Sunday, August 9, 2020

Could U.S. Troops Capture China's Island Outposts?

Paratroopers assigned to the 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division, U.S. Army Alaska, conduct a Joint Forcible Entry Operation jump into Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, on June 30, 2020. U.S. Air Force photo by Master Sgt. Richard Ebensberger

Forbes: China Is Counting On Island Outposts To Project Power—But U.S. Troops Could Capture Them

The U.S. military probably has enough warplanes to win a war with China in the western Pacific. What it doesn’t have is enough bases.

But maybe American troops could “borrow” those bases ... from China. By dropping paratroopers or landing Marines on some of Beijing’s new island outposts.

Distance is the great destroyer of tactical air power, especially in the vast Asia-Pacific region. Most modern fighters can fly and fight no farther than 500 miles from their bases. Refueling tankers realistically can add a few hundred miles to a fighter’s combat radius.

The U.S. military probably has enough warplanes to win a war with China in the western Pacific. What it doesn’t have is enough bases.

But maybe American troops could “borrow” those bases ... from China. By dropping paratroopers or landing Marines on some of Beijing’s new island outposts.

Read more ....

WNU Editor: It is not going to be easy to capture these bases. From the few pictures that I have seen of these Chinese "island bases/outposts", they are heavily fortified and defended.

16 comments:

  1. Then again China is not Japan circa ww2....nobody is leaving tens off thousands of troops on these islands to fight to the death.

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  2. I have seen many historic Steven Segal documentaries. It'll be easy, if that guy is any indication

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  3. I am not a strategist, but it seems to me that the main pillar of the defense of these islands is their radars. Without them these islands are blind and their missiles useless. The runways must be destroyed also to suppress their aviation.
    I don't know if it's realistic, but it seems to me that it's the job of our B2s.
    The following tasks will be easier.

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  4. If we wanted it, we could take the island easy. That’s not the issue; the issue is how to support it afterwards. But brilliantly; this does now matter because we could just leave. LOL

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  5. Take them with troops? No. Figure out how to compromise their construction. Reclaimed land (man made islands) are essentially large piles of sand. If one could figure out a way to damage them from underneath - to crate a void at their base, we could render them unusable.


    LIQUEFACTION,

    R,

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  6. Large bombs on small islands leave big craters. Why land on them? Blow them to flinders

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  7. Agreed, Russ. Let's have something other than National Interest level speculative material.
    I see some sitting duck element here considering the accuracy of today's weapons. Strategic targetting of the most essential item. We've heard "target the radar". Sounds good. I love blind enemies.
    As an historical background of the cost to Japan of keeping an island defense chain may I suggest, as before, "Pacific War Diary" by James J. Fahey. Quite the eye opener, the level of attacks and cost to Japan.
    If these bases are crucial to china's subs, damage them. Radar coverage, attack them.
    Myself I see the possession of these sand piles as an albatross around the neck of china. The threat of attack and preventing it will be time consuming to china.
    This is my speculative three cents for the sandpiles.

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  8. Homing on radar emission is quite old and well developed. They have had time for an acronym change from HORE to HARM. I don't know why they changed it. Maybe whenever they were talking about the systems, congress thought that the were being talked about?

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  9. The islands are a stop gap. Allowing china the time to invade and secure tiawan. Good luck with north korea at this time. Then who has the logistics nightmare? China WILL expand! Boot em now or never!

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