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| Sanya base to float Chinese naval ambition |
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By Paul Monk China is set to challenge US dominance in the Pacific by 2050. ACCORDING to naval intelligence sources in London and Washington and a recent MI6 briefing to Jane's Intelligence Weekly, China is building a massive, highly secure naval base at Sanya on Hainan Island. This has been independently confirmed, using commercially available satellite imagery, by the Federation of American Scientists. It turns out the EP-3 incident in April 2001, when a US reconnaissance plane was harassed and forced to land in Hainan, was all about Sanya. It had been the EP-3's surveillance target. That's why the Chinese were so concerned about the matter. The question is, should we be concerned about Sanya? The answer: Yes. The naval base centres on a huge underground complex even the most sophisticated spy satellites cannot penetrate. It is being prepared with berths for up to 20 of the most advanced Chinese submarines, the C94 Jin-class boat, which will be capable of firing both anti-satellite and nuclear-tipped missiles. It is also being fitted out to house several aircraft carriers — something China does not even have yet. In short, Sanya is a very clear signal of the scale of China's emerging blue-water naval ambitions. We are very used to Anglo-American naval dominance and to China not even having a significant blue-water navy. Moreover, American naval dominance remains overwhelming. Sanya, however, raises the twofold question: will that dominance endure and what would be the consequences if it did not? We need to put Sanya in geopolitical and historical perspective, and we need to remind ourselves that the future could take any one of several paths from here, whatever the intentions of China's current leaders might be. Several episodes in modern history show us, by analogy, what Sanya could signify: the development of German naval power in the 1910s to rival British dominance; the rise of Japanese naval power in the 1920s to rival Western naval dominance in the Pacific; and the attempt by the Soviet Union, in the 1970s and early 1980s, to build a blue-water navy that could challenge American dominance of the world's oceans. None of those attempts succeeded, but they were part of what became the First World War, the Second World War and the last anxious phase of the Cold War. Consider the case of Germany 100 years ago.
The intention of the Germans, when they began their naval build-up, was not to fight Britain but to develop enough naval muscle to apply pressure on Britain in a possible future crisis that would induce Britain to come to terms and make concessions. The Kaiser's Navy Laws of 1898 and 1900 gave navy secretary Alfred von Tirpitz a mandate to develop a fleet of short-range battleships that could challenge the Royal Navy in the North Sea.
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