Relations  between the U.S. and China have been steadily deteriorating since the  beginning of the year when Washington confirmed the completion of a $6.4  billion arms deal with Taiwan and China suspended military-to-military  ties with the U.S. in response.
In January the Chinese Defense  Ministry announced the cessation of military exchanges between the two  countries and the Foreign Ministry warned of enforcing sanctions against  American companies involved with weapons sales to Taiwan.
The  Washington Post reported afterward that during a two-day Strategic and  Economic Dialogue in Beijing this May attended by approximately 65 U.S.  officials, Rear Admiral Guan Youfei of the People's Liberation Army  accused Washington of "plotting to encircle China with strategic  alliances" and said arms deals with Taiwan "prove that the United States  views China as an enemy." [1]
During the 9th Asia Security  Summit (Shangri-La Dialogue conference) in Singapore in early June a  rancorous exchange occurred between U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert  Gates and Major General Zhu Chenghu, director of China's National  Defense University. The Chinese official lambasted the U.S. over more  than $12 billion in proposed arms transactions with Taiwan in the past  two years, stating they were designed to prevent the reunification of  China.
The preceding week China had rebuffed Gates' request to visit Beijing after the Singapore summit.
At  that conference Gates spoke of "our collective responsibility to  protect the peace and reinforce stability in Asia" in reference to the  sinking of the South Korean corvette the Cheonan in late March.
Major  General Zhu reacted by casting doubts on the U.S. account of the ship's  sinking and indicated that "America’s stance over the Cheonan was  hypocritical given its failure to condemn the Israeli commando raid on a  flotilla of ships carrying supplies to Gaza on May 31, which resulted  in the death of nine activists." He also warned that the latest Taiwan  arms package threatened China's “core interests.” [2]
At the  same event, General Ma Xiaotian, deputy head of the People's Liberation  Army General Staff Department, itemized obstacles to the resumption of  U.S.-China military relations, including Washington providing weapons to  Taiwan and "frequent espionage activities by US ships and aircraft in  the waters and airspace of China's exclusive economic zones." [3]
Matters  went from bad to worse after Gates and Secretary of State Hillary  Clinton visited South Korea in late July, accompanied by Chairman of the  Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Michael Mullen and Admiral Robert  Willard, commander of U.S. Pacific Command, and on July 20 Gates, Mullen  and Willard announced the U.S. would conduct a series of war games with  South Korea in the Yellow Sea and the Sea of Japan.
The first  such exercise, the four-day Invincible Spirit naval maneuvers, started  on July 25 and was led by the USS George Washington Carrier Strike  Group, named after the 97,000-ton nuclear-powered supercarrier at its  core, and involved 8,000 military personnel, 20 warships and 200  warplanes, including F-22 Raptor fifth generation stealth fighters,  deployed to the region for the first time. Shifted from the Yellow Sea,  which borders the Chinese mainland, to the Sea of Japan (on which Russia  has a coastline) at the last moment, the drills nevertheless  antagonized China and were transparently intended to produce that  effect.   
While in South Korea five days before the naval  exercises began, Admiral Willard - head of the largest U.S. overseas  military command, Pacific Command - announced that future war games of  comparable scope would be held in the Yellow Sea, where China has an  extensive coastline and claims a 200-mile exclusive economic zone. (For a  map of the Yellow Sea, see: http://www.worldatlas.com/aatlas/infopage/yellowsea.htm )
Joining  a chorus of major U.S. military and civilian officials making  statements that could only be intended to taunt China, "Willard said he  is not concerned about China’s feeling about U.S.-South Korean naval  exercises in that area."
In his own words, "If I have a concern  vis-a-vis China it’s that China exert itself to influence Pyongyang to  see that incidents like Cheonan don’t occur in the future.” [4]
His comment is entirely in line with others issued before and afterward.
During  the Group of 20 (G20) summit in Toronto on June 27 U.S. President  Barack Obama held a "blunt" conversation with Chinese President Hu  Jintao and accused him of “willful blindness” in relation to the Cheonan  incident. [5]
In mid-July Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell  dismissed and belittled China's concerns over not only large-scale but  ongoing U.S. naval exercises on both sides of the Korean Peninsula by  stating, “Those determinations are made by us, and us alone....Where we  exercise, when we exercise, with whom and how, using what assets and so  forth, are determinations that are made by the United States Navy, by  the Department of Defense, by the United States government.” [6] On  August 6 Morrell confirmed that U.S. warships will lead exercises in the  Yellow Sea in the near future.
Shortly afterward, while  preparing to leave for South Korea, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of  Staff Mullen said, "the Yellow Sea specifically is an international body  of water and the United States, you know, always reserves the right to  operate in those international waters. That’s what those are. Certainly,  you know, I hear what the Chinese are saying with respect to that, but  in fact we’ve exercised in the Yellow Sea for a long time and I fully  expect that we’ll do so in the future." [7]
On July 21 Deputy  Secretary of State James Steinberg, who had recently returned from  visits to Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia and Japan, spoke  at the Nixon Center in Washington, D.C., and in addition to speaking of  "our traditional alliances with Japan, South Korea, Australia, Thailand,  and the Philippines," stated:
"I think the most important  [problem with bilateral relations] is the continued unwillingness of  China to deepen the mil-to-mil engagement between the United States and  China.
"At the same time, so that there is no mistake about our  intentions, we made clear that we will exercise when and where we want  to when we need to consistent with international law. And that, as I’ve  said, we’ve clearly indicated in the past. We’ve exercised in the Yellow  Sea. We will exercise in the Yellow Sea again."
  
To rub the  salt deeper into the wound, he added: "We do not consult with China on  Taiwan arms sales. We make a judgment based on what we believe are the  legitimate defensive needs of Taiwan for arms sales." [8]
While  in South Korea last month for the first "two plus two" meetings between  the U.S. Secretaries of State and Defense and South Korean counterparts  "to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the Korean War," [9] Hillary  Clinton and Pentagon chief Robert Gates visited the Demilitarized Zone  separating North and South Korea, still technically at war, to "show  solidarity with their allies in Seoul." [10]
 
The following day  Clinton arrived in the capital of Vietnam for the 17th Association of  Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Regional Forum and a U.S.-ASEAN  post-ministerial meeting on July 23 and 22, respectively. While in Hanoi  she spoke of territorial disputes over the Spratly and Paracel island  chains between China on one hand and Vietnam, Brunei, Malaysia and the  Philippines (the last four members of ASEAN) on the other.
On  July 23, in a blunt reference to China, she said that the U.S. “has a  national interest in freedom of navigation, open access to Asia’s  maritime commons, and respect for international law in the South China  Sea,” where the islands are located, and that “We oppose the use or  threat of force by any claimant,” as "America’s future is intimately  tied to that of the Asia-Pacific.” [11]
Clinton formally  initiated a campaign to recruit the ten members of ASEAN - Vietnam,  Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar (Burma), the  Philippines, Singapore and Thailand - into a rapidly evolving Asian NATO  aimed against China.
After seven months of unrelenting  challenges to China, when it appeared that enough gratuitous insults and  mounting threats had already been issued, the USS George Washington  aircraft carrier arrived in the Sea of Japan on July 25.
Three  years before, the U.S. Defense Department released a report on China  which claimed it was "pursuing long-term, comprehensive transformation  of its military forces to enable it to project power and deny other  countries the ability to threaten it." [12]
Proceeding from that  perspective, Washington is ensuring that China will be so thoroughly  boxed in by U.S. warships, submarines, interceptor missile systems and  advanced deep penetrating stealth bombers - and a ring of U.S. military  client states ready to host American ships, planes, troops, missile  shield installations and bases - that it indeed will not be able to  protect itself from the threat of attack.
Eleven days after the  completion of the U.S.-South Korean naval exercises in the Sea of Japan,  the U.S. Seventh Fleet began a weeklong series of naval maneuvers with  Vietnam, the first-ever such joint exercises.
USS George  Washington, fresh from the recently concluded naval war games with South  Korea, arrived in the South China Sea for the occasion.
"The  formidable USS George Washington is a permanent presence in the Pacific,  based in Japan. As one of the world's biggest warships, it is a  floating city that can carry up to 70 aircraft, more than 5,000 sailors  and aviators and about 4 million pounds (1.8 million kilograms) of  bombs. It lurked Sunday [August 8] about 200 miles (320 kilometers) off  the central coast of Danang, Vietnam's jumping-off point for the  disputed [Spratly and Paracel] islands."
 
Captain Ross Myers,  commander of the George Washington's air wing, was quoted echoing  Clinton's earlier assertion that "The strategic implications and  importance of the waters of the South China Sea and the freedom of  navigation is vital to both Vietnam and the United States." He was  interviewed "as fighter jets thundered off the flight deck above." [13]
Several  high-ranking Vietnamese military and civilian officials as well as the  U.S. ambassador to the country were flown onto the supercarrier "to  observe the strike group as it operates in the South China Sea," [14]  near the contested Spratly islands.
With senior Vietnamese  government and military officials aboard, USS George Washington "cruised  near the Paracel Islands - another chain claimed by both China and  Vietnam." [15]
On August 10 the guided missile destroyer USS  John S. McCain docked at Da Nang in central Vietnam, in its first visit  to the country, to join the joint naval maneuvers in the South China  Sea.
Rear Admiral Ron Horton, commander of Task Force 73 of the  U.S. Seventh Fleet, said, "This is indicative of the increasingly closer  ties between the U.S. and Vietnam. Exchanges like this are vital for  our navies to gain a greater understanding of one another, and build  important relationships for the future." [16]
The U.S. Seventh  Fleet is "the largest of the forward-deployed U.S. fleets, with 50–60  ships, 350 aircraft and 60,000 Navy and Marine Corps personnel." [17]  That is, the mightiest seaborne military machine in the world.
As  the U.S.-Vietnamese naval exercises were underway in the South China  Sea, an article by a former commander of the U.S. Pacific Fleet  (assigned to U.S. Pacific Command), Retired Admiral James Lyons,  appeared in the editorial pages of the Washington Times which advocated  that "The United States should consider leasing big-ticket military  hardware to the Philippines to give it the capability to defend its  sovereign territory against Chinese expansionism in the South China  Sea...."
In particular, he said "the US should consider leasing a  squadron of F-16 along with T-38 supersonic trainers, an aircraft for  maritime patrol, and two FFG-7 guided-missile frigates to provide a  recognized capability to enforce the Philippines’ offshore territorial  claims."
He also wrote that "now that President Barack Obama’s  administration has directly challenged China, the US should expand its  relations with ASEAN 'by building on our Mutual Defense Treaty with the  Philippines.'
"The US should negotiate a commercial agreement for  access to logistic support facilities in Subic Bay," [18] where the  U.S. maintained a naval base until the Philippine Senate ordered it  closed in 1991.
Washington's project for an Asian NATO designed to surround and neutralize China is not limited to Southeast Asia and ASEAN.
The  U.S. is currently leading this year's Khaan Quest (pronounced like  conquest) military exercises in Mongolia on China's northern border with  troops from military partners Canada, France, Germany, India, Japan,  South Korea and Singapore. Previous Khaan Quest exercises going back to  2003 trained Mongolian troops for deployment to Iraq and Afghanistan.  [19]
On August 16 U.S. and British troops will begin ten days of  military drills in Kazakhstan, on China's northwest border, in the 2010  Steppe Eagle "multinational exercise, part of NATO's Partnership for  Peace programme...."
"The exercise is intended to assist  Kazakhstan's Ministry of Defence in its stated aim to generate a NATO  inter-operable peace support operational capability," according to  British military attache Simon Fitzgibbon. [20] Kazakhstan deployed a  "peacekeeping" contingent to Iraq in 2003 and may be tapped for one to  serve under NATO in Afghanistan.
To China's south, a senior  Indian Air Force official recently disclosed that his government is  upgrading another air base near the Chinese border to accommodate  warplanes. According to the U.S. Defense News website, "The moves are  part of the effort to strengthen India's defenses against China."
In  June India approved a $3.3 billion deal to purchase 42 more Su-30  air-to-air and air-to-surface jet fighters, bringing the planned total  to 272 by 2018.
Regarding a joint Russian-Indian long-range  multirole jet fighter/strike fighter adaptation of the Su-30, the same  Indian official said "a nuclear-armed Su-30MKI could fly deep inside  China with midair refueling." [21]
On China's Western flank  where a narrow strip of land connects the two countries, the U.S.  Defense Department announced on August 11 that, in addition to 30,000  U.S. forces not so assigned, "The NATO-led International Security  Assistance Force in Afghanistan now has almost 120,000 troops from 47  different countries assigned to it," [22] including forces from  Asia-Pacific nations South Korea, Mongolia, Malaysia, Australia and New  Zealand.
The noose is tightening around China and the nation's military knows it.
Notes
1) Washington Post, June 8, 2010
2) Jamestown Foundation, June 24, 2010
3) China Daily, June 7, 2010
4) United States Department of Defense, July 20, 2010
5) U.S. Risks Military Clash With China In Yellow Sea
   Stop NATO, July 16, 2010
   http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/07/16/u-s-risks-military-clash-with-china-in-yellow-sea
6) Agence France-Presse, July 14, 2010
7) Joint Chiefs of Staff, July 19, 2010
8) United States Department of State, July 27, 2010
9) U.S. Department of State, July 21, 2010
10) BBC News, July 21, 2010
11) Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S. Department of State
    July 23, 2010
12) Voice of America News, May 26, 2007
13) Associated Press, August 8, 2010
14) Navy NewsStand, August 9, 2010
15) Voice of America News, August 10, 2010
16) Navy NewsStand, August 9, 2010
17) Wikipedia
18) Philippine Star, August 10, 2010
19) Mongolia: Pentagon Trojan Horse Wedged Between China And Russia
    Stop NATO, March 31, 2010
    http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/03/31/mongolia-pentagon-trojan-horse-wedged-between-china-and-russia
20) Reuters, August 13, 2010
    Kazakhstan: U.S., NATO Seek Military Outpost Between Russia And China
    Stop NATO, April 14, 2010
    http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/04/15/kazakhstan-u-s-nato-seek-military-outpost-between-russia-and-china
21) Defense News, August 12, 2010
22) United States Department of Defense, American Forces Press Service,
    August 11, 2010
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