DTIC ADA624366: Tallying the U.S. China Military pdf

DTIC ADA624366: Tallying the U.S. China Military_bookcover

DTIC ADA624366: Tallying the U.S. China Military

More Book Details

Description of the Book:

Over the past two decades, China s People s Liberation Army (PLA) has transformed itself from a large but antiquated force into a capable, modern military. Although China continues to lag behind the United States in terms of aggregate military hardware and operational skills, it has improved its capabilities relative to those of the United States in many critical areas. Moreover, China does not need to catch up fully to the United States to challenge the U.S. ability to conduct effective military operations near the Chinese mainland. Ensuring an adequate defense and deterrent capability in the face of these trends will require careful consideration of U.S. strategy, procurement priorities, and relations with regional allies. Much of the discussion about China s military modernization in the United States has focused on new PLA weapon systems. There has been little comparative analysis of Chinese and U.S. military forces and developments and even less rigorous analysis of how those inventories and systems would perform against each other in a potential conflict or how the balance of relative capabilities has evolved over time.

This brief summarizes RAND Project AIR FORCE analysis that seeks to fill this gap. The research uses a set of scorecards to assess the relative capabilities of U.S. and Chinese forces in diverse types of conflict, at varying distances from the Chinese mainland, and at different points in time from 1996 to 2017. Based entirely on open sources, the scorecards provide a basis for deeper public discussion of how the balance of power in Asia has evolved and the challenges the United States can expect to face in the future. To be clear, the goal is to avoid war, which the authors do not anticipate and which would be disastrous for both China and the United States. The scenarios and the operational activities described here are not meant to signify either the likelihood of a future conflict or the course of events should one occur

  • Creator/s: Defense Technical Information Center
  • Date: 1/1/2015
  • Year: 2015
  • Book Topics/Themes: DTIC Archive, , RAND PROJECT AIR FORCE SANTA MONICA CA, *MILITARY CAPABILITIES, *MILITARY FORCES(FOREIGN), *MILITARY FORCES(UNITED STATES), CHINA, COMPARISON, SCORING, THREATS

An excerpt captured from the PDF book

DTIC ADA624366: Tallying the U.S. China Military_book-excerpt

Report Broken Link

File Copyright Claim

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Categories

You might be also interested in these Books

Related Posts
PDF Viewer

الرجاء الانتظار بينما يتم تحميل الـ PDF…
HTML Popup Example