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Page Eight
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Red Chinese PLA Poster - 1972
Chinese text reads - "Long Live the great Chinese People's Liberation Army"
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People's Liberation Army (PLA) Tank
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March 8, 2007
A Chinese Military Superpower?
by John J. Tkacik, Jr.
WebMemo #1389
"On March 4, China's National People's Congress announced that it would increase the country's military budget 17.8 percent in 2007 to a total of $45 billion. Despite the fact that this was the biggest single annual increase in China's military spending, the Chinese government reassured the world that this spending hike was normal and need not worry anyone. "China is committed to taking a path of peaceful development and it pursues a defensive military posture," a spokesman said. But the evidence suggests instead that China's intent is to challenge the United States as a military superpower.
A closer look at China's military spending raises profound questions about China's geopolitical direction."
"The ultimate question must be whether Beijing's leaders have any purpose in assembling a military machine worthy of a superpower other than to have the strength to challenge the United States' strategic position in Asia. It is time to take China's military expansion seriously."
John J. Tkacik, Jr., is Senior Research Fellow in China Policy in the Asian Studies Center at The Heritage Foundation.
http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/wm1389.cfm
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This Page is Under Construction!
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AMERICAN MILITIAMEN
Prepare to Meet Chinese Invaders!


American Militiamen
It is time to Stockpile lots of Ammo
& Sharpen your Bayonets!

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A RECAP OF SOME IMPORTANT FACTS
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U.S. - China Economic and Security Review Commission
“China’s Strategic Reach into Latin America”
“In the 21 st Century, the weak may defeat the powerful by employing supra-national methods of warfare, which professional Western military people are unfamiliar with. These include financial warfare, smuggling warfare, cultural warfare, drug warfare, [natural] resources warfare, psychological warfare and international law warfare.
“The most basic form of ancient Chinese warfare is called “the side principle.” This means to avoid clashing with the enemy’s powerful sword in a frontal collision, at his point of strength. But rather using one’s sword to cut into the warrior’s exposed side.”
-- from the strategic treatise, Unrestricted Warfare, published by the People’s Liberation Army Literature and Arts Publishing House, 1999
Chinese geo-strategic practices of asymmetrical warfare, using both ancient techniques and modern “war by other means” targeting the “weak exposed sides” of the United States have been steadily and effectively growing during the past decade in Latin America. Chinese tactics are being used to gain political and economic influence, as well as military alliances and bases for cyber-electronic warfare. These developments are a critical challenge to the United States in a vulnerable resource-rich area on our doorstep that we have too often taken for granted.
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People's Liberation Army (PLA) Sniper and Soldier with an Anti-Tank Weapon
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Red Chinese Commie People's Liberation Army (PLA) Soldiers
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Red Chinese Military Threat
& Technology Transfers
http://www.conservativeusa.org/redchina-missile.htm
http://www.conservativeusa.org/redchina-military-old.htm
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People's Liberation Army (PLA) Fighter Planes

People's Liberation Army Air Force Symbol
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People's Liberation Army (PLA)
The PLA actually includes an army, navy, air force, and strategic nuclear forces; it serves as the military of the People's Republic of China (PRC). Its 2.25-million-strong force makes it the largest army in the world, in terms of sheer number of troops (3.25 million if active paramilitary personnel are included).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/People's_Liberation_Army

People's Liberation Army (PLA) Airborne
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AMERICA RUNNING SCARED FROM VASTLY SUPERIOR CHINESE MILITARY FORCE
http://www.brojon.org/frontpage/bj042001.html
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People's Liberation Army (PLA) Desert Troops
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People's Liberation Army (PLA) Female Marines

PLA Red Communist ChineseWomen Marines
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How We Would Fight China
http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/prem/200506/kaplan
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“China’s Strategic Reach into Latin America”
Beijing's strategic plan to challenge – and eventually defeat the United States – is being utilized in Latin America, along with an aggressive worldwide cyber-warfare capability, which add to a massive blue water naval and intercontinental ballistic missile build-up. This build-up – funded in large part by its massive trade surplus with the United States -- has been deceptively cloaked by Beijing’s new economic strength, seen as non-threatening by most of the West. Russia, Israel and certain Asian nations, have joined American weapons and military technology merchants to supply Beijing for its unprecedented military modernization. This has enabled Chinese military officials during a ten-year period to take a "great leap forward” in military capability and is enabling their geo-strategists to applying ancient martial traditions to “modern conditions.”
China’s new military doctrine calls for a total war of politics, finance, electronic communications, trade supremacy, manipulation of financial markets, and control of critical natural resources, especially scarce resources such as oil, cobalt and nickel, which are found in relatively few regions of the planet. At the same time, with no regard for matters of human rights, Beijing continued to mold political, financial and military relationships with resource-rich, non-democratic governments who deny those same scarce resources to Beijing’s rivals. Cuba and Venezuela should be included at the top of this list.
In addition, Chinese military planners have also advocated the dirty business of utilizing narcotics traffickers, international organized crime networks and terrorist organizations -- such as the shadowy al Qaeda network -- that could sap a great Superpower of its financial strength, military confidence and national morale. Latin America, and particularly Cuba's proximity to the United States and its radical leftist networks throughout the region, have provided Beijing the opportunity to utilize its strategic plan of "unrestricted warfare," where the weak can defeat the powerful through unconventional means.
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Page Eight
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LINK
FOES of WHITE CHRISTIAN AMERICA - INDEX PAGE
China’s Strategic Reach into Latin America
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This Alarm Sounded By The

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