ok so i hear china has like a 2.3 million man army which is the biggest in the worldwell that being said...what if *hypothetical situation* happened and china went to war...it seems like the kinda country that would make some of its citizens join the armyso i guess my question is this...if *hypothetical situation* were to happen, how quickly could china mobilize its army? like for instance(bout to throw out random numbers to help illustrate my question), how quickly could it go from 2.3 million army to like a 5 million man army or 10 million man army, etc?
5/14/2007 6:07:30 PM
in an attosecond.
5/14/2007 6:10:29 PM
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/china/index.html
5/14/2007 6:13:20 PM
whats the point of a 10 million man army when there is no chance in hell you could transport them or supply them. Against invasion? I'm sure they be drafted quite quickly. "Um, everyone is now a solider, good luck!"Too invade another country? Large numbers in the 5-10 million range would be useless
5/14/2007 6:15:38 PM
ok another quick question...(since the only way they would have a giant army is if they got invaded)do yall see china getting into any kind military conflict in the next lets say 20 years?
5/14/2007 6:18:17 PM
^are you referring to us?I strongly doubt that China/USA would be foolish enough to get into a world war with one another....however, you could very well see some smaller conflicts/wars in the Asian theatre that would indirectly challenge US diplomacy in the region.... say, with a smaller country(ies) in the region that has been traditionally allied to the U.S. Then it will be a matter of how we deal with it. [Edited on May 14, 2007 at 8:13 PM. Reason : .]
5/14/2007 8:09:40 PM
nah, i was referring to china[Edited on May 14, 2007 at 8:13 PM. Reason : like is china gonna have any kind of military conflict in the next 20 years]
5/14/2007 8:12:19 PM
Bottom line is ......there is no way to tell at this point in time. [Edited on May 14, 2007 at 8:16 PM. Reason : .][Edited on May 14, 2007 at 8:17 PM. Reason : .]
5/14/2007 8:15:57 PM
Well, if you name a theater, such as China vs. Korea, then America could reasonably hold on to South Korea, assuming it committed fully to saving it before the war started. Of course, any conflict that requires the crossing of water, such as China vs. Japan or China vs. Malasia, or China vs. Australia, then there is no question of China's defeat, even with limited U.S. support. With Full U.S. Support then such areas could probably be taken back from China (if it was a surprise invasion, or the like).
5/14/2007 8:42:18 PM
so pretty much if china doesnt try to invade anyone they are not going to be fucked with?sounds like no one would want to invade them and sounds like they cant really invade anyone
5/14/2007 8:44:38 PM
tawian... or anywhere else china thinks they own. hell they might have claim to part of russia
5/14/2007 8:49:37 PM
Their power is concentrated in light infantry. Basically they have a really good defense, but the effectiveness of their offense is limited to their neighbors.
5/14/2007 9:13:15 PM
what do you mean about that last part?(being restricted to their neighbors)
5/14/2007 9:20:20 PM
ie their main offense is marching their infantry across the border. They don't really have the ability to bring it across the world.
5/14/2007 9:29:01 PM
China has learned from the USSR's mistakes...They will not waste precious resources and economic potential on a huge military budget that will only cause them to be shunned by the world community and lose foreign investments..however, they are determined that Japan's invasion in the early part of the 20th century will be the last foreign invasion ever.IMHO, When China takes our place as the #1 economy in the world, then I think we will have a major situation. I don't think they'll sit idle for long after that.[Edited on May 14, 2007 at 9:31 PM. Reason : .][Edited on May 14, 2007 at 9:32 PM. Reason : .]
5/14/2007 9:29:05 PM
5/14/2007 9:35:10 PM
5/14/2007 10:03:03 PM
i have no freakin clue...if i were to make a stupid wild ass guess though, i'd say in 50 years
5/14/2007 10:08:39 PM
We owe china too much money
5/14/2007 10:27:43 PM
It's far from inevitable that China's economy will ever be the "#1" economy in the world. They have a lot of internal problems and handicaps that could explode on them and their exports can easily be replaced by other countries(ie there is nothing that China produces that couldn't be easily purchased from somewhere else). China is today what people made Japan out to be in the 80's, according to the hype back then Japan was suppose to own the US by now . China has a LOT to sort out before they could ever come close to the US or Europe in lasting economic strength. Their military is big, but that's about all it has going for it. Their equipment is still mostly Russian or Russian knockoffs, their doctrines are light years behind ours, they have no Navy, their pilots are about 1/100th as well trained as ours (even if they had planes equal to ares, which they don't). Militarily they can bridge the technology gap much easier then they can bridge the doctrinal/training gap. And as has already been said, their force projection is almost nil.
5/14/2007 10:29:20 PM
well what is one supposed to think when china has made double digit percentage increases in military spending since like 1994AND THEY NEED TO FUCKING VALUE THEIR MONEY RIGHT/rant
5/14/2007 10:45:42 PM
Recessions occur when wages exceed productivity due a host of possible causes. In the case of China, imported technology is increasing productivity very quickly; meanwhile labor inflows from inland are preventing labor shortages which would otherwise bid up wages. As things go, China will be able to maintain this happy situation for a decade. But eventually even China will run out of labor; eventually wages will start rising quickly; it will be at this point that future profits will no longer be sufficient to hide loses and institutions become insolvent. At this point, of course, China will flood itself with cash, using inflation to hide institutional loses. Either way, I suspect China will do fine in its first recession, and if it does then we know China will become the largest economy on the planet in a few decades.
5/14/2007 10:57:34 PM
ok so new question(sory i'm drunk a little now and i dont drink a lot)crazywade says 50 yearsyou say a "few" decades(i'm guessing lower or equal to 30 years)so if yall dont mind like can you all debate on the different year estimateshonestly i'm guessing you are right(loneshark)...it seems like with how fast the world is changing and shit it wont be 20 years until the chinese are number 1(although i hope its 50 years cause by then i'll be 70 and want to die anyway)
5/14/2007 11:00:41 PM
5/15/2007 2:32:14 AM
Who cares if China's GDP is higher than ours?I seriously doubt their per capita will be higher than ours in the next 100 years anyway even if their GDP passes us. As of right now they aren't even close to being on our level as a whole economy and their per capita is light years behind.As long as we sustain steady economic growth it really doesn't matter who "#1" is. Like i just said in another thread, wealth can be created. It doesn't have to be transferred.So China could pass us but we'll still be much better off 50 years from now regardless. In a world economy everyone can get better. Its not some pie graph where the total amount of wealth is a fixed number and you're fighting for your share of the pie.Secondly, China has WAY too much money invested in the US to even consider a war with us. This would be like setting your parents wallets on fire to destroy part of your inheritance.All the idiots against globalization fail to realize that one of the best things to come from it has been steadying economic growth across nations and making future world wars much less feasible.Thirdly, man power doesn't mean what it used to. Resources and weapons technology are more important than pure man power. Also, China has a LOT more land to protect than we do so their man power would be greatly watered down by the pure size of their holdings.[Edited on May 15, 2007 at 3:58 AM. Reason : a]
5/15/2007 3:56:23 AM
5/15/2007 4:33:06 AM
5/15/2007 7:55:03 AM
I said 50 years but it was a...
5/15/2007 9:06:44 AM
5/15/2007 9:30:46 AM
5/15/2007 9:56:41 AM
5/15/2007 10:20:40 AM
I love how you guys are talking to him as if he read or understands anything you're writing.
5/15/2007 10:35:46 AM
lol ya we can't even occupy iraq where we destroyed thier military in 2 weeks and half the country wants us to. nobody in china would want us there. China is inustrializing and modernizing fast. Their economy has already past our. who cares about per capita? thats just how well off each indidiviudal is and will never get near the us but they are collectivly the largest economy in the world and thier population will continue to grow exponentially. numbers aren't all important in war anymore but they still are important in overal power. nobody could win a ground war with china. They are allying with iran as we speak so i could see future problems there. them and russia are also bound to have some problems then theres the taiwan thing.and they do have a strong navy and air force with several carriers and stuff we don't know about because they keep their military things secret.
5/15/2007 10:36:40 AM
^ ignore that post.
5/15/2007 10:42:21 AM
5/15/2007 10:58:42 AM
china does have 1 carrier, but it is not operational. Its a half completed soviet era carrier that was sold to them with the clause that it not be made operational. They are supposedly using it as a mock carrier while they design and build their own, which means having an operational carrier will be at least a decade away, and forming a an actual carrier group even farther.
5/15/2007 1:23:23 PM
I think India could give China a run for the money for the next super-economy in the next few decades...
5/15/2007 1:38:50 PM
^I agree. what is India's military like?
5/15/2007 5:48:00 PM
5/15/2007 6:02:45 PM
5/15/2007 7:30:30 PM
5/15/2007 7:42:25 PM
5/15/2007 8:30:02 PM
5/15/2007 8:51:39 PM
yeah i'm a big fan of india...i'm glad they are on our side...i'd rather them be on our side than the chinese
5/15/2007 8:55:27 PM
5/15/2007 8:59:08 PM
And I'd just like to enumerate some of the "niggling" internal problems that Japan had to overcome from when it opened up to today:- assassinations of prime ministers- military takeover of democratic government- two DECADES at war, including a MOTHERFUCKING WORLD WAR- complete destruction of all major cities- TWO switches to completely different forms of governmentNone of the China's internal problems even come close to what Japan's economic advance overcame.
5/15/2007 9:06:32 PM
5/15/2007 9:27:48 PM
True. But those are notably urban countries; it takes far less effort to modernize your urban landscape (Japan's rural economy is still backward). However, China is a major resource producer and so it needs to implement technological advancement on a much wider scale to collect the resources needed from the rural landscape. Most of industrialized Asia is relying upon resources from the mainland United States, Australia, and Canada. This is fine if all you want to do is create a high standard of living for a few hundred million people on the coast. But even we cannot muster enough production for the whole of China. This is why commodity prices are being driven up so high by China's development; it has failed to modernize its internal resource base and thus the rest of us must do so. This is because the communist government is dragging its feet. Last I heard, in China all resources default to state ownership (as opposed to the anglo-saxon tradition of resource ownership falling to the land owner) and many industries, such as oil exploration and extraction, are granted whole to state-run monopolies. Which is a shame, China could hold more resource wealth than the whole of North America, we will just never know until the Chinese people and western corporations are set lose on the Chinese countryside.
5/15/2007 10:47:05 PM
India holds a lot of potential, but I think they've still got some catching up to do with China in terms of capital, infrastructure, and economic production. Their military is solid, but they've still got their Pakistani problem to deal with. Internally, I believe they have much more division and strife compared to the Chinese as well as a less nimble, more slowly moving government machinery.
5/16/2007 12:37:03 AM
5/16/2007 7:00:22 AM