I'd say that's a good thing; reduces the risk of initiating nuclear holocaust based on a false positive.
I don't believe for one moment that Russia has more advanced or a larger quantity of nuclear warheads. But granting that for the sake of argument, it really doesn't change the deterrence calculus at all. During the height of the Cold War, both the USSR and the US had enough nuclear fire power to destroy the entire world hundreds of times over. Even if you accept the most pessimistic projections regarding our current nuclear capabilities, we could still reduce every city in China and Russia to a heap of smoking rubble if we needed to.
I think your disagreements with most others in this thread boil down to two points:
- You think that China and/or Russia could successfully knock out our ability to retaliate with some sort of preemptive strike. As I mentioned above, given our nuclear triad deterrent (which is still the most advanced in the world) and the fact that we have bases all over the globe, that's simply not possible (nor would it be possible for us to preemptively knock out Russia's or China's ability to retaliate. So mutually-assured destruction is still alive and well. Self-preservation is the top priority for every regime, which means nobody is in a hurry to kick-start the apocalypse.
- You think that the economies of China and Russia are significantly distinct from ours. They're not; there's one global economy now that every nation participates in to varying degrees. But we're at the center of everything. If our economy collapses along the lines you described above, Russia and China do not emerge as winners; everyone loses. It's not nearly as simple as "China owns X amount of our debt"; America provides the bulk of demand for China's products, and has driven the industrial revolution that continues to lift its people out of poverty. If that demand suddenly disappeared, China's economy tanks, and it faces the prospect of mass rioting/ starvation/ revolution at home. That's not in anyone's interest.
I have already countered these arguments with hard facts, which you apparently refuse to accept, nor respond to with facts/links of your own. At this point, you have clearly lost the argument. Your opinions are of little value in the face of facts.
You are down to two key points, both of which are backward looking and completely discreditable with current facts. You are living in the past, and refuse to see the trends right in front of you.
By 2020, China and Russia will be much less dependent on the US, and ready to challenge the US for world power.
To wit:
The US government has formally disclaimed Russia as threat militarily (at least officially).
I have posted links discussing such in lengthy detail. As a result, the
US has mothballed their most potent nuclear warheads at the exact time
Russia has modernized theirs. The US arsenal cannot compare with Russia's, even though we officially have the same number of missiles.
Also note that the US has not been able to conduct assessments of Russia's arsenal for some time, as Russia has denied US scientists access for many years, and is now disallowing US planes from formal surveillance. The US is concentrating on Iran, Syria, and the Middle East with their nuclear policy. Which is silly, since their nuclear arsenal is not 1/10 of 1% of Russia's.
In addition, the US has scratched 'launch on warning' and has been instructed to absorb the first way before firing back. This puts the US as a distinct strategic dis-advantage, especially considering Russia has more potent warheads in its arsenal than the US now does. To think this is an 'advantage' is
pure idiocy.
Once the US absorbs the attack, their ability to retaliate is severely damaged. First, the US government will be in shambles after most US cities have either been destroyed or crippled. Manufacturing infrastructure will be largely decimated, and communications channels will be severely damaged.
Who then will command the massive army? Even if you live in fantasy land and think the remnants of the US government could retaliate with any efficacy, how are they going to fund any sort of war or defense over the long term? The US economy would be in shambles, while China and Russia still have theirs intact.
It is a matter of who strikes first and does the most damage. And, the US ability to retaliate will be severely crippled as I am about to document.
The ships will be out at sea, no doubt, but who is going to pay for their fuel? Who will coordinate the military when communications has been severed? Will the US be able to launch 'some' nukes? Sure, but only some. And by then, it will be largely too late.
In a preemptive strike, Russia and China will have severely damaged the US economy, military, communications infrastructure, manufacturing base, and cities. And yet, we expect to retaliate in full and win such a war? This is
PURE IDIOCY.
Add in the components of cyber attacks on the nation's infrastructure, and it is unlikely the US will be able to run basic services such as food and utilities for the first few months after the strikes. For example, the US Dept of Energy has already stated that the
electric infrastructure can be crippled with cyber attacks. This resulted from an NSA sponsored report that the US cyber infrastructure (utilities, manufacturing, services and goods such as agriculture and technology) is unprepared for cyber-attacks.
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC),
as documented in a Wall Street Journal article, has already stated that the nation's electric grid is susceptible to
collapse if 9 specific substations are attacked.
Direct quote from FERC's report:
Destroy nine interconnection substations and a transformer manufacturer and the entire United States grid would be down for at least 18 months, probably longer.
Quote from the WSJ reporter:
"The U.S. could suffer a coast-to-coast blackout if saboteurs knocked out just nine of the country's 55,000 electric-transmission substations on a scorching summer day, according to a previously unreported federal analysis"
Now that this research is public, what do you want to bet Russia and China have these points on our grid circled on their maps? Those will obviously be hit first (first with cyber attacks, then strategic nukes).
If the grid goes down, how does the US communicate,
by satellites, with it's military spread across the world? Satellites are the backbone of US military coordination. Without electricity, the US military CANNOT COMMUNICATE and CANNOT COORDINATE massive, global military operations with satellites. Are they going to resort to unencrypted shortwave portable radio transmissions using AA batteries, and hope it's not a cloudy day? How does this work?
How do they launch any domestic ICBM's? Assuming someone in the presidency survives, how exactly do they order a counterstrike? Do they send trucks out to the silos that weren’t completely destroyed (assuming there are any) with hand-printed launch codes? How long would this take?
As far as the economic issue goes, you seem to misunderstand the situation. The US has the world reserve currency upon which everything in the US is based. If that collapses, the US economy collapses. This does not, however, collapse the rest of the world at the same time. Why?
US hyperinflation would hurt imports. But China is already on her way to
building a stronger internal economy.
This has
been her policy for quite some time. By 2020, China will be much less dependent on US imports and will have largely dumped a significant portion of US debt from it's books. They will maintain enough to affect the bond markets to their advantage, but not enough that they cannot offset with existing savings in other assets which they have been massively accumulating for some time.
Some facts about C
hina's recent economic changes:
-"China’s 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-2015) prioritized more equitable wealth distribution, increased domestic consumption, improved social infrastructure, and social safety nets. The plan is representative of China’s efforts to shift its emphasis toward domestic consumption."
-"You see, wages in China have been growing by around 12% a year in real terms over the last decade."
-“China was very key to results. The region now contributes roughly 13.3% of Apple’s total third-quarter revenue of $28.57 billion, compared to less than 4% in the year ago quarter. This has been a substantial opportunity for Apple, and I firmly believe we are just scratching the surface right now.”
The Australian Treasury has documented h
ow China is turning into a consumption-based economy. China is where the US was decades ago, with a hungry population that wants an increased lifestyle and that is starting to have the funds to support it.
"Instead, future export growth will increasingly be led by shifts in China's exports towards more sophisticated goods and services as China adopts more advanced manufacturing technologies, and towards emerging economy destinations. This will underpin continued rises in China's productivity and living standards,
allowing consumer spending to become a more important internal driver of growth, as the economy reduces its reliance on export and investment demand."
In addition, I have already documented in this thread how China has stockpiled reserves, built up their manufacturing base, and stored precious metals to back their new currency. You see, when the US dollar collapses, China will step forward as the new world reserve currency,
as they have already publicly called for.
Once they have the reserve currency, they can print as much as they want to finance their economy (nations can typically do this for 40 years before a currency collapse). They wouldn't collapse like the US would, but instead would only suffer short term pain.
Let's take a look at some of China's non-dollar economic agreements that are positioning the Yuan as a future world reserve currency:
China and Brazil agree to $30 billion economic pact not using US dollars
China and Europe
agree to $45 billion currency swap (non-US)
China and Japan
agree to use own currencies in bilateral trade
China and Russia are close on an energy trading deal amongst themselves
China
moves into a trade agreement with Australia
Shangai Exchange moving towards petro-Yuan
China
sells oil using Yuan
Your opinion is no longer true, and therefore not relevant.
At this point I have kicked your ass pretty good. However, if someone else wants to come to the table with facts and analysis and not
unsupported and
undocumented personal opinions, I would be happy to come back and discuss them.
Cheers