US military bases around China
US military bases around China
US military bases around China
How dare the evil Chinese place their country so closely and aggressively next to our military bases?
Chinese Military bases around the US:
Are these embasseys? I can't imagine the US allowing a millitary base built in DC.
Its just highlighting big cities, as most maps do when show a country.
China's embassy is in DC and has consulates general in Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and New York City.
North Korea
Republic of Korea
Petty assholes
This is the first time I’ve ever seen South Korea referred to as “Republic of Korea” and even in this context it’s weird as hell.
Real Republic of China hours
In South Korea all the English stuff says ROK
Look at how close China put their country to our military bases!
I've legit seen liberals make this argument using different wording before.
Why are they breaking containme- err getting so close to our installations????
China:
Iran:
Russia:
NATO stans hate these maps.
Lookin' defensive to me. Just look at them aggressors, moving their borders so close to peaceful NATO bases. smh
I am pretty sure that NATO does not have a base in Wrangel Island though.
I recently saw someone cite the 'China has the world's largest navy'. So I looked it up.
https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/largest-navies-in-the-world
It's true if you just count 'naval vessels' because China and NK have a lot of small boats:
Top 10 Largest Navies in the World (by total number of warships and submarines - 2020):
undefined
China - 777 Russia - 603 North Korea - 492 United States - 490 Colombia - 453 Iran - 398 Egypt - 316 Thailand - 292 India - 285 Indonesia - 282
So maybe not the most useful metric for comparison of relative might. Maybe tonnage is a better metric of that?
Top 10 Most Powerful Navies in the World (by total tonnage - 2014):
undefined
United States - 3,415,893 Russia - 845,739 China - 708,886 Japan - 413,800 United Kingdom - 367,850 France - 319,195 India - 317,725 South Korea - 178,710 Italy - 173,549 Taiwan - 151,662
Taiwan even makes it on the the top ten list that way. And you can clearly see that the USA has the most massive navy by a wide margin. You can get into aircraft carriers and subs too if you want to see how lopsided these stats can appear.
So China has about 500 grams of navy per capita, vs 10.2kg per capita for USA and 6.3kg per capita for Taiwan.
How can we not be scared of the yellow peril?
I really like this metric of tonnage per capita.
China has been working to increase the PLAN's power and reach this past decade. They are nearing to a blue water navy at this point, and have broken through the first island chain, within which they are no longer considered to be defeatable without extreme cost.
The US has withdrawn their concentration back to Guam (previously, they didn't bothered to arm the second island chain).
China has 20x the manufacturing power of the US and a bigger PPP (more efficient use of their military budget) , and they have known the US will one day come for them since Mao. Their recent ships are lighter in tonnage but newer than the American fleet by several decades, carries better equipment, radar, with greater fire power that makes them more equal to traditional ships one category higher in tonnage.
Finally, they aren't building a navy to project power around the globe like the US navy does. The PLAN intends to have the capability to defend their home waters and to protect their economic interests abroad, that's it, so it will never need to have as many ships as the US navy, so a tonnage or ship number comparison would not be an accurate measure of the PLAN capabilities.
China's navy along with the vast majority on that list follow or followed a Green Water doctrine, meaning most of their ships are tugs, small patrol boats, corvettes, fast attack craft, with the biggest ships usually being destroyers. All of those have very low tonnages so that's why their numbers are pretty slanted.
Plus North Korea's navy are mostly WW2 vessels given by the Soviet Union and China.
A few points
Big ships = small brains
They can’t defend missiles. Big tonnage few ships means temporarily floating artificial reefs
Thailand - 292
Did...did whoever made this consider a frigging river patrol boat equal to a guided missile frigate?
Yes
We will fight them on the beaches... We will fight them in the rivers... We will fight them in the aqueducts...
Damn, why does Colombia have so many vessels? Anti-narcotrafficking missions?
It’s small police boats used by the coast guard for fast attack operations against narcotraffickers.
So they’re counting speedboats, and other small vessels.
Note that this list include auxiliary ships. China have a lot smaller ships because PLAN is a defensive navy so they build a lot of mine trawlers and short range missile corvettes, patrol boats and conventional submarines. While USN is build specifically for acting as a long arm of imperialism, therefore they have less small ships but they need a lot of huge ones. Their carriers make up for a lot of that tonnage, and their auxiliary ships also needs to be huge for the reason they need to operate on a long ranges to perform their gunboat diplomacy. Even their frigates are 4000 tons and underarmed because they need that operational range.
So yeah, USN have huge margin of tonnage advantage, but the questions is, will it be able to use this advantage vs PLAN in west Pacific, and here the answer is way less conclusive, especially that latest Chinese hypersonic missile drill point out that carriers can be as well useless.
Even their frigates "are 4000 tons" and underarmed because they need that operational range.
You haven't seen the newest frigate they're building, I take it.
Wait, is Michael Tracey the worst person you know that made a great point? I’m unfamiliar with him tbh
he's the Gabbard type pseudo-leftist who hates "identity politics", and repeatedly appears on Tucker Carlson
this is actually only like 10% of the total US military installations in the region
There’s only one base in S Korea?
This map leaves out Camp Humphreys for some reason, and there's at least one other air force facility in South Korea too
I was gonna say, there’s a reason it’s only slightly hyperbolic to call it occupied Korea
Juicy targets
Seriously, the US troops stationed along that line have to know that PLA have their firing coordinates saved in the notes app on their proverbial phone, ready to copypaste into whatever
I'm not sure if you're speaking hyperbolically or not.
They're actually building another one in Guam because they don't have enough already: https://www.rt.com/news/582875-pentagon-pacific-airbase-china
Time for target practice
Our troops are merely passing through
I just don't understand Michael Tracey, he doesn't support anti Hitler coalition but doesn't support war escalation against China and Russia. His reporting on these issues are pretty good though.