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Chino Tiềm năng - mối đe dọa trên biển và làm sao để chống đỡ ?

Chủ đề trong 'Giáo dục quốc phòng' bởi Phudongthienvuong, 21/11/2004.

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  1. Nakata

    Nakata Thành viên rất tích cực

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    Các bác nhà ta nhát lắm không dám làm gì nó đâu còn thua cả bác bắc hàn tuy bị tàu mĩ đánh nhưng vẫn dũng cảm đánh trả.Các bác nhà mình mà nhát thế này miết thì nó càng lấn ép hơn làm cho NC mình lép vế ở Vùng biển này.Gặp tớ tớ đánh một lần cho nó chừa
    [/quote]
    To Kenjjing
    Dạo này Kẹnjị hoạt động tích cực quá nhảy. Hehe đúng là "chiến sỹ" yêu nước, sẵn sàng hy sinh cho tổ quốc đi là vừa. Chiến tranh nổ ra, người tích cực như cậu dễ chết đầu tiên lắm.
  2. xuxin

    xuxin Thành viên mới

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    Tung Của Nhân Dân chuổn bị phát hành post card có hình ảnh các đảo mà Tung Của Nhân Dân muốn xâm chiếm này.
    http://www.japantoday.com/e/?content=news&cat=9&id=323401
    China issues postcards featuring disputed islands
    Wednesday, December 29, 2004 at 07:18 JST
    BEIJING ?" China''s State Postal Bureau has for the first time issued postcards featuring islands in the East China Sea claimed by Japan, China and Taiwan, and sales will begin soon in major Chinese cities, state media reported Tuesday.
    The postcard with a face value of 60 fen ($0.07) features pictures of the islands, and bears four Chinese characters meaning Happy New Year, according to the report by Xinhua News Agency. (Kyodo News)
  3. Bradley

    Bradley Thành viên mới

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    Trong năm 2005 -06,china sẽ hoàn tất hợp đồng 8 chiếc Kilo với Nga thuộc project 636 có mang theo tên lửa chống ngầm Klub điều này sẽ giúp tăng cường đáng kể sức mạnh của hải quân china.Nếu tính luôn những chiếc đã có thì china có tổng cộng 12 chiếc loại Kilo class.
  4. xuxin

    xuxin Thành viên mới

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    một bài khác về Tung Của Nhân Dân đang điên cuồng theo đuổi chính sách dùng quân sự thay ngoại giao kiểu phát xít Đức ngày xưa này.
    http://www.iht.com/articles/2004/12/29/news/china.html
    U.S. rule of Pacific waves faces China challenge
    Thursday, December 30, 2004
    SAIPAN, Northern Mariana Islands One day in November, a nuclear-powered Chinese Navy submarine quietly slipped past this western Pacific island, home port for five supply and ammunition ships positioned here by the U.S. military for rapid deployment around the world.
    "We are watching them," a crew member of a U.S. Navy nuclear attack submarine said at an American fast food restaurant while on shore leave here. "The Chinese are a real concern."
    Ever since the U.S. Marine Corps defeated Japanese forces here 60 years ago, the Marianas have been widely considered an American lake. Now, the United States may have to get used to sharing the western Pacific with China, the world''s rising naval power.
    According to military analysts, China is rapidly expanding its submarine force to about 85 by 2010, about one-third more than today.
    "They want to become the dominant power in the western Pacific, to displace the United States, to kick us back to Hawaii or beyond," said Richard Fisher Jr., who studies Chinese naval strengths and strategies for the International Assessment and Strategy Center, a Washington research institute.
    China is embarking on a $10 billion submarine acquisition and upgrade program and is buying destroyers and frigates and equipping them with modern antiship cruise missiles, according to Eric McVadon, a retired U.S. Navy admiral who served as defense attaché in Beijing in the early 1990s.
    "The Chinese are converting their surface navy into a truly modern antiship cruise-missile surface navy," McVadon, now an East Asia security consultant, said after attending a naval review conference in Hawaii. "The modernization of their navy has taken a great leap forward. Their nuclear sub program has taken off like wildfire."
    In contrast, Russia, which once had 90 submarines in the Pacific, has mothballed all but 20. Japan has 16 submarines and no plans to buy more. The U.S. Pacific Fleet has 35 submarines, with many considered to be the most modern in the world.
    "We don''t have to worry about losing control of the seas anytime soon," Richard Halloran, a military affairs analyst based in Honolulu, said by telephone. "But the Chinese are moving a whole lot faster on military modernization than anyone expected a short time ago."
    For its open-water navy, China is concentrating on submarines. The immediate goal, analysts say, is to blockade Taiwan, an island nation seen by Beijing as a breakaway province.
    In response, the U.S. Navy is reversing an old Soviet-era formula, where the United States had 60 percent of its submarines in the Atlantic and 40 percent in the Pacific. In ad***ion to shifting toward keeping 60 percent in the Pacific, the United States recently set up an antisubmarine warfare center in San Diego.
    In January, Guam is to receive a third U.S. nuclear attack submarine, the Houston. In three years, the United States will have brought from zero to three its forward deployed submarines in Guam, the U.S. territory 240 kilometers, or 150 miles, south of here. Since March, the United States, using satellites and maritime surveillance planes has detected Chinese submarines in waters west of Guam.
    The Chinese Han Class submarine that passed near here cruised first near Guam. From the Marianas, the Chinese submarine went north to Okinawa, where Japanese forces detected it Nov. 9 as it shadowed a joint naval exercise between the United States and Japan.
    Violating international law, the submarine passed between two Japanese islands without surfacing and identifying itself. Japan protested strongly, and Japanese officials said they had won a private apology from Chinese officials.
    The rise of China''s navy is watched with apprehension in the Pacific, where, down through the centuries, the islands have long been playthings for the world''s maritime powers: Spanish, American, British, French, German and Japanese.
    "I have talked to several Chinese residents here who are quite proud that China will have a big navy again," Samuel McPhetres, regional history professor at Northern Marianas College, said in an interview. "But are two big maritime powers willing to share the Pacific?"
    In October 2003, a destroyer and a supply ship from the Chinese Navy made a goodwill visit to Guam, reciprocating a visit made one month earlier by two U.S. Navy ships to Zhanjiang, in southern Guangdong Province. It was the first call by U.S. warships to the headquarters of China''s South Sea Fleet there.
    But a few years ago, alarm bells rang in Washington when Chinese companies were the only bidders for a U.S. Navy ship repair facility that was to be ceded by the Pentagon to Guam''s territorial government. Washington stopped the sale. Later, Guam signed a 20-year lease with a Japanese company.
    Today, Washington is cautious about extending to Chinese tourists the same Guam-only visa privileges extended to South Korean tourists.
    Robert Underwood, who served until 2003 as the territory''s nonvoting delegate to the U.S. Congress, warned that huge Chinese tourism might scare away military strategists who are investing hundreds of millions of dollars.
    Today''s era of carefully negotiated port calls and surreptitious surveying reminds some historians of an earlier era.
    "In the 1920s American military and Japanese military had to size up each other to see what the challenges were," Daniel Martinez, National Park Service historian at the USS Arizona Memorial in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, said in an interview in Saipan. "You could see today the potential of what was happening in 1930s, when the U.S. and Japan sought to spread influence throughout the Pacific." Japan''s influence is eroding with new air links from here to Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong.
    "The Chinese influence in the Pacific islands will be very, very big, bigger than Japan''s today," Hiroshi Nakajima, executive director of the Pacific Society, an academic group, predicted in a recent interview here. Eventually, Nakajima said, "Chinese interests and the American interest will clash."
  5. Bradley

    Bradley Thành viên mới

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    Theo nguồn tin nước ngoài thì đến năm 2010,China sẽ có 30 chiếc Molniya class trang bị Moskit missile.
  6. xuxin

    xuxin Thành viên mới

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    VN nên đào tạo lính biệt kích kiểu biệt động rừng Sác ngày xưa. Cho học tiếng Tèo và cách làm bomb sau đó gửi qua bên đó khi có chiến tranh để làm nổ mấy chiếc tàu này ngay tại căn cứ :-) :-)
  7. Bradley

    Bradley Thành viên mới

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    Bác tande này có diệt thì diệt con này nè ,những con Molniya kia không đáng gì đâu.Sắp tới TQ sẽ có tổng công 4 con này
    Được Bradley sửa chữa / chuyển vào 05:38 ngày 31/12/2004
  8. kenjijing

    kenjijing Thành viên mới

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    Huấn luyện biệt kích thì mỹ hay nhất.Còn du kích thì Việtnam tài nhất.Nên huấn luyện trên một hòn đảo nào bí mật.Tới lúc có gì thì dùng mấy anh "yết kiểu" giết mấy chiếc đó.Hay dùng ngư lôi cũ nhiều thật nhiều tấn công bọn nó
  9. xuxin

    xuxin Thành viên mới

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    2 tàu do thám của Tung Của Nhân Dân do thám bị bắt ở vùng biển thuộc Ấn Độ

    I N T E L L I G E N C E
    2 Chinese spy ships seized off Andamans
    30 November 2004: Two Chinese ships have been seized in and around the Andamans last week.
    More than forty Chinese sailors with suspicious identities were carrying navigation equipment on board the ships.
    They were also conducting a survey of the magnetic resonance of the seabed in the vicinity of the islands on which India plans to station a part of its strategic forces.
    So far, the arrested sailors have said they are fishermen, who mistakenly entered into Indian territorial waters.
    Officials said that the ships came from either the East China Sea or the South China Sea, a distance of more than two-thousand miles, which makes it not a case of casual, mistaken intrusion.
    When informed about the seizures, the Chinese embassy in New Delhi buttoned up, and its officials refused to meet the arrested sailors.
    Since some Taiwanese nationals were identified among the arrested, the Taiwanese diplomats were summoned, who promptly reached the island, confirmed their citizens, and exposed some of the Chinese with fake travel documents who were posing as Taiwanese.
    While the intelligence agencies are investigating the spying, the government is keen to play down the incident.
    Magnetic resonance of the seabed sheds light on its con***ion, its capacity to accept submarines, and the kind of weapons that can be used in case of hostility.
  10. xuxin

    xuxin Thành viên mới

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    Một số tin tức về việc Mỹ chuyển quân để đối phó với phát xít mới Tung Của Nhân Dân.
    USS Hawai''i to be based at Pearl after commission
    By William Cole
    Advertiser Military Writer
    Pearl Harbor will be home port for the third Virginia-class attack submarine being built for the Navy, a vessel with a sweet name: USS Hawai''i.
    Rear Adm. John Donnelly, deputy commander of U.S. Pacific Fleet, said the 377-foot nuclear-powered sub, with the capability to operate in shallow waters and drop off Navy SEALs, will be commissioned in 2006.
    Meanwhile, as the Navy looks to shift the balance of attack submarines from the Atlantic to the Pacific to meet changing needs, two other subs may be based in Hawai''i, Donnelly said.
    Such a shift, not yet finalized, would be part of a reconfiguring of the fleet from 40 percent of attack submarines in the Pacific and 60 percent in the Atlantic, to a 50-50 split now, and 60 percent in the Pacific and 40 percent in the Atlantic in the future.
    Six attack submarines would be moved to the Pacific under that scenario, Donnelly said.
    The capabilities of the Virginia-class submarines reflect a changing world and new threats of quieter diesel submarines in the Pacific.
    The 17 Los Angeles-class attack submarines based out of Pearl Harbor were designed and built for open-water submarine warfare when the former Soviet Union was the main threat, Donnelly said.
    "We''ve adapted those platforms to this new environment that we live in today, but the Virginia-class is the next step in the enhancement," Donnelly said.
    A Virginia-class sub "is an extremely quiet platform and carries a lot of new technologies that we''ve not used before in our submarines that make it a very capable platform for littoral (coastal) warfare," he said.
    The Pentagon is looking for ways to trim the defense budget, and future Virginia-class submarines and other Navy systems are coming under more scrutiny. Nevertheless Hawai''i not only stands to gain submarines, but possibly an aircraft carrier strike group as well.
    That would pump millions of dollars into Hawai''i''s economy.
    State Rep. K. Mark Takai, D-34th (Pearl City, Newtown, Royal Summit), said yesterday at the annual Hawai''i Military Partnership Conference, hosted by the Chamber of Commerce of Hawai''i, that a resolution will be introduced in the next legislative session supporting the return of a portion of the former Barbers Point to the Navy to show support for the carrier basing plan.
    Sen. Dan Inouye, D-Hawai''i, has said the Navy was considering his suggestion to disperse a carrier''s 70 to 80 aircraft at Barbers Point, the Marine Corps Base at Kane''ohe Bay, Wheeler Army Airfield and Barking Sands on Kaua''i to minimize jet noise.
    "We want *****pport the efforts to bring an aircraft carrier group to Hawai''i," Takai said. "If it means we have to give back (part of the former Barbers Point), we''d like the Navy to consider that because we''re willing to work with them."
    Gov. Linda Lingle in August took part in a keel-laying ceremony in Rhode Island for USS Hawai''i, the third of the Virginia class. In October, the Navy commissioned the USS Virginia, the lead ship of the new class of submarines, which are configured to dock with the Advanced SEAL Delivery System, a separate sub that rides piggyback.
    The USS Hawai''i will have greater stealth, modularity for upgrades, can dive to depths greater than 800 feet, and will have a crew of about 130 like its Los Angeles-class predecessor. Other Virginia-class subs are named Texas, North Carolina and New Mexico.
    At the Chamber of Commerce meeting, Lt. Gen. John M. Brown III, commander of U.S. Army Pacific at Fort Shafter, said the Army is transforming at Schofield Barracks to include a Stryker Brigade based around eight-wheeled vehicles, and a reconfigured 3rd Brigade with greater combat capability.

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