen Bannon thinks so
Both countries are preparing for the worst case scenario. 
War on the Rocks has an intriguing set of satellite images that indicate that preparations on the Chinese side are farther along—and more specific—that anyone previously believed.
The United States maintains an extensive network of bases in the Asia-Pacific region. 
Much of the network is a holdover from World War II, preserved through the Cold War, and still in place today. 
Naval bases such as Yokosuka and Sasebo, and air bases such as Yokota, Kadena, and Osan protect America's allies while projecting American power into the region. 
Some of America's most advanced military equipment, from F-22 Raptors to B-1 Lancer and B-2 Spirit bombers to a full carrier battle group are deployed in an arc stretching from South Korea to Guam.
China sees those bases as a threat—and it's not necessarily wrong. 
The great distances between the continental United States and China mean the U.S. military will need those bases to prosecute any war between the two countries. 
According to WotR, China is actively practicing hitting those bases with long-range ballistic and cruise missiles.
For decades, China's main means of power projection was in the form of ballistic missiles, and large numbers of them. 
Ballistic missiles—placed under the command of what is now the People's Liberation Army-Rocket Forces—are an inexpensive and efficient way of delivering warheads long distances. 
They're cheaper than aircraft carriers, or long-range bombers, but can still pack a considerable punch. Modern guidance systems, even those not using GPS, can target with precision. 
The DF-21D intermediate-range ballistic missile, for example, can hit moving aircraft carriers at sea.
Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor, the preemptive strike that brought the United States into World War 2, was a tactical success but a strategic failure. 
Although Japan managed to sink several battleships, it failed to destroy the what really mattered—the port facilities, fuel storage depots, and other critical infrastructure that sustained American air and naval power. 
Ships and planes eventually need fuel and maintenance. 
Without those facilities, the U.S. Navy could not have sustained the counterattack that led to the Battle of Midway, and might have even been forced to withdraw thousands of miles eastward to the West Coast.
Satellite imagery shows China is preparing to target ships in port, particularly at Yokosuka naval base, and individual hardened aircraft bunkers at Kadena Air Force Base on the island of Okinawa
What's more, China appears to have learned Japan's lesson: it's also practicing targeting electrical substations, above-ground fuel storage depots, and other support facilities. 
The goal would be to force American forces back to Guam or even Hawaii, isolating America from allies Japan, Australia, and even South Korea.
The attack plan appears comprehensive and well thought-out. 
The satellite imagery shows that cluster munition strikes have been carried out against simulated Patriot PAC-2 and PAC-3 missile batteries, the primary American defense against Chinese missile strikes. 
A mobile, land-based air defense missile capable of shooting down aircraft, cruise missiles, and ballistic missiles, Patriot is particularly vulnerable to attack by ballistic missiles that dump cluster munitions over a wide area.
The imagery should serve as a reminder that the Chinese are maximizing their resources and are prepared to take on the might of the U.S. military. 
The Pentagon should be prepared for a tough fight.

World War III Casualties
2016 PopulationKilledSurvivors
CHINA1 373 541 2781 057 119 68977%316 421 589
UNITED STATES323 995 52819 089 7836%304 905 745
EUROPEAN UNION513 949 445371 356 95872%142 592 487
RUSSIA142 355 41530 924 81622%111 430 599
INDIA1 266 883 5981 158 499 17491%108 384 424
PAKISTAN201 995 540175 747 47387%26 248 067
JAPAN126 702 133114 241 88990%12 460 244
VIETNAM95 261 02184 340 68889%10 920 333
PHILIPPINES102 624 20992 732 90290%9 891 307
KOREA, NORTH25 115 31121 141 05084%3 974 261
KOREA, SOUTH50 924 17247 636 30294%3 287 870
TAIWAN23 464 78722 278 49095%1 186 297
4 246 812 4373 195 109 21475%1 051 703 223