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War Rations

Deep Dives

Explore related topics with these Wikipedia articles, rewritten for enjoyable reading:

  • People's Liberation Army Rocket Force 16 min read

    The article discusses China's underground tunnel system designed for nuclear second-strike capability. Understanding the PLA Rocket Force (formerly Second Artillery Corps) provides crucial context for China's nuclear strategy and the infrastructure supporting it.

  • Senkaku Islands dispute 11 min read

    The article references 'ongoing land disputes' between China and Japan and mentions coast guard excursions. This territorial dispute in the East China Sea is the specific flashpoint driving the tensions described in the article.

“Before all else, be armed.” – Niccolo Machiavelli

Scattered across China and buried deep underground is a series of interconnected tunnels designed to harden its military against conventional and nuclear strikes. Estimated to span more than 3,000 miles, China’s tunnel system is by far the world’s largest, significantly more comprehensive than similar sites in the US. The so-called “Underground Great Wall” even includes its own rail system and factory complexes, part of a full-blown logistics network.

China’s stated purpose for this massive and ongoing investment in subterranean infrastructure is to ensure a credible second-strike nuclear capability. But the sheer scale involved has led some Western analysts to speculate that the country is underreporting the size of its nuclear arsenal. A controversial study out of Georgetown University in 2011 mapped what was known about the tunnel system. The researchers estimated that China may have as many as 3,000 nuclear warheads, an order of magnitude larger than most arms-control experts estimated. One can imagine how this system and its inventory have developed in the intervening years.

Construction in progress | CCTV

Understanding Chinese military intent is especially important in light of the recent and severe breakdown in its relationship with Japan, a crisis that some believe constitutes one of the most dangerous moments between the two countries since World War II. Amid ongoing land disputes and talk of a major Japanese rearmament, Japan’s new Prime Minister, Sanae Takaichi, poured fuel on the fire in recent remarks about defending Taiwan. The response from China was severe:

Chinese travelers have canceled more than half a million plane tickets to Japan since Saturday. Chinese students there have been told to be careful. Two Japanese films have been pulled from the Chinese box office. Ships are patrolling in disputed waters. State-affiliated academics are warning that the entire country of Japan could be turned into a ‘battlefield.’ And now, China has suspended imports of Japanese seafood.

Beijing is using harsh rhetoric, military saber-rattling and economic coercion to make clear its displeasure with Japan’s new prime minister, Sanae Takaichi, a China hawk who suggested this month that Japan could intervene militarily if Beijing makes good on its threat to invade Taiwan, a self-governing island that the Chinese Communist Party claims as its territory.

Poking the bear | Getty

The row adds to the already precarious tension in the region, as it comes amid an economic

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