China was identified this week as posing the most significant
long-term military challenge to the United States by America’s
senior-most military leader, as he set out new US military strategies
and policies toward China and Asia more generally in a congressional
hearing.
Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, also
revealed in the hearing, before senate, that he had informed China last
summer of US plans to use military force against North Korea.
Dunford was asked to rank various military threats and identified
nuclear missile-armed North Korea as presenting an “immediate” threat,
with Russia and China posing potential dangers based on their growing
nuclear arsenals.
“We don’t actually have the luxury of identifying a single threat
today, unfortunately, nor, necessarily, to look at it in a linear
fashion,” Dunford said.
The four-star Marine Corps general then went on to say that, over the
longer term, China represents the most significant danger,
overshadowing the nuclear and cyber power of Moscow.
“If I look out to 2025, and I look at the demographics and the
economic situation, I think China probably poses the greatest threat to
our nation by about 2025, and that’s consistent with much of our
analysis,” Dunford said.
The comments echoed those of CIA Director Mike Pompeo, who said in
July that he believes China is the most significant regional security
threat. “I think China has the capacity to present the greatest rivalry
to America… over the medium and long term,” he said.
The Chinese military buildup of missiles, warships, submarines and
aircraft, along with cyber-warfare and other non-kinetic tools of
warfare, is aimed at limiting the United States’ ability to project
power and also to weaken American alliances in the Pacific.
China has closely studied US warfare weapons and tactics and has
developed both arms and strategies that will enable its weaker forces to
defeat US military forces in a future conflict, he said, adding that
the gap has been closed between the two militaries over the last decade
and a half.
In 2000, “we had a significant competitive advantage in our ability
to project power when and where needed to advance our national
interest,” Dunford said. “I can’t say that today. We are challenged in
our ability to project power, both to Europe and in the Pacific, as a
result of those threats.”
Dunford outlined how the military is backstopping President Donald
Trump’s attempts to press the North Korean regime of Kim Jong-un to give
up its nuclear arms.
Government analysts put forth the pessimistic view that Kim will not
give up his nuclear and missile arsenal because those weapons are
inextricably linked to his survival. The analysts also assessed that
China will not co-operate with the United States in seeking Korean
Peninsula denuclearization.
Dunford said US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson is testing both
assumptions, realizing that the alternatives – a second Korean war – are
extremey dire.
“We’re at the phase now where implementation of the sanctions is
going to determine whether or not we have a peaceful solution to
denuclearization on the peninsula,” Dunford said.
Military options have been drawn up and placed before Trump for
consideration if the campaign of economic and diplomatic pressure fails.
Dunford said he had traveled to China in August and delivered that
stark message to the Chinese, which has a defense alliance with North
Korea.
The chairman also disclosed that Pacific forces had adopted a new
policy toward American warship passage near disputed Asian islands
claimed by China.
In February, US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis rejected the military’s
piecemeal approach to freedom of navigation, which depended on approval
through a bureaucratic process that limited passage.
The new Mattis policy was described by Dunford as a “full strategy
that lays this thing out now for a long period of time and talks about
the strategic effect we’re trying to achieve.”
The new policy will include regional allies in freedom of navigation operations and will become “routine and regular.”
Three American warship drills have been carried out so far this year,
drawing the ire of China, which declared each to be a violation of
Chinese sovereignty. Chinese warships shadowed the US destroyers during
the activities.
“That’s what we’re implementing right now, a strategic approach to
freedom of navigation operations that does in fact support our overall
strategy in the Pacific, as well as the specific mission, which is, to
ensure that we fly, sail and operate wherever international law allows,”
Gen. Dunford said. “And we continue to validate those claims where we
see international airspace for that matter, or the maritime domain.”
Dunford also expressed concern about China’s growing space warfare
capabilities, including the development of satellite-killing missiles
and multiple tests of high technology weapons.
“When we fielded the current space capabilities, we didn’t field them with resilience to the current threat in mind,” he said.
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