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A Low-Visibility Force Multiplier: Assessing China's Cruise Missile Ambitions

TLDR
In this paper, the authors present a survey of the People s Republic of China (PRC) ASCM and LACM programs and their implications for broader PLA capabilities, especially in a Taiwan scenario.
Abstract
: China s military modernization is focused on building modern ground, naval, air, and missile forces capable of fighting and winning local wars under informationized conditions. The principal planning scenario has been a military campaign against Taiwan, which would require the People s Liberation Army (PLA) to deter or defeat U.S. intervention. The PLA has sought to acquire asymmetric assassin s mace technologies and systems to overcome a superior adversary and couple them to the command, control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (C4ISR) systems necessary for swift and precise execution of short-duration, high-intensity wars. A key element of the PLA s investment in antiaccess/area-denial (A2/AD) capabilities is the development and deployment of large numbers of highly accurate antiship cruise missiles (ASCMs) and land-attack cruise missiles (LACMs) on a range of ground, air, and naval platforms. China s growing arsenal of cruise missiles and the delivery platforms and C4ISR systems necessary to employ them pose new defense and nonproliferation challenges for the United States and its regional partners. This study surveys People s Republic of China (PRC) ASCM and LACM programs and their implications for broader PLA capabilities, especially in a Taiwan scenario. Key findings are presented below.

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The U.S.-China Military Scorecard: Forces, Geography, and the Evolving Balance of Power, 1996–2017

TL;DR: The authors analyzed Chinese and U.S. military capabilities in two scenarios (Taiwan and the Spratly Islands) from 1996 to 2017, finding that trends in most, but not all, areas run strongly against the United States.
Journal ArticleDOI

Projecting Strategy: The Myth of Chinese Counter-intervention

TL;DR: In analyses of China's military modernization, it has become increasingly common to describe China as pursuing a "counter-intervention" strategy in East Asia as mentioned in this paper, which aims to push the United States away from China's littoral, forestalling the ability to intervene in a conflict over Taiwan or in disputes in the East and South China Seas.
BookDOI

Air Base Defense: Rethinking Army and Air Force Roles and Functions

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present alternative courses of action for Air Force consideration and assesses strengths and weaknesses of each of them, including ground-based systems currently assigned to the Army.
Journal ArticleDOI

Crossover Point: How China’s Naval Modernization Could Reverse the United States’ Strategic Advantage:

TL;DR: The military aspects of the intensifying competition for hegemony in the US-China competition have been analyzed in this article, showing broad-based US primacy but trend lines that favour China.