Paul Szoldra
So, what are the indicators and how do we know what they are? Thank retired CIA analyst John Culver for answering both questions in this sober and insightful analysis. The 35-year intel veteran notes the warning signs of a full-scale invasion or naval blockade to cut off western support and concludes that if “China decides to fight a war of choice over Taiwan, strategic surprise would be a casualty of the sheer scale of the undertaking.”
Beijing’s preparations for war “almost certainly would not be subtle, at least to the U.S. intelligence community,” says Culver, “and probably not to Taiwan and other Western observers.” So here are other things to watch for before any shots are fired in anger…
1 to 2 years out:
China “would take visible steps to insulate its economy, military, and key industries from disruptions and sanctions.”
Internally and externally, Beijing would ramp up propaganda against the west and would prepare its citizens “psychologically for the costs of war”—tens of thousands of deaths in combat, financial pain, and civilian deaths from a U.S.-Taiwan response.
“Six or twelve months before a prospective invasion, China probably would implement a [People’s Liberation Army]-wide stop loss, halting demobilizations of enlisted personnel and officers, just as it did in 2007 when it ratcheted up pressure as Taiwan prepared to hold elections.”
A freeze on foreign financial assets in China
Travel restrictions placed on high-priority workers and Chinese elites
Sales of U.S. bonds and rapid repatriation of Chinese assets from abroad
Stockpiling of emergency supplies and medicine
3 to 6 months out:
At this point, the PLA “would also halt most regular training and perform maintenance on virtually all major equipment,” Culver writes. “It would expand the capacity of the Navy and Air Force to rearm, resupply, and repair ships, submarines, and aircraft away from military facilities that the United States or Taiwan would likely bomb, including naval bases and military airfields near the Taiwan Strait. The PLA Navy would replace electric batteries on its non-nuclear submarines and intensify training in loading missiles, torpedoes, and ammunition on all vessels.”
In the areas opposite Taiwan's coast in China’s Eastern and Southern Theater Command, the PLA would set up field hospitals near embarkation points and airfields and take other “steps rarely seen in mere exercises.”
“There likely would be public blood drives. Mobile command posts would depart garrisons and move to hidden locations. Units responsible for managing petroleum, oil, and lubricants would deploy with field pipeline convoys to support vehicle preparation at civilian ports being used to load transport ships embarking on an invasion.”
Additionally, “provincial military-civilization mobilization committees would commandeer commercial ships, roll-on/roll-off vehicle transport ships, large car ferries, aircraft, trains, trucks—everything relevant to a war effort, for preparation prior to conflict, and then throughout.”
Military forces would be placed on alert. Across the PLA, leave would be canceled, and many would be recalled or restricted to their bases and ships. Civilian flights around the country would be disrupted. Even with Chinese censorship and its great firewall, it’s hard to imagine these activities not leaking out or being spotted by western observers.
And an “enormous” number of China’s 1.4 billion-strong population would be mobilized, “including reservists to guard key civilian infrastructure, be prepared to repair U.S. bomb damage, and prevent riots and sabotage.”
WASHINGTON — American officials are intensifying efforts to build a giant stockpile of weapons in Taiwan after studying recent naval and air force exercises by the Chinese military around the island, according to current and former officials.
The exercises showed that China would probably blockade the island as a prelude to any attempted invasion, and Taiwan would have to hold out on its own until the United States or other nations intervened, if they decided to do that, the current and former officials say.
Three: Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen said Monday that China’s threat of armed confrontation “is absolutely not an option for our two sides.” She added: “Only by respecting the commitment of the Taiwanese people to our sovereignty, democracy, and freedom can there be a foundation for resuming constructive interaction across the Taiwan Strait.” China predictably responded by saying Taiwan was not independent and didn’t have a president. But Tsai comes out ahead by bringing the rhetoric down—while suggesting that Beijing’s continued saber-rattling and military incursions near Taiwan’s shores will only result in even more western support rather than capitulation.
“We have an abiding interest in maintaining peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait, which is critical to regional and global security and prosperity and a matter of international concern and attention,” The White House says in its new National Security Strategy released on Wednesday. “We oppose any unilateral changes to the status quo from either side, and do not support Taiwan independence…And we will uphold our commitments under the Taiwan Relations Act to support Taiwan’s self-defense and to maintain our capacity to resist any resort to force or coercion against Taiwan.”
All countries must “chip in and help them rebuild and sustain an integrated missile defense system,” said Milley, explaining that it requires planning, system deployment, training, and linking with Kyiv’s command and control. “It’s quite complicated from a technical standpoint,” but “it is achievable.”
“The systems will be provided as fast as we can physically get them there,” Austin replied to a Ukrainian journalist who said he was “anxious” about his family at home.
“I know that you’re concerned about your family, and certainly that’s understandable. We’re going to do everything we can to help Ukraine get what they need to protect the Ukrainian people.”
The Sig Sauer-made M5 is a bit heavier than the M4 familiar to grunts, but it fires more lethal 6.8mm rounds (rather than 5.56mm), giving soldiers more stopping power and greater range.
“These weapon systems will give soldiers significant capability improvements in accuracy, range, signature management, and lethality,” the Army says on its acquisition website, which has additional specs.
“Mortgaging the future by buying into the Chinese vision for technology may be attractive to some in the short term…” he said, but “[w]e need to offer alternative solutions that are practical, that are affordable, and that are backed by international funding or market investment. If we don’t, in the longer term, the hidden costs of China’s cheap technology solutions will become very obvious.”
Air Force researchers have translated this Chinese text on port landing operations, which may be handy for U.S. planners exploring Taiwan's defense options.
A new paper on the “potential for arms control for military applications of AI” has been published at the Center for a New American Security.
The US and UK Navies wrapped a one-day exercise testing unmanned systems and AI “to enhance maritime monitoring” in the Arabian Gulf on Oct. 7. Exercise Phantom Scope saw 3 Saildrone Explorer drone vessels sailing alongside manned American and British ships off the coast of Bahrain.
“Today marks another major milestone for the Marine Corps as we recognize the contributions of Col. Mann—a proven warfighter with several dozen combat missions in Iraq and Afghanistan—and now the first female Marine to be a NASA mission commander,” said Gen. David Berger, Marine Commandant.
The Navy reprimanded three officers and altered SEAL training following an investigation into the death of sailor Kyle Mullen in February. Two captains and an unnamed medical officer were issued non-punitive letters of caution after the investigation concluded that Mullen died “in the line of duty,” although they were not directly blamed for the 24-year-old’s death.
“There’s just no answer,” a House Intelligence Committee member briefed on the investigation told CNN. “They’ve done an immense amount of work, literally spreadsheeting every catastrophic set of symptoms down to the headache and there’s just nothing. None.”
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