Müs wrote:
I'm not particularly concerned for the west coast of the US. That's a balls hard target for them and their current weapons tech.
SK and Japan and Taiwan etc though... they're close enough to get the short end of the stick.
And yeah, I can imagine it *is* complex, but I don't understand why China hasn't taken a harder line on their insane little puppet state.
They are, but by the same token the shorter-ranged systems you'd use to attack targets like those are much easier to defeat with THAAD, PAC-3, or SM-3. The last is especially important because it launches from ships, which are easy to reposition as-needed, and Japan has destroyers capable of launching SM-3.
As to the behavior of China, the reasons fundamentally go back to why they got involved in the Korean War in the first place, and how they see the situation in Korea. The Chinese worldview is simply fundamentally different from ours, much like the Russian one is. It's influenced by their geography, their language, their history, and cultural norms just like ours is for us.
It's probably impossible for us to truly understand why Chinese leaders make the decisions they do, but I will say that it is not because they are crazy or stupid. What they are doing certainly makes sense to them in terms of their own assumptions, beliefs, and what they know and don't know. That last is especially important because they are just as human as we are and just as subject to irrationality and incorrect or incomplete information as we.
That makes understanding what they do even harder; not only do we not understand how they think, we don't know what THEY know, don't know, or erroneously believe. In particular, they are just as subject to not understanding our way of thinking as we are theirs.
This is what makes understanding our opponents so hard - when they do something that doesn't seem to make sense it may be because they don't have full information, have wrong information, are acting emotionally, have misunderstood us, have incorrect or incomplete information about what WE know or don't know, are misunderstanding how WE see the situation - or any combination of any or all of the above!
Maddening, isn't it?
A good example is the common sentiment of "China wants trade, not war". This is true insofar as they're fundamentally rational and driven by self-interest. They recognize the costs of war. However, they also understand its utility and they have their own views on how hard power can be used to get what they want without actually fighting - just as we do.
More importantly, "China" doesn't want anything. It's not a hive mind. They have their own internal politics and factions, and who is in charge and has what influence matters a lot. If they do one thing in a given situation one year and do something totally different the next year in a very similar situation it may be simply that different people are making the decisions.
Quote:
China is no longer in control of the little ****. They'd much rather have SK on their border at this point. I think they keep thinking that if they pretend they don't notice NK, it will go away.
It's vastly more complicated than this. NK is a pain in the *** for them, but they have fundamental misgivings about SK that date back to MacArthur's bellicose rhetoric.