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The
Perils of Threat Inflation
[The views expressed in this article are those of Mr. Lind,
writing in his personal capacity.
They do not reflect the opinions or policy positions
of the Free Congress Foundation,
its officers, board or employees,
or those of Kettle Creek Corporation.]
By William
S. Lind *
Infosearch:
José Cadenas
Bureau Chief
USA
Research Dept.
La Nueva Cuba
May 28, 2006
In the
1980s, when I was on the staff of Senator Gary Hart of Colorado,
I traveled regularly to Maxwell Air Force Base (whose claim to fame
is not one, but two golf courses) to give the slide-show briefing
of the Congressional Military Reform Caucus to Squadron Officers
School. After one such session, an Air Force captain, an intelligence
officer, came up to me and asked, Does military reform mean
we can stop inflating the threat?
The Defense
Departments annual report to Congress, Military Power of the
Peoples Republic of China, 2006, released last week, shows
that threat inflation remains a growth industry in Washington. Though
the report is written in a careful tone, its message is that China
is a growing military threat to the United States. Subheads in Chapter
Five, Force Modernization Goals and Trends, point to
Emerging Area Denial Capability, Building Capacity
for Precision Strike, and Improving Expeditionary Operations.
One can almost hear the threat inflation engines pumping away, puffing
the dragon up to a fearsome size.
China is, to
coin a Rumsfeldism, the threat we want, not the threat we face.
By dint of much puffery, China can be made into the devoutly prayed
for peer competitor, an opponent against whom our transformed,
hi-tech, video-game future military can employ its toys, or more
importantly, justify their acquisition. Our real enemy, the thousand
faces of the Fourth Generation, fails to meet that all-important
test and is therefore deflated into rejectionists and
bad guys.
In fact, Chinas
conventional forces are a long way from being able to take the United
States on, especially at sea or in the air. The issue is less equipmentnot
that China has much of itbut personnel. Chinese ships spend
little time at sea, its fighter pilots get few flight hours, and
one can hardly speak of a Chinese navy: its really
just a collection of ships. In a naval and air war with the United
States, China would have little choice but to go nuclear from the
outset, which is what I suspect it would do.
A close read
of DODs China report reveals an interesting twist, one all
too typical of the American Empire advocates who dominate
the Washington Establishment. The main Chinese threat
the report identifies is defensive, not offensive, namely an improving
capability to repel outside intervention in a crisis between China
and Taiwan. The report states,
Since the early-
to mid-1990s, Chinas military modernization has focused on
expanding its options for Taiwan contingencies, including deterring
or countering third-party intervention
.
Simultaneously,
the (U.S.) Department of Defense, through the transformation of
the U.S. Armed Forces and global force posture realignments, is
maintaining the capacity to resist any effort by Beijing to resort
to force or coercion to dictate the terms of Taiwans future
status.
Under its one
China policy, the U.S. recognizes that Taiwan is part of China.
So the Chinese threat is that China may be able to deter
or counter American intervention in a Chinese civil war. Who is
the attacker here? If Britain or France had intervened on behalf
of the Confederacy after the American South declared its independence,
would the Union have seen such action as defensive?
This points
to the grand folly DODs China report represents, namely America
allowing Taiwan, a small island of no strategic importance to the
United States, to push it into a strategic rivalry with China. Taiwan
is vastly important to China, because the great threat to China
throughout its history has been internal division. If one province,
Taiwan, can secure its independence, why cannot other provinces
do the same? It is the spectre of internal break-up that forces
China to prevent Taiwanese independence at any cost, including war
with America.
But America
has no corresponding interest. A war with China over Taiwan would
be, for the U.S., another war of choice, not of strategic
necessity. We are currently fighting two other wars of choice,
and neither is going particularly well.
A strategic
rivalry between the U.S. and China points to an obvious parallel,
the strategic rivalry between England and Germany before World War
I. That parallel should give Washington pause. If the rivalrycompletely
unnecessary in both casesleads to war, as it then did, the
war will have no victor. Germany and Britain destroyed each other.
While Britain finally won, the British Empire died in the mud of
Flanders.
A war between
China and the United States could easily result in a similar fatal
weakening of the U.S. (perhaps after a strategic nuclear exchange),
while a defeated Chinese state may dissolve, with China becoming
a vast region of stateless, Fourth Generation instability. Is Taiwan
worth risking such an outcome? Was Belgian neutrality worth the
Somme, Bolshevism and Hitler?
In a 21st century
where the most important division will be between centers of order
and centers or sources of disorder, it is vital to American interests
that China remain a center of order. America needs to handle a rising
China the way Britain handled a rising America, not a rising Germany.
From that perspective, the proper place for DODs China report,
the threat inflation it represents and the strategic rivalry it
stokes is in the trash can marked bad ideas.
* William
S. Lind, expressing his own personal opinion, is Director for the
Center for Cultural Conservatism for the Free Congress Foundation
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