Tiongkok, kekuatan imperialis yang sedang berkembang, terus mengejar 
ketinggalannya untuk merebut hegemoni dari Imperialis tua yang sedang sekarat. 
Kekuasaan ekonominya terus dikembangkan melalui One Road One Belt, sementara 
itu Angkatan Lautnya terus diperkuat untuk menantang hegemoni AS. Kontradiksi 
antar imperialis akan terus meningkat.. Sementara itu Rusia juga sudah 
mencanangkan adanya arm race yang lebih membahayakan dunia dari pada yang 
terjadi ketika Perang Dingin abad lalu.

China's Navy Has Arrived (And the U.S. Navy Should Be Worried)

Beijing is trying to close some critical gaps.
by Stratfor Worldview Follow @Stratfor on TwitterL






All fitted out, China's second-ever aircraft carrier — and the first built 
entirely in China — is set to sail for sea trials. The construction of the 
aircraft carrier represents a significant milestone in China's steady rise as a 
major naval power. And barring any hiccups, Beijing will continue its ascent in 
the following decade to the degree that it challenges the United States for 
naval supremacy – at least in East Asia.


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China's Navy Takes a Bow

With a new aircraft carrier, Beijing shows off its expanding maritime 
capabilities.
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>From a Coastal Defense Force to a World Power
The might of the Chinese navy today is far beyond what it was just 30 years 
ago. As recently as the 1990s, it was effectively a coastal defense force with 
little ability to challenge its U.S. counterpart. But quick as the Chinese 
navy's rise since then has been, its tremendous progress stems from evolution 
rather than revolution, as Beijing has carefully and incrementally introduced 
new designs and equipment into the navy before proceeding to intensified 
shipbuilding.
At the turn of the millennium, Beijing began producing new indigenous vessels, 
but many of the initial designs, such as the Type 051C destroyer, depended 
heavily on Russian and other foreign technology for their main armaments. At 
the same time, China continued to purchase Russian warships, such as 
Sovremenny-class destroyers and Kilo-class submarines, as a hedge against the 
potential failure of their new designs.

Over the course of the century's first decade, China restricted itself to 
constructing small batches of each warship type; only after engaging in 
comprehensive testing for each type did the country slowly transition to 
improved designs. This decade of cautious experimentation gave the country’s 
navy the confidence to settle on reliable models for high-rate production. 
Chinese shipyards rapidly rolled out the Type 054A frigate, the Type 039A 
submarine, the Type 052D destroyer and the Type 056 corvette, making the four 
classes of vessel the mainstay of the naval inventory. Such production, 
however, did not necessarily increase the size of the fleet but replaced aging 
and obsolete vessels that had remained in the naval inventory since the 20th 
century.

As naval authorities complete this modernization drive over the next two years, 
China is poised to significantly expand its strength and capabilities . The 
pace of China's naval exercises and training regimen is already unprecedented, 
and the tempo is only likely to continue. The elimination of obsolete warships 
will provide China with an opportunity to improve not just the quality of its 
vessels, but also their quantity. If the country maintains its current rate of 
production, it could add approximately three destroyers each year from 2020 to 
2030.


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China Builds Maritime Muscle

With the launch of its biggest and most advanced destroyer yet, the country 
continues to sail toward its goal of...
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But an increase in the number of modern destroyers, frigates, corvettes and 
diesel-electric submarines only constitutes one aspect of the navy’s growing 
strength. Over the next 10 years, China will construct next-generation nuclear 
submarines that emit far less sound, build new types of aircraft carriers 
equipped with catapult launch systems and expand its amphibious fleet with the 
introduction of Type 075-class amphibious assault ships.. Supplementing the 
addition of this hardware will be a continued focus on the country's logistics 
fleet, which is key to conducting blue-water operations — sustained, long-range 
maritime operations over oceans and deep waters — and securing logistics bases 
around the globe.
Closing the Gap

The coming decade of development will significantly reduce, but not eliminate, 
the gap between China's navy — already the second most powerful maritime force 
on the planet — and the U.S. Navy by 2030.
 
But even as China comes closer to rivaling the United States in global maritime 
strength , the two countries will continue to excel in different facets. 
Because the United States is largely secure and unchallenged in its home 
waters, it will retain its traditional focus on constructing a blue-water 
force. Accordingly, Washington has long emphasized aircraft carriers, large 
surface combatants and a sizable fleet replenishment force that can project 
influence and force around the globe. China will strive to develop these same 
blue-water capabilities with similar vessels, but it will focus on exercising 
power closer to home in the South China and East China seas. As a result, China 
will maintain a much larger fleet of small surface combatants and 
diesel-electric submarines — vessels that are ideal for combat in littoral 
environments close to home ports.

Other factors are also likely to consolidate China's control of its immediate 
vicinity, including improved command and control, better training, greater 
access to land-based air power and missile forces, the existence of geographic 
chokepoints, as well as the concentrated nature of its forces – in contrast to 
the more dispersed deployment of U.S. forces. By 2030, the Chinese will likely 
be the dominant naval force up to an initial island chain that encircles the 
Yellow, East China and South China seas, while it will also enjoy significant 
advantages out to a farther limit running roughly from Japan to Indonesia 
through islands such as Guam and Palau. The United States, naturally, will 
remain largely dominant on the rest of the world’s oceans and seas.
 
Predicting China's potential naval strength beyond 2030 is impossible, but the 
country could well seek to challenge the United States' maritime dominance even 
farther out in the Pacific Ocean. For the decade to come, however, the 
country's navy is set to go from strength to strength. It may not become the 
master of the open seas, but it will become the master of its own maritime 
backyard.

China's Navy Prepares to Close the Gap on the U.S. is republished with the 
permission of Stratfor Worldview , a geopolitical intelligence and advisory 
firm.

Image: Reuters



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