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UNITED STATES A BIGGER THREAT TO WORLD SECURITY THAN CHINA?
by Jenifer Dixon



By Jenifer Dixon of Global SpinJesse Miller makes the point that China is a
rapidly growing threat to world security. The following is not to counter his
argument so much as it is to fill in the blanks. Although China is certainly
a world power, it is not one on the scale of the United States. If China
poses a threat to world security then what does the military activitiy of the
U.S. pose? Neither country has a clean record as far as militarism or human
rights but the U.S. is unique in its extension of itself as a power across
the globe. It is possible to see the 'China threat' as a response to American
militarism wordwide .

The following pieces of information are taken from links available on this
page of GlobalSpin. they are elaborated on in greater detail in those
documents on those sites.

China may have the world's largest army but it is unlikely to walk over to
San Francisco and Los Angeles. There's a large body of water in the way.

The China-U.S. trade could be considered an argument against ratchetting up
the aggressive posture. But there is the internal U.S. conflict between the
Bush people and the China Lobby. One argument I haven't heard is that this
aggressive stanc of the Bush Administration could be a form of leverage. We
run a huge trade deficit with China. Even if the transnationals don't care,
it still poses problems for the U.S. government.

The top ten companies who receive Department of Defense contracts did $50
billion worth of business with the DOD in FY 2000. This figure does not
include the next 90 companies.

In 1994 China, Vietnam and North Korea spent $58.7 billion on defense. The
pro-western group, Australia, Japan, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore,
South Korea, Taiwan and Thailand spent $89.5 billion, one and a half times as
much. Also the pro-China group was in the decline in the years from 1986-
1994.

North Korea's military budget is half that of South Korea.

China is surrounded by US supplied, pro-Western armies and weaponry, i.e.:
-S. Korea has a US military presence of 37,000 troops in over 120 bases. The
U.S. military commander is also formally in command of the Republic of Korea
Army.

-Okinawa has a US military presence of 28,000 troops.

-Japan and the US have signed a Theater Missile Defense agreement.

-New arms sales to Taiwan include offensive weapons. Bush has lifted the
requirement for an annual review, whereby he leaves it to his own discreation
to arm Taiwan whenever he chooses. The latest sales of arms to Taiwan is the
largest ever and in violation of an earlier treaty with China.

The U.S. dominates the economies of the Western Hemisphere. the U.S. economy
is 75% of the total economies of the region with Brazil a distant decond
(6.7%) and Canada at 5.3%.

The U.S. is the world's largest arms supplier. From 1995- 1999 the US
supplied almost as many weapons as the rest of the world combined. Taiwan,
Saudi Arabia and Turkey (the last two being human rights violators) are the
major recipients. Israel the largest recipient of foreign aid, which stand s
at $ 4 billion annually, is also cut in on weapons development progrmas with
the DOD. Israel is the most militarized state in the Middle East and is also
a human rights violator.

The latest sale to Taiwan is the larg4est ever, $7 billion, and offensive
weapons are included.

Eighty-nine per cent (89%) of the US arms transfer to non-industrialized
countries from 1991-1999 went to non-democratic regimes.

The U.S. conducts military training exercises throughout Asia in Indonesia
(human rights violator), Cambodia, the Philippines, India, Thailand, and Sri
Lanka. In the Middle East the U.s. supplies Israel, Turkey and Saudi Arabia,
all human rights violators. The U.S. teaches counter-insurgency techniques,
psychological warfare, internal defense tactics, sniper skills, and military
operations in urban areas.

The U.S. miliary budget was $752,620,000 in FY 2000. the figure includes
payments to Veterans, not included in most calculations. this budget dwarfs
that of the rest of the planet. It is 3X that of the combined budgets of the
countries the U.S. considers enemies:

China

Russia

Iran

Iraq

Syria

North Korea

Cuba

China will boost its budget 17% this year, that is true, but its $7 billion
military budget is minute compared to the U.S $340 billion ( the figure that
does not include Veterans payments).

Lockheed-Martin profits for 1999 were $3.8 billion

Boeing " " " $2.6 billion

Raytheon " " " $977 million

American taxpayers financed the production of these three companies as
follows:

Lockheed-Martin $30,734,000,000

Boeing $28,072,000,000

Raytheon $ 5,488,000,000

The U.S. has more than 800 military installations around the world.

The Sudan, Colombia, and Panama are all counties that the U.S. has damaged in
some way. In the Sudan, a country suffering from civil war and extreme levels
of starvation, we bombed the only pharmaceutical plant, the al-Shifa plant in
1998.

We also bombed Panama under the senior Bush, and killed at least 400 people,
estimates run up to the thousands.

And Colombia was 'given' $1.3 billion in military aid by the departing
Clinton Administration. Waiving aside abundant evidence of human rights
violations on the part of the military and the para-militaries that, it has
become increasingly obvious, they supply, the U.S. maintains its military
'support' of that country. Colombia has seen the displacement of one million
people and the murder of close to a quarter million more in the ever
increasingly spiral of violence that has possessed it for the last ten years.

Is it any wonder that the Chinese can make inroads in societies like these
for whom the word American connotes violence, a violence that most members of
these societies have experienced personally?

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