Chart of the day: China as the world's biggest navy
Economist story on defense spending in a time of austerity.
Unsurprisingly, the focus is on how the West keeps reducing its platform numbers because of its addiction to speed, stealth and other forms of high technology (i.e., every platform costs so much more to build over time, that we can afford far fewer of them). Poster child right now is the F-22, whose production runs for the US ends at 187 units instead of the originally planned 750.
But what do commanders in the field want? Helicopters and drones--not F-22s. So why worry about the numbers?
Well, on the naval side, we can now say that China's Peoples Liberation Army Navy is the world's biggest fleet of major combatants, even though nobody would seriously suggest that the PLAN comes anywhere near our overall naval combat capability nor global reach.
So how impressed should we be?
The only question that matters, in my mind, is whether or not China is building a force that counters our capacity to shape the global security environment. That's not simply a numbers game, but a willingness-to-use mindset, which I don't see China possessing now, or in the future so long as the Party rules. Why? If you use forces, you will lose forces, and China's single-party state can't afford such losses of face.
If you think major naval battles are in the offing, then you're spooked by China's PLAN build-out, but I myself don't see the larger nuclear correlation of forces impacted by this whatsoever, so China's numerical superiority impresses no more than the old Sov version did. We dare not go to the mattresses over anything important because we know how that will end. China may still dream of Taiwan in these terms, but America does not.
Hence, the only military developments that impress me are those that involve bolstering China's ability to do counterinsurgency and nation-building, and I see none in the offing or on the horizon. Instead, China mindlessly apes America's past in its military build-up, as though it's more interested in appearances than global capabilities, and more interested in narrow sea denial than expansive sea control.
I'd be more impressed with a PLAN that eschewed classic major combatants and went in for vast fleets of unmanned vehicles, because I don't see countering traditional naval capabilities to be all that hard--or all that expensive.
What the system really needs right now is more Somali-like pirates the world over to encourage more navy-to-navy collaboration like the Somali version has.
In the end, it's not a matter of who has more ships, but whose ships are most welcomed around the world.
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