Stig Östlund

onsdag, augusti 29, 2018

With Ships and Missiles, China Is Ready to Challenge U.S. Navy in Pacific












By Steven Lee Myers
Aug. 29

DALIAN, China — In April, on the 69th anniversary of the founding of China’s Navy, the country’s first domestically built aircraft carrier stirred from its berth in the port city of Dalian on the Bohai Sea, tethered to tugboats for a test of its seaworthiness.
“China’s first homegrown aircraft carrier just moved a bit, and the United States, Japan and India squirmed,” a military news website crowed, referring to the three nations China views as its main rivals.
Not long ago, such boasts would have been dismissed as the bravado of a second-string military. No longer. A modernization program focused on naval and missile forces has shifted the balance of power in the Pacific in ways the United States and its allies are only beginning to digest
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China’s first aircraft carrier, the Liaoning, at sea in April.
 First launched by the Soviet Union in 1988, 
it was sold for $20 million to a Chinese investor
 who said it would become a floating casino,
 though he was in reality acting on behalf 
of the People’s Liberation Army Navy.

Ballistic missiles designed to strike ships on display 
at a military parade in Beijing in 2015.

Fiery Cross Reef in the South China Sea.
 The deployment of missiles on three man-made
 reefs in the disputed Spratly Islands — Subi, 
Mischief and Fiery Cross — 
has prompted protests from the White House.Credit


Soldiers with the People’s Liberation Army Navy
 patrolling Woody Island in the disputed
 Paracel archipelago in 2016.
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Om Liaoning, se --> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_aircraft_carrier_Liaoning

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