War With China
Charles R. Smith
Tuesday, Aug. 14,
2001
On the first day of World
War III, the United States lost two-thirds of its military and nearly half its
population, yielding superiority to communist China. U.S. orders of the day
were of high alert, and there is simply no evading the fact that we were not
ready.
The
Chinese rain of missiles on U.S. installations and homeland cities was a
military masterpiece. The People's Liberation Army Second Artillery Corp
achieved complete surprise, armed only with a small force of more than 300
tactical and 10 strategic missiles.
Defenseless
against the attack, U.S. forces in Hawaii, Alaska, South Korea and Japan were
quickly overwhelmed by the guided warheads of the Chinese missiles. The bombs
plunged out of the inky blackness of space, striking within seconds of each
other. The rain of death fell swiftly upon a sleeping America with precise and
devastating accuracy.
In
a span of little more than 30 minutes, China wiped out Los Angeles, San
Francisco, Seattle, San Diego, Chicago, Washington, Boston, New York, Hawaii,
Manila, Seoul, Taipei and Tokyo.
China
sank five U.S. carriers, seven Ohio class submarines, vaporized more than 200
MX and Minuteman missiles and destroyed more than 800 combat aircraft including
15 B-2 strategic bombers. The strikes also killed more than 100 million people
without the loss of a single PLA soldier.
The
Second Artillery succeeded by striking key U.S. bases, warships and air fields
with a swift and bold attack. The attack left China with 10 remaining strategic
missiles and nearly 300 tactical missiles, holding the devastated U.S. homeland
hostage to another strike.
Despite
the calls to retaliate, sending the scattered remains of U.S. nuclear forces
against China would not stop another attack on America, nor would it stop the
PLA Generals who ordered the first.
There
is no question that the U.S. strategic missiles could devastate the Chinese
homeland. However, killing hundreds of millions of innocent Chinese citizens
would do little to deter the warlords in Beijing from launching the second wave
of 10 missiles while remaining hidden inside bomb-proof tunnels.
China's
sudden and brutal attack forced America to surrender on Beijing's terms. In
little more than 48 hours, China won World War III.
No
U.S. Defense Against Attack
Fiction?
Then consider this fact: The United States has no defense against a missile
attack. The U.S. has NO missile defense and is only testing a limited system
that might stop one or two missiles.
Those
who minimize the Chinese strategic forces frequently state that China has only
20 missiles. These people are fools playing games with the lives of millions of
innocent humans. They fail to mention that each Chinese strategic missile is
tipped with a multi-megaton H-bomb that can vaporize a city.
In
the previous scenario, Chinese forces used only half their current strategic
and tactical missiles in a single attack, turning 10 of the top U.S. cities and
most of free Asia into charred, radioactive wastelands.
China
apologists also question whether Beijing is willing to wage war against
America. However, the Chinese military makes it very clear it wants nuclear
combat with the U.S.A.
According
to an August 1999 policy document published by the People's Liberation Army
Office of the Central Military Command, "unlike Iraq and Yugoslavia, China
is not only a big country, but also possesses a nuclear arsenal that has long
since been incorporated into state warfare system and play a real role in our
national defense."
"In
comparison with the U.S. nuclear arsenal, our disadvantage is mainly numeric,
which in real wars the qualitative gap will be reflected only as different
requirement of strategic theory," states the PLA military document.
"In
terms of deterrence, there is not any difference in practical value. So far we
have built up the capability for the second and third nuclear strikes and are
fairly confident in fighting a nuclear war. The PCC [communist Party Central
Committee]
has decided to pass though formal channels this message to the top leaders in
the U.S."
China
also has recently tested a new long-range missile capable of reaching America,
the DF-31. The DF-31 is capable of delivering a single multi-megaton H-bomb or
up to three 90-kiloton nuclear bombs. The most recent DF-31 test took place
earlier this year, and some Pentagon analysts expect the PLA Second Artillery
will begin active deployment of DF-31 units early next year.
1,000
Nuclear Missiles by 2006
Clearly,
China apologists must seriously consider the growing capability of Beijing's
nuclear missile forces, including the tremendous buildup of short-range
tactical missiles. China continues to deploy short-range "Dong Feng"
or "East Wind" missiles. China has a force of nearly 500 DF-15 and
DF-11 mobile tactical missiles and at the current rate of production will have
more than 1,000 missiles by 2006.
The
Soviet Union and the U.S. considered the short-range tactical missile to be the
most dangerous threat to peace because of its short flight time. Despite the
tension between Moscow and Washington, both sides agreed to withdraw and ban
the weapons. The Soviet SS-20 Saber and U.S. Pershing missiles were dismantled
and destroyed.
It
is worth noting that each Chinese DF-15 tactical missile has a flight time of
less than four minutes, from launch to impact. Today, China dominates the
tactical nuclear missile category and frequently demonstrates that fact. In
1996, China dropped dummy DF-15 warheads just off Taiwan's coastline.
Illegal
Missile Exports to Pakistan
Nor
are Chinese missiles limited strictly to China. According to documents obtained
from the Clinton administration, China sold Pakistan 34 nuclear-tipped DF-11
missiles in 1992. The DF-11 missiles, exported as the M-11, are based at
Sargodha air force base, west of Lahore, next to the Pakistani plutonium
reactor at Khushab.
In
August 1994, Ron Brown wrote a briefing document for Bernard Schwartz, CEO of
Loral. That document is one of many from the withheld files of Ron Brown
obtained by this author using the Freedom of Information Act. The document is a
pre-China briefing report prepared for Loral CEO Bernard Schwartz in August
1994 by Commerce and is titled "Background Information".
"EXPORT
CONTROLS.
Last
August [1993], the U.S. imposed sanctions on China for an M-11 missile-related
transfer to Pakistan. On January 7, 1994 it was decided that although
communications satellites licensed by the State Department are covered by the
sanctions law, export licenses for communications satellites licensed by the
Department of Commerce may be approved. Two such export licenses for
communications satellites were recently approved by the Department of
Commerce."
Rewarding
Illegal Exports
Then-President
Bill Clinton gave China a vast array of missile technology with the stroke of
his pen despite the illegal DF-11 exports to Pakistan. The Chinese military
obtained encrypted radiation hardened chips from Loral, post-boost vehicle
technology from Lockheed, telemetry systems from Motorola and nose cone
technology from Hughes. The Chinese generals made huge profits from the
advanced rocket and satellite deals with America.
One
of the main reasons why China continues to violate arms export treaties is
because many of the Chinese leaders who signed the treaties also have a vested
interest to break them. The Chinese generals that do the official arms
negotiating also happen to own the same munitions factories that sell DF-11
missiles to Pakistan.
China
is no longer a backward communist nation but a modern nuclear-armed fascist
state, more closely resembling Francisco Franco's Spain with the bomb.
Ownership is legal to a limited few. China has no conflict-of-interest laws.
You can be a Chinese general, the rich owner of a major arms company and an
arms control minister in the Chinese government all at the same time.
In
2001, Chinese DF-11 missile parts were spotted by satellite entering Pakistan.
The violation should invoke economic and political sanctions according to MTCR
missile treaties signed by Beijing. However, much like Loral's Bernard Schwartz
in 1994, U.S. satellite makers are again anxious to restart exports to China by
2002.
No
Calls for Sanctions
So
far, there have been no calls from the White House or Congress to invoke sanctions
against Beijing for violating the missile export treaties. None of the U.S.
European allies, so outraged at American anti-missile tests, have uttered a
word about Beijing's nuclear missile exports to Pakistan.
One
way to slow the illegal sales from Beijing is to use the provisions in the MTCR
treaties and invoke sanctions. The first and most useful signal that Washington
could issue to Beijing is a firm "no" on the sale of U.S. satellites.
Another
way to prevent World War III is to for America to build an anti-missile system
as quickly as possible. The question of whether it will work may never be
answered. However, a weapon never used in combat can be a success if only
because it made victory in battle an uncertain verdict for dictators and tyrants.
Reproduced with the permission of NewsMax.com. All
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