Great
Fallout: NDAA Chinese tunnel scare 'smokescreen for US nuclear
intentions'
A
US defense report has called for contingency planning to neutralize a
vast Chinese tunnel network with both “conventional and nuclear
forces.” James Corbett told RT the “Underground Great Wall”
scare is being used to mask US nuclear ambitions.
14
January, 2013
Orders
for the Commander of the US Strategic Command (STRATCOM) to submit a
report on means of nullifying China’s underground tunnel network
were outlined in the new National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA)
signed by President Barack Obama on January 2.
The
NDAA-directed report will further seek to identify knowledge gaps
regarding China’s nuclear weapons programs, a request which was
likely spurred by a controversial 2011 study out of Georgetown
University entitled “Strategic Implications of China’s
Underground Great Wall.”
The
researchers claimed that China’s Second Artillery Corps, a
secretive branch of the country’s military tasked with protecting
and deploying its ballistic missiles and nuclear warheads, had dug
some 3,000 miles of tunnels which currently housed up to 3,000
nuclear warheads – ten times US intelligence estimates.
The
report drew a firestorm of criticism via its unconventional
Internet-based research methods, which relied on Google Earth, blogs,
military journals and even a fictional television program about
Chinese artillery soldiers, to reach its conclusions.
But
the questionable conclusions of the Georgetown report and
Washington’s drive to more properly assess China’s military
capability, are more reflective of Washington’s own ‘nuclear
strategy’ than Beijing’s ambitions, James Corbett, editor of the
Japanese-based Corbett Report news website, argues.
RT:
The U.S. government is operating on the assumption that there are
three thousand kilometers worth of tunnels crisscrossing China. Is
that something you'd find believable?
James
Corbett: Well, I’m not even sure that the US government really
believes it. This is really on the back of a study that was
commissioned out of George Town University last year – or two years
ago now – that found that in this network of tunnels that we do
know exist and can see from satellite telemetry…and it’s just
sheer speculation what exists within them at this point. US
intelligence estimates puts the Chinese nuclear arsenal at 300 but
this study out of George Town in 2011 estimated that it could house
as many as 3,000 nuclear warheads. So basically as part of the NDAA
[National Defense Authorization Act] 2013 they’re basically saying
that now STRATCOM is going to have to issue a report to identify the
potential problems involved in this and whether or not they’ll be
able to confront this with conventional or nuclear forces in the
event that they actually need to take action.
RT:We've got most of
America’s ballistic submarines, we’ve also got more US ships
moving to the Pacific, the Pentagon all the while promising to
contain China, and now planning for a possible nuclear strike. That's
not exactly going to help already strained relations, is it?
JC:
It really isn’t. I don’t think we have to look at this report
within the context of their going to move in with a nuclear strike
right at this point but I think it has to be seen as a wider part of
US nuclear policy that’s been stretching out for decades now,
trying to come up with ways to justify the existence of some of the
US’ existing nuclear arsenal and looking for ways to create new
weapons. So, for example, we have the B61-11 nuclear bunker busters
with a 400 kiloton yield that they’ve been harboring and talking
about for the better part of a decade now in relation to Iran and
trying to bust through into Iran’s underground nuclear facilities
or alleged nuclear facilities. Now they’re just shifting that
rhetoric over to the Asia-Pacific as part of this Asia-Pacific pivot.
I think to a certain extent this is just to justify the existence of
the US arsenal and to make sure that things like the new START –the
strategic arms reduction treaty – basically gets scuttled before it
gets off of the ground. And there’s a lot in this new NDAA that
really seeks to undermine the president’s ability should he ever
want to actually reduce the nuclear stockpile. So I think the
congress is definitely trying to get their foot in the door and stop
any types of arms reductions before they can actually be implemented.
RT:There
are certainly some who say that the American president is powerless
when going head to head with the military industrial complex. We’ve
been getting reports that there have been some rather peculiar, high
altitude jet forays between China and Japan, some Japanese jets
tailing Chinese jets, basically playing high altitude games of cat
and mouse, possibly reigniting another territorial dispute. Is it
possible that those two could get involved in something slightly more
intense?
JC:
It certainly could, and of course the more bellicose that the US
becomes against China, the more safe Japan will feel in either
threatening or responding to these aggressions. So I think it really
only serves to put a match next to this powder keg that is the
Asia-Pacific region, especially now that this really is heating up
and that the American is turning here, we’re going to see more and
more of these types of situations come along that could justify even
further military intervention. So we have to look at the types of
nuclear rhetoric that is coming out right now as not necessarily an
intent to strike soon, but [as something] to keep our eyes on as this
rhetoric continues to ratchet up
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