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ID147843
Title ProperBeyond the China seas
Other Title Informationwill China become a global “sea power”?
LanguageENG
AuthorSheldon-Duplaix, Alexandre
Summary / Abstract (Note)In May 2015, the Information Office of the State Council published a new white paper on China’s military strategy stating that “overseas interests [had become] an imminent issue.” Accordingly, China has embarked on a build-up aimed at making itself into a “sea power,” mainly in the Indo-Pacific region, in order to deter a US intervention in Taiwan and to protect its trade in the Indian Ocean. China has acquired a medium-sized aircraft carrier with a tenth of the capability of a US super-carrier and is learning the ropes as fast as the more experienced and poorer Russia did in the early 1990s. As a source of pride to its citizens, China’s aircraft carrier program plays into the hands of the Communist Party to demonstrate its legitimacy and success. And yet, China has not yet tried to challenge the superiority of the US Navy on the “far seas.” With three or four carriers, China will remain a regional navy with global reach leading India, the UK, and France at that level.
`In' analytical NoteChina Perspectives ,No. 3; 2016: p.43-52
Journal SourceChina Perspectives 2016-07
Key WordsSea Power ;  String of Pearls ;  Chinese Navy ;  Overseas Interests ;  Military Base Abroad ;  21st Century Maritime Silk Road