纽约时报关于黑丝新文

来源:百度文库 编辑:超级军网 时间:2024/04/29 23:39:30
把黑丝完全放在军事战略背景下:

China’s Push On Military Is Beginning To Bear Fruit

BEIJING — Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates, on a mission to resuscitate moribund military relations with China, will not arrive in Beijing for talks with the nation’s top military leaders until Sunday. But at an airfield in Chengdu, a metropolis in the nation’s center, China’s military leaders have already rolled out a welcome for him.

It is the J-20, a radar-evading jet fighter that has the same two angled tailfins that are the trademark of the Pentagon’s own stealth fighter, the F-22 Raptor. After years of top-secret development, the jet — China’s first stealth plane — was put through what appear to be preliminary, but also very public, tests this week on the runway of the Aviation Design Institute in Chengdu, a site so open that aircraft enthusiasts often gather there to snap photos of their favorites.

Some analysts say the timing is no coincidence. “This is their new policy of deterrence,” Andrei Chang, the Hong Kong editor in chief of the Canadian journal Kanwa Defense Weekly, said in a telephone interview on Wednesday. “They want to show the U. S., show Mr. Gates, their muscle.”

These days, there is more muscle to show. A decade of aggressive modernization of China’s once creaky military is beginning to bear fruit, and both the Pentagon and China’s Asian neighbors are increasingly taking notice.

By most accounts, China remains a generation or more behind the United States in military technology, and even further behind in deploying battle-tested versions of its most sophisticated naval and air capabilities. But after years of denials that it has any intention of becoming a peer military power of the United States, it is now unveiling capabilities that suggest that it intends, sooner or later, to be able to challenge American forces in the Pacific.

Besides the J-20, a midair-refuelable, missile-capable jet designed to fly far beyond Chinese borders, the Chinese are reported to be refitting a Soviet-era Russian aircraft carrier — China’s first such power-projecting ship — for deployment as soon as next year. Two other 50,000-ton-plus carriers are being built from scratch in a Shanghai shipyard. The first is said to be scheduled for launching by 2014; several more could come by 2020, Pentagon experts say.

The military’s nuclear deterrent, estimated by experts at no more than 160 warheads, has been redeployed since 2008 onto mobile launchers and advanced submarines that no longer are sitting ducks for attackers. Multiple-warhead missiles are widely presumed to come next. China’s 60-boat submarine fleet, already Asia’s largest, is being refurbished with super-quiet nuclear-powered vessels and a second generation of ballistic-missile-equipped subs.

And a widely anticipated antiship ballistic missile, called a “carrier-killer” for its potential to strike the big carriers at the heart of the American naval presence in the Pacific, appears to be approaching deployment. The head of the United States Pacific Command, Adm. Robert F. Willard, told a Japanese newspaper in December that the weapon had reached “initial operational capability,” an important benchmark. Navy officials said later that the Chinese had a working design but that it apparently had yet to be tested over water.

On that and other weaponry, China’s clear message nevertheless is that its ability to deter others from territory it owns, or claims to own, is growing fast.

China, of course, has its own rationales for its military buildup. A common theme is that potentially offensive weapons like aircraft carriers, antiship missiles and stealth fighters are needed to enforce claims to Taiwan, should leaders there seek legal independence from the mainland.

Taiwan’s current status, governed separately but claimed by China as part of its sovereign territory, is maintained in part by an American commitment to defend it should Beijing carry out an attack. Some experts date elements of today’s military buildup from crises in the mid-1990s, when the United States sent aircraft carriers unmolested into waters around Taiwan to drive home Washington’s commitment to the island.

Chinese officials also clearly worry that the United States plans to ring China with military alliances to contain Beijing’s ambitions for power and influence. In that view, the Pentagon’s long-term strategy is to cement in Central Asia the sorts of partnerships it has built on China’s eastern flank in South Korea, Japan and Taiwan.

“Some Chinese scholars worry that the U. S. will complete its encirclement of China this way,” said Xu Qinhua, who studies Russia and Central Asia at the People’s University of China and advises government officials on regional issues. “We should worry about this. It’s natural.”

The Pentagon’s official view has long been that it welcomes a stronger Chinese military as a partner with the United States to maintain open sea lanes, fight piracy and perform other international duties now shouldered — and paid for — by American service members and taxpayers.

But Chinese military leaders have seldom offered more than a glimpse of their long-term military strategy, and the steady buildup of a force with offensive abilities well beyond Chinese territory clearly worries American military planners.

“When we talk about a threat, it’s a combination of capabilities and intentions,” said Abraham M. Denmark, a former China country director in Mr. Gates’s office. “The capabilities are becoming more and more clearly defined, and they’re more and more clearly targeted at limiting American abilities to project military power into the western Pacific.”

“What’s unclear to us is the intent,” he added. “China’s military modernization is certainly their right. What others question is how that military power is going to be used.”

Mr. Denmark, who now directs the Asia-Pacific Security Program at the Center for a New American Security in Washington, said China’s recent strong-arm reaction to territorial disputes with Japan and Southeast Asian neighbors had given both the Pentagon and China’s neighbors cause for concern.

Still, a top Navy intelligence officer told reporters in Washington on Wednesday that the United States should not overestimate Beijing’s military prowess and that China had not yet demonstrated an ability to use its different weapons systems together in proficient warfare. The officer, Vice Adm. David J. Dorsett, the deputy chief of naval operations for information dominance, said that although China had developed some weapons faster than the United States expected, he was not alarmed over all.

“Have you seen them deploy large groups of naval forces?” he said. “No. Have we seen large, joint, sophisticated exercises? No. Do they have any combat proficiency? No.”

Admiral Dorsett said that even though the Chinese were planning sea trials on a “used, very old” Russian aircraft carrier this year and were intent on building their own carriers as well, they would still have limited proficiency in landing planes on carriers and operating them as part of larger battle groups of ships at sea.

Little about China’s military intentions is clear, even to Chinese experts. The Pentagon’s 2009 assessment of China’s military strategy stated baldly that despite “persistent efforts,” its understanding of how and how much China’s government spends on defense “has not improved measurably.”

In an interview on Wednesday, a leading Chinese expert on the military, Zhu Feng, said he viewed some government claims of rapid progress on advanced weapons like stealth fighters as little more than puffery.

“What’s the real story?” he asked in a telephone interview. “I must be very skeptical. I see a lot of vast headlines with regards to weapons procurement. But behind the curtain, I see a lot of wasted money — a lot of ballooning, a lot of exaggeration.”

Mr. Zhu, who directs the international security program at Peking University, suggested that China’s military establishment — not unlike that in the United States — was inclined to inflate threats and exaggerate its progress in a continual bid to win more influence and money for its favored programs.

And that may be true. If so, however, the artifice may be lost on China’s cross-Pacific rivals.

“Ultimately, from a U. S. perspective it comes down to an issue of whether the United States will be as dominant in the western Pacific as we always have been,” Bonnie Glaser, a China scholar at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies, said in a telephone interview. “And clearly the Chinese would like to make it far more complicated for us.”

“That’s something the Chinese would see as reasonable,” she said. “But from a U. S. perspective, that’s just unacceptable.”把黑丝完全放在军事战略背景下:

China’s Push On Military Is Beginning To Bear Fruit

BEIJING — Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates, on a mission to resuscitate moribund military relations with China, will not arrive in Beijing for talks with the nation’s top military leaders until Sunday. But at an airfield in Chengdu, a metropolis in the nation’s center, China’s military leaders have already rolled out a welcome for him.

It is the J-20, a radar-evading jet fighter that has the same two angled tailfins that are the trademark of the Pentagon’s own stealth fighter, the F-22 Raptor. After years of top-secret development, the jet — China’s first stealth plane — was put through what appear to be preliminary, but also very public, tests this week on the runway of the Aviation Design Institute in Chengdu, a site so open that aircraft enthusiasts often gather there to snap photos of their favorites.

Some analysts say the timing is no coincidence. “This is their new policy of deterrence,” Andrei Chang, the Hong Kong editor in chief of the Canadian journal Kanwa Defense Weekly, said in a telephone interview on Wednesday. “They want to show the U. S., show Mr. Gates, their muscle.”

These days, there is more muscle to show. A decade of aggressive modernization of China’s once creaky military is beginning to bear fruit, and both the Pentagon and China’s Asian neighbors are increasingly taking notice.

By most accounts, China remains a generation or more behind the United States in military technology, and even further behind in deploying battle-tested versions of its most sophisticated naval and air capabilities. But after years of denials that it has any intention of becoming a peer military power of the United States, it is now unveiling capabilities that suggest that it intends, sooner or later, to be able to challenge American forces in the Pacific.

Besides the J-20, a midair-refuelable, missile-capable jet designed to fly far beyond Chinese borders, the Chinese are reported to be refitting a Soviet-era Russian aircraft carrier — China’s first such power-projecting ship — for deployment as soon as next year. Two other 50,000-ton-plus carriers are being built from scratch in a Shanghai shipyard. The first is said to be scheduled for launching by 2014; several more could come by 2020, Pentagon experts say.

The military’s nuclear deterrent, estimated by experts at no more than 160 warheads, has been redeployed since 2008 onto mobile launchers and advanced submarines that no longer are sitting ducks for attackers. Multiple-warhead missiles are widely presumed to come next. China’s 60-boat submarine fleet, already Asia’s largest, is being refurbished with super-quiet nuclear-powered vessels and a second generation of ballistic-missile-equipped subs.

And a widely anticipated antiship ballistic missile, called a “carrier-killer” for its potential to strike the big carriers at the heart of the American naval presence in the Pacific, appears to be approaching deployment. The head of the United States Pacific Command, Adm. Robert F. Willard, told a Japanese newspaper in December that the weapon had reached “initial operational capability,” an important benchmark. Navy officials said later that the Chinese had a working design but that it apparently had yet to be tested over water.

On that and other weaponry, China’s clear message nevertheless is that its ability to deter others from territory it owns, or claims to own, is growing fast.

China, of course, has its own rationales for its military buildup. A common theme is that potentially offensive weapons like aircraft carriers, antiship missiles and stealth fighters are needed to enforce claims to Taiwan, should leaders there seek legal independence from the mainland.

Taiwan’s current status, governed separately but claimed by China as part of its sovereign territory, is maintained in part by an American commitment to defend it should Beijing carry out an attack. Some experts date elements of today’s military buildup from crises in the mid-1990s, when the United States sent aircraft carriers unmolested into waters around Taiwan to drive home Washington’s commitment to the island.

Chinese officials also clearly worry that the United States plans to ring China with military alliances to contain Beijing’s ambitions for power and influence. In that view, the Pentagon’s long-term strategy is to cement in Central Asia the sorts of partnerships it has built on China’s eastern flank in South Korea, Japan and Taiwan.

“Some Chinese scholars worry that the U. S. will complete its encirclement of China this way,” said Xu Qinhua, who studies Russia and Central Asia at the People’s University of China and advises government officials on regional issues. “We should worry about this. It’s natural.”

The Pentagon’s official view has long been that it welcomes a stronger Chinese military as a partner with the United States to maintain open sea lanes, fight piracy and perform other international duties now shouldered — and paid for — by American service members and taxpayers.

But Chinese military leaders have seldom offered more than a glimpse of their long-term military strategy, and the steady buildup of a force with offensive abilities well beyond Chinese territory clearly worries American military planners.

“When we talk about a threat, it’s a combination of capabilities and intentions,” said Abraham M. Denmark, a former China country director in Mr. Gates’s office. “The capabilities are becoming more and more clearly defined, and they’re more and more clearly targeted at limiting American abilities to project military power into the western Pacific.”

“What’s unclear to us is the intent,” he added. “China’s military modernization is certainly their right. What others question is how that military power is going to be used.”

Mr. Denmark, who now directs the Asia-Pacific Security Program at the Center for a New American Security in Washington, said China’s recent strong-arm reaction to territorial disputes with Japan and Southeast Asian neighbors had given both the Pentagon and China’s neighbors cause for concern.

Still, a top Navy intelligence officer told reporters in Washington on Wednesday that the United States should not overestimate Beijing’s military prowess and that China had not yet demonstrated an ability to use its different weapons systems together in proficient warfare. The officer, Vice Adm. David J. Dorsett, the deputy chief of naval operations for information dominance, said that although China had developed some weapons faster than the United States expected, he was not alarmed over all.

“Have you seen them deploy large groups of naval forces?” he said. “No. Have we seen large, joint, sophisticated exercises? No. Do they have any combat proficiency? No.”

Admiral Dorsett said that even though the Chinese were planning sea trials on a “used, very old” Russian aircraft carrier this year and were intent on building their own carriers as well, they would still have limited proficiency in landing planes on carriers and operating them as part of larger battle groups of ships at sea.

Little about China’s military intentions is clear, even to Chinese experts. The Pentagon’s 2009 assessment of China’s military strategy stated baldly that despite “persistent efforts,” its understanding of how and how much China’s government spends on defense “has not improved measurably.”

In an interview on Wednesday, a leading Chinese expert on the military, Zhu Feng, said he viewed some government claims of rapid progress on advanced weapons like stealth fighters as little more than puffery.

“What’s the real story?” he asked in a telephone interview. “I must be very skeptical. I see a lot of vast headlines with regards to weapons procurement. But behind the curtain, I see a lot of wasted money — a lot of ballooning, a lot of exaggeration.”

Mr. Zhu, who directs the international security program at Peking University, suggested that China’s military establishment — not unlike that in the United States — was inclined to inflate threats and exaggerate its progress in a continual bid to win more influence and money for its favored programs.

And that may be true. If so, however, the artifice may be lost on China’s cross-Pacific rivals.

“Ultimately, from a U. S. perspective it comes down to an issue of whether the United States will be as dominant in the western Pacific as we always have been,” Bonnie Glaser, a China scholar at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies, said in a telephone interview. “And clearly the Chinese would like to make it far more complicated for us.”

“That’s something the Chinese would see as reasonable,” she said. “But from a U. S. perspective, that’s just unacceptable.”
没有翻译,看的都是虫子蚯蚓怎么看
cd应该禁止方言
好酸的分析与评论
除了标点符号偶都认识,其他的,偶只知道   啊  喔  鹅  衣  屋   语    拨   破  摸  佛   德  特  呢  勒
楼上博士毕业啊,这都知道
北大的神马浮云珠峰?

写得挺客观。


方言求翻译。
Bear Fruit-奏效,有成果

方言求翻译。
Bear Fruit-奏效,有成果
标题:中国对军事的投入逐渐开花结果
哪位好人可不可以把方言翻译一下?
好像还采访了平可夫
哪位鸟语好的兄弟译一下
China’s Push On Military Is Beginning To Bear Fruit

BEIJING — Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates, on a mission to resuscitate moribund military relations with China, will not arrive in Beijing for talks with the nation’s top military leaders until Sunday. But at an airfield in Chengdu, a metropolis in the nation’s center, China’s military leaders have already rolled out a welcome for him.

It is the J-20, a radar-evading jet fighter that has the same two angled tailfins that are the trademark of the Pentagon’s own stealth fighter, the F-22 Raptor. After years of top-secret development, the jet — China’s first stealth plane — was put through what appear to be preliminary, but also very public, tests this week on the runway of the Aviation Design Institute in Chengdu, a site so open that aircraft enthusiasts often gather there to snap photos of their favorites.

Some analysts say the timing is no coincidence. “This is their new policy of deterrence,” Andrei Chang, the Hong Kong editor in chief of the Canadian journal Kanwa Defense Weekly, said in a telephone interview on Wednesday. “They want to show the U. S., show Mr. Gates, their muscle.”

These days, there is more muscle to show. A decade of aggressive modernization of China’s once creaky military is beginning to bear fruit, and both the Pentagon and China’s Asian neighbors are increasingly taking notice.

By most accounts, China remains a generation or more behind the United States in military technology, and even further behind in deploying battle-tested versions of its most sophisticated naval and air capabilities. But after years of denials that it has any intention of becoming a peer military power of the United States, it is now unveiling capabilities that suggest that it intends, sooner or later, to be able to challenge American forces in the Pacific.

Besides the J-20, a midair-refuelable, missile-capable jet designed to fly far beyond Chinese borders, the Chinese are reported to be refitting a Soviet-era Russian aircraft carrier — China’s first such power-projecting ship — for deployment as soon as next year. Two other 50,000-ton-plus carriers are being built from scratch in a Shanghai shipyard. The first is said to be scheduled for launching by 2014; several more could come by 2020, Pentagon experts say.

The military’s nuclear deterrent, estimated by experts at no more than 160 warheads, has been redeployed since 2008 onto mobile launchers and advanced submarines that no longer are sitting ducks for attackers. Multiple-warhead missiles are widely presumed to come next. China’s 60-boat submarine fleet, already Asia’s largest, is being refurbished with super-quiet nuclear-powered vessels and a second generation of ballistic-missile-equipped subs.

And a widely anticipated antiship ballistic missile, called a “carrier-killer” for its potential to strike the big carriers at the heart of the American naval presence in the Pacific, appears to be approaching deployment. The head of the United States Pacific Command, Adm. Robert F. Willard, told a Japanese newspaper in December that the weapon had reached “initial operational capability,” an important benchmark. Navy officials said later that the Chinese had a working design but that it apparently had yet to be tested over water.

On that and other weaponry, China’s clear message nevertheless is that its ability to deter others from territory it owns, or claims to own, is growing fast.

China, of course, has its own rationales for its military buildup. A common theme is that potentially offensive weapons like aircraft carriers, antiship missiles and stealth fighters are needed to enforce claims to Taiwan, should leaders there seek legal independence from the mainland.

Taiwan’s current status, governed separately but claimed by China as part of its sovereign territory, is maintained in part by an American commitment to defend it should Beijing carry out an attack. Some experts date elements of today’s military buildup from crises in the mid-1990s, when the United States sent aircraft carriers unmolested into waters around Taiwan to drive home Washington’s commitment to the island.

Chinese officials also clearly worry that the United States plans to ring China with military alliances to contain Beijing’s ambitions for power and influence. In that view, the Pentagon’s long-term strategy is to cement in Central Asia the sorts of partnerships it has built on China’s eastern flank in South Korea, Japan and Taiwan.

“Some Chinese scholars worry that the U. S. will complete its encirclement of China this way,” said Xu Qinhua, who studies Russia and Central Asia at the People’s University of China and advises government officials on regional issues. “We should worry about this. It’s natural.”

The Pentagon’s official view has long been that it welcomes a stronger Chinese military as a partner with the United States to maintain open sea lanes, fight piracy and perform other international duties now shouldered — and paid for — by American service members and taxpayers.

But Chinese military leaders have seldom offered more than a glimpse of their long-term military strategy, and the steady buildup of a force with offensive abilities well beyond Chinese territory clearly worries American military planners.

“When we talk about a threat, it’s a combination of capabilities and intentions,” said Abraham M. Denmark, a former China country director in Mr. Gates’s office. “The capabilities are becoming more and more clearly defined, and they’re more and more clearly targeted at limiting American abilities to project military power into the western Pacific.”

“What’s unclear to us is the intent,” he added. “China’s military modernization is certainly their right. What others question is how that military power is going to be used.”

Mr. Denmark, who now directs the Asia-Pacific Security Program at the Center for a New American Security in Washington, said China’s recent strong-arm reaction to territorial disputes with Japan and Southeast Asian neighbors had given both the Pentagon and China’s neighbors cause for concern.

Still, a top Navy intelligence officer told reporters in Washington on Wednesday that the United States should not overestimate Beijing’s military prowess and that China had not yet demonstrated an ability to use its different weapons systems together in proficient warfare. The officer, Vice Adm. David J. Dorsett, the deputy chief of naval operations for information dominance, said that although China had developed some weapons faster than the United States expected, he was not alarmed over all.

“Have you seen them deploy large groups of naval forces?” he said. “No. Have we seen large, joint, sophisticated exercises? No. Do they have any combat proficiency? No.”

Admiral Dorsett said that even though the Chinese were planning sea trials on a “used, very old” Russian aircraft carrier this year and were intent on building their own carriers as well, they would still have limited proficiency in landing planes on carriers and operating them as part of larger battle groups of ships at sea.

Little about China’s military intentions is clear, even to Chinese experts. The Pentagon’s 2009 assessment of China’s military strategy stated baldly that despite “persistent efforts,” its understanding of how and how much China’s government spends on defense “has not improved measurably.”

In an interview on Wednesday, a leading Chinese expert on the military, Zhu Feng, said he viewed some government claims of rapid progress on advanced weapons like stealth fighters as little more than puffery.

“What’s the real story?” he asked in a telephone interview. “I must be very skeptical. I see a lot of vast headlines with regards to weapons procurement. But behind the curtain, I see a lot of wasted money — a lot of ballooning, a lot of exaggeration.”

Mr. Zhu, who directs the international security program at Peking University, suggested that China’s military establishment — not unlike that in the United States — was inclined to inflate threats and exaggerate its progress in a continual bid to win more influence and money for its favored programs.

And that may be true. If so, however, the artifice may be lost on China’s cross-Pacific rivals.

“Ultimately, from a U. S. perspective it comes down to an issue of whether the United States will be as dominant in the western Pacific as we always have been,” Bonnie Glaser, a China scholar at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies, said in a telephone interview. “And clearly the Chinese would like to make it far more complicated for us.”

“That’s something the Chinese would see as reasonable,” she said. “But from a U. S. perspective, that’s just unacceptable.”
化外 发表于 2011-1-6 09:46


    你这头像也太强了吧
中国军事投入开始出成果

北京——尽管国防部长罗伯特 盖茨在本周日才会带着使命抵达中国,修复与中国军方高层的军事
交流,但是,在中国的一个省会城市——成都的某军用机场,中国军方领导人们已经事先彩排了一场欢迎仪式。
“Have you seen them deploy large groups of naval forces?” he said. “No. Have we seen large, joint, sophisticated exercises? No. Do they have any combat proficiency? No.”

Admiral Dorsett said that even though the Chinese were planning sea trials on a “used, very old” Russian aircraft carrier this year and were intent on building their own carriers as well, they would still have limited proficiency in landing planes on carriers and operating them as part of larger battle groups of ships at sea.


BKC, BKC.
方言学得不太好!大概看了一下,私货太多,还是老生常谈,没有什么可看的。
中国军事野心初见成效。
在中美军事交流前夕,中国不顾民主美国的诚意,有意放出J20图片,展示肌肉,试图给美方下马威。
然后严密论证中国包藏祸心,殚精竭虑妄图挑战美国霸权的努力,还采访了中共北美局局长平可夫,其间还引用“北大的神马浮云珠峰”的话,说明中国故意夸大威胁,装无辜,要钱要发展。
最后首尾呼应,画龙点睛,强调中国对美国的危险。
实在是小学生优秀作文的模仿佳作。
建议小学优秀作文大全予以收录
这也太长了,写译文起码要半天啊
哪位翻译一下啊!
J-20是一种雷达侦查喷气式战斗机,相当于国防部标志性的F-22猛禽隐身战机。通过数年来极度保密
的发展,中国的首款喷气式隐身战机的验证机,终于公开地进入大众的视野里,并于本周开始在成飞的机场跑道上测试,公开的尺度如此之大,以至于中国的机迷们可以公然地聚集在周围,任意拍照。
超大直接贴方言的趋势看来越来越严重了。
cd应该禁止方言
一些分析家认为,J-20在露面的时机并不是偶然的。“这是他们实施威慑的一种新策略。”汉和防务周刊
总编Andrei Chang在接受电话采访时如是说,“他们是在向美国,向盖茨先生展示肌肉。”
F22本位制被打破,J20意义得重新审视啊,应该能成为历史上绝对的标志性事件
这一阵子,中国展示了足够多的肌肉,十年积极的现代化进程让中国一度落后破败的军事工业开始结出硕果。
这越来越引起五角大楼和中国的亚洲邻国的警觉。
大部分观点认为,中国的军事工业技术仍旧落后美国一代以上,而且要让这些技术运用于军队,并适应复杂
的海空作战,本身就还有很长的路要走。但是也要看到,一直以来,中国都极力否认要在军力上和美军匹敌
而现在又主动展示军工生产能力,这表明中国正逐渐地挑战美国在太平洋的军力,这是早迟的事。
据报道,除了可以携带导弹、具备超出中国领土的远程打击能力的J-20外,中国正在改装的一艘苏联时代的
航空母舰,最早在明年可以下水,另外在建的还有上海造船厂的两艘50000吨级的舰船。第一艘会在2014年
服役,2020年将有更多的大型舰只服役,五角大楼的专家如是说。
MD需要蛋定
楼上某些同学连北大的朱峰都不知道?

前些日子在南棒子《中央日报》上发文,鼓吹中国放弃朝鲜,全面倒向美国南棒的就是他。


人民解放军现代化建设结硕果
麦克尔•维恩斯,爱德华德•黄 2011年1月5日报道

为恢复和发展合众国与中国大陆的军事外交关系,国防部长罗伯特•埃姆•盖茨本周日将到访北京,并将与大陆军事领导人展开会谈。与此同时,在中国内陆的一个大城市-成都的机场上,大陆的军事领导人已经向他表示了热烈的欢迎。

歼-20和五角大楼自己的匿踪战机F-22猛禽一样拥有标志性的外倾双垂尾,是一架具备雷达匿踪性的喷气式战斗机。这架中国第一架隐身飞机,经过多年高度保密的研发,本周出现在了成都航空设计所的跑道上,进行了相当公开的基础测试。现场管制松散,以至于航空爱好者们为了拍到飞机的照片蜂拥而至。

有分析师认为在盖茨到访前进行这次测试是经过精心安排的,决非时机巧合。加拿大期刊《汉和防务周刊》总编安德烈•凯申•常,在周三的电话访问中说:“这次测试是一种新的威慑方式,他们想借此向盖茨先生、向合众国展示军备能力。”

最近此类的军备展示远不止于此。五角大楼和中国的邻国都越来越清楚,经过十余年奋发不懈的现代化建设,中国一度相对落后的军事力量正重新变得羽翼丰满起来。

一般认为,中国大陆在军备技术方面落后合众国至少一代,特别是在海、空军合成实战能力方面,差距更大。虽然过去中国一直强调不谋求与合众国相当的军事力量,但现在情况显示,迟早中国都将获得在太平洋挑战合众国军事力量的能力。

据报道,J-20具有空中加油和发射导弹攻击的能力,它的设计目的就是攻击敌方纵深目标。此外,中国还在翻新一艘前苏联时期建造的乌克兰航空母舰,该舰明年服役后将使中国首次获得远洋军力投放能力。

尽管2006年中国官方否认了正在建造航空母舰的报道,但去年以来人民解放军的高级军官们在公开场合不断强调“海军需要大型水面战斗舰艇”。多处消息指出,上海正在建造至少一条航空母舰的船体。在2009年的报告中,五角大楼认为中国已经具备了在2020年以前建成数艘航空母舰的能力。

据专家分析,中国大陆的核威慑力量规模不超过160枚核弹头,从2008年起投入使用的机动发射载具和先进潜艇,使其在对手的核打击面前拥有了初步的机动生存能力。据悉,更先进的分导式核弹头也将马上投入使用。中国的60艘潜艇,已经是亚洲规模最大的水下力量,还在继续研发超静音核潜艇和第二代战略导弹核潜艇。

此外,广泛认为,中国研发的号称“航母杀手”的反舰弹道导弹即将服役,目的就是在太平洋上打击合众国海军力量的核心-航空母舰。合众国太平洋司令部指挥官,罗伯特•埃夫•威拉德海军上将,12月在接受一家日本报纸访问时说,该武器已达到“初始作战能力”,这是一个重要的标志。但稍后海军军官们称,该武器系统明显未经过实弹海试,反舰能力还只是纸面上的。

通过展示这些军备,中国清楚地表明,它对于威胁其领土或争议领土的力量进行威慑的能力,正在迅速增长。

当然,发展军备,中国也有它自己的理由。其中一个常见的理由就是,为了在一旦台湾领导人寻求从大陆分裂出去时,能够确保中国的领土和主权完整,因此需要发展航空母舰、反舰导弹和隐形战机等进攻性武器。

正是因为合众国对台湾承诺,如果大陆向台湾发动进攻,合众国将保卫台湾,台湾才能够在大陆对其主张主权的情况下,维持自治的现状。有些专家认为,大陆现在的军备发展,正是因为在90年代中期的台海危机中合众国兑现了对台湾的承诺,派出数个航母战斗群进入台湾附近海域,对大陆进行武力阻吓。

中国官员认为,合众国正在建设包围中国的军事同盟,以遏制中国的实力和影响。他们还认为,五角大楼在中亚地区的长期目标,是谋求建立与中国东侧的南韩、日本和台湾同样性质的伙伴关系。

在中国人民大学研究俄罗斯和中亚地区的许庆华(音译),在处理有关地区事务方面向中国政府提出过很多建议,他说:“很多学者担心合众国对中国的军事包围,我们的担心是很自然的。”

五角大楼对中国军备力量增长的官方态度一直都是,欢迎中国作为合众国的伙伴,在维护公海交通安全、反海盗和其它国际事务方面,分担这些正由合众国武装力量和纳税人承担的国际责任。

但是中国军事领导人在甚少披露其长期军事战略的同时,却在稳步地建立起一支投射能力大大超出其国境的武装力量。这不能不使合众国的军事领导人感到担忧。

前盖茨办公室的中国事务主管,亚伯拉罕•埃姆•丹马可说:“威胁,是一种能力和意图的结合。中国的能力增长显而易见,而他们的目的也日益明显,就是限制合众国在西太平洋的武力投射能力。”

他还说:“军事现代化是中国政府当然的权利。我们不清楚的是中国意图怎样来达到目的,他们打算怎样来使用自己的军事力量。”

丹马可先生,现在华盛顿新美安全研究中心负责亚太安全研究项目,他说中国最近在与日本及东南亚邻国主权争议地区采取的强硬反应,引起了五角大楼和中国的邻国的密切关注。

然而本周三在华盛顿,一位主管海军情报工作的官员却告诉记者,合众国无须高估中国军备能力的发展,他认为中国在合成使用不同的武器系统方面还没有展现出相应的能力。这位官员就是,海军信息优势办公室副主任戴维•积•多塞特中将,他说虽然中国在某些装备研发方面进展比合众国预计的要快,他却根本不紧张。

他说:“中国有组织过大型远洋舰队吗?没有。有组织过大型复杂合成演习吗?没有。有表现出相当的战斗力吗?没有。”

多塞特中将说,尽管中国人计划今年对一艘原俄罗斯的“二手旧航母”进行海试,还打算自建航母,但他们在起降航母舰载机和组织航母战斗群方面,能力还很有限。

中国政府对其军事意图进行了严格的保密。2009年五角大楼的中国军事战略报告明确指出,尽管付出了“不懈努力”,对中国政府军事投入数量和途径的情报,“仍然没有明显改善”。

本周三,一位中国军事方面的专家,朱峰(音译)在采访时说,他认为一些关于中国先进装备快速发展的报道含有很大的虚构成分。

他在接受电话采访时说:“实际情况到底怎么样?我还是持怀疑态度。台前是大量关于装备采购的新闻,幕后却是大量的浪费、吹牛和浮夸。”

朱先生在北京大学负责国际安全研究,他认为中国军方在此方面与合众国军方一样,倾向于夸大对手的威胁,同时夸大己方的发展,以便持续性地争取政治关注和财政支持。

事实可能就是如此。不过,这却给中国在太平洋彼岸的对手出了个难题。

华盛顿战略和国际研究中心的中国事务研究员邦妮•格雷泽,在电话采访中说:“从合众国的观点看,这最终归结到一个简单的问题:我们是否要继续保持一直拥有的西太平洋控制权?不过很明显,中国人将把这个简单的问题变得越来越复杂。”

她说:“中国人也许会认为这种情况是自然而然、合情合理的。但从合众国的观点来看,这种情况就是不可接受的。”

麦克尔•维恩斯在北京报道,爱德华德•黄在厦门报道。伊丽莎白•芭姆米勒在华盛顿参与报道。本杰明•哈斯和席韵•杨参与研究。

人民解放军现代化建设结硕果
麦克尔•维恩斯,爱德华德•黄 2011年1月5日报道

为恢复和发展合众国与中国大陆的军事外交关系,国防部长罗伯特•埃姆•盖茨本周日将到访北京,并将与大陆军事领导人展开会谈。与此同时,在中国内陆的一个大城市-成都的机场上,大陆的军事领导人已经向他表示了热烈的欢迎。

歼-20和五角大楼自己的匿踪战机F-22猛禽一样拥有标志性的外倾双垂尾,是一架具备雷达匿踪性的喷气式战斗机。这架中国第一架隐身飞机,经过多年高度保密的研发,本周出现在了成都航空设计所的跑道上,进行了相当公开的基础测试。现场管制松散,以至于航空爱好者们为了拍到飞机的照片蜂拥而至。

有分析师认为在盖茨到访前进行这次测试是经过精心安排的,决非时机巧合。加拿大期刊《汉和防务周刊》总编安德烈•凯申•常,在周三的电话访问中说:“这次测试是一种新的威慑方式,他们想借此向盖茨先生、向合众国展示军备能力。”

最近此类的军备展示远不止于此。五角大楼和中国的邻国都越来越清楚,经过十余年奋发不懈的现代化建设,中国一度相对落后的军事力量正重新变得羽翼丰满起来。

一般认为,中国大陆在军备技术方面落后合众国至少一代,特别是在海、空军合成实战能力方面,差距更大。虽然过去中国一直强调不谋求与合众国相当的军事力量,但现在情况显示,迟早中国都将获得在太平洋挑战合众国军事力量的能力。

据报道,J-20具有空中加油和发射导弹攻击的能力,它的设计目的就是攻击敌方纵深目标。此外,中国还在翻新一艘前苏联时期建造的乌克兰航空母舰,该舰明年服役后将使中国首次获得远洋军力投放能力。

尽管2006年中国官方否认了正在建造航空母舰的报道,但去年以来人民解放军的高级军官们在公开场合不断强调“海军需要大型水面战斗舰艇”。多处消息指出,上海正在建造至少一条航空母舰的船体。在2009年的报告中,五角大楼认为中国已经具备了在2020年以前建成数艘航空母舰的能力。

据专家分析,中国大陆的核威慑力量规模不超过160枚核弹头,从2008年起投入使用的机动发射载具和先进潜艇,使其在对手的核打击面前拥有了初步的机动生存能力。据悉,更先进的分导式核弹头也将马上投入使用。中国的60艘潜艇,已经是亚洲规模最大的水下力量,还在继续研发超静音核潜艇和第二代战略导弹核潜艇。

此外,广泛认为,中国研发的号称“航母杀手”的反舰弹道导弹即将服役,目的就是在太平洋上打击合众国海军力量的核心-航空母舰。合众国太平洋司令部指挥官,罗伯特•埃夫•威拉德海军上将,12月在接受一家日本报纸访问时说,该武器已达到“初始作战能力”,这是一个重要的标志。但稍后海军军官们称,该武器系统明显未经过实弹海试,反舰能力还只是纸面上的。

通过展示这些军备,中国清楚地表明,它对于威胁其领土或争议领土的力量进行威慑的能力,正在迅速增长。

当然,发展军备,中国也有它自己的理由。其中一个常见的理由就是,为了在一旦台湾领导人寻求从大陆分裂出去时,能够确保中国的领土和主权完整,因此需要发展航空母舰、反舰导弹和隐形战机等进攻性武器。

正是因为合众国对台湾承诺,如果大陆向台湾发动进攻,合众国将保卫台湾,台湾才能够在大陆对其主张主权的情况下,维持自治的现状。有些专家认为,大陆现在的军备发展,正是因为在90年代中期的台海危机中合众国兑现了对台湾的承诺,派出数个航母战斗群进入台湾附近海域,对大陆进行武力阻吓。

中国官员认为,合众国正在建设包围中国的军事同盟,以遏制中国的实力和影响。他们还认为,五角大楼在中亚地区的长期目标,是谋求建立与中国东侧的南韩、日本和台湾同样性质的伙伴关系。

在中国人民大学研究俄罗斯和中亚地区的许庆华(音译),在处理有关地区事务方面向中国政府提出过很多建议,他说:“很多学者担心合众国对中国的军事包围,我们的担心是很自然的。”

五角大楼对中国军备力量增长的官方态度一直都是,欢迎中国作为合众国的伙伴,在维护公海交通安全、反海盗和其它国际事务方面,分担这些正由合众国武装力量和纳税人承担的国际责任。

但是中国军事领导人在甚少披露其长期军事战略的同时,却在稳步地建立起一支投射能力大大超出其国境的武装力量。这不能不使合众国的军事领导人感到担忧。

前盖茨办公室的中国事务主管,亚伯拉罕•埃姆•丹马可说:“威胁,是一种能力和意图的结合。中国的能力增长显而易见,而他们的目的也日益明显,就是限制合众国在西太平洋的武力投射能力。”

他还说:“军事现代化是中国政府当然的权利。我们不清楚的是中国意图怎样来达到目的,他们打算怎样来使用自己的军事力量。”

丹马可先生,现在华盛顿新美安全研究中心负责亚太安全研究项目,他说中国最近在与日本及东南亚邻国主权争议地区采取的强硬反应,引起了五角大楼和中国的邻国的密切关注。

然而本周三在华盛顿,一位主管海军情报工作的官员却告诉记者,合众国无须高估中国军备能力的发展,他认为中国在合成使用不同的武器系统方面还没有展现出相应的能力。这位官员就是,海军信息优势办公室副主任戴维•积•多塞特中将,他说虽然中国在某些装备研发方面进展比合众国预计的要快,他却根本不紧张。

他说:“中国有组织过大型远洋舰队吗?没有。有组织过大型复杂合成演习吗?没有。有表现出相当的战斗力吗?没有。”

多塞特中将说,尽管中国人计划今年对一艘原俄罗斯的“二手旧航母”进行海试,还打算自建航母,但他们在起降航母舰载机和组织航母战斗群方面,能力还很有限。

中国政府对其军事意图进行了严格的保密。2009年五角大楼的中国军事战略报告明确指出,尽管付出了“不懈努力”,对中国政府军事投入数量和途径的情报,“仍然没有明显改善”。

本周三,一位中国军事方面的专家,朱峰(音译)在采访时说,他认为一些关于中国先进装备快速发展的报道含有很大的虚构成分。

他在接受电话采访时说:“实际情况到底怎么样?我还是持怀疑态度。台前是大量关于装备采购的新闻,幕后却是大量的浪费、吹牛和浮夸。”

朱先生在北京大学负责国际安全研究,他认为中国军方在此方面与合众国军方一样,倾向于夸大对手的威胁,同时夸大己方的发展,以便持续性地争取政治关注和财政支持。

事实可能就是如此。不过,这却给中国在太平洋彼岸的对手出了个难题。

华盛顿战略和国际研究中心的中国事务研究员邦妮•格雷泽,在电话采访中说:“从合众国的观点看,这最终归结到一个简单的问题:我们是否要继续保持一直拥有的西太平洋控制权?不过很明显,中国人将把这个简单的问题变得越来越复杂。”

她说:“中国人也许会认为这种情况是自然而然、合情合理的。但从合众国的观点来看,这种情况就是不可接受的。”

麦克尔•维恩斯在北京报道,爱德华德•黄在厦门报道。伊丽莎白•芭姆米勒在华盛顿参与报道。本杰明•哈斯和席韵•杨参与研究。
不懂东海岸的方言