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Command Post What is this?
Posted on Sep 13, 2014
RallyPoint Team
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CW5 Desk Officer
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Edited 10 y ago
The U.S. and China may not always have the same goals in mind, but I think it is very important to stay engaged with China - as much as possible. I applaud the Obama administration for doing just that by having our National Security Advisor raise these concerns with the Chinese.
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CPT Ahmed Faried
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Edited 10 y ago
This is complicated to say the least. If we were hell-bent on halting the rise of China we missed that opportunity in the 50s, and compounded upon it with Nixon's overture to them in the 70s. At this point China's rise and ever growing influence in the world can't be checked, nor should it. We are more than capable of a world in which China is a peer nation. What we need if far-seeing politicians to ensure that we absorb their growth to our mutual benefit. Chinese leaders tend to think in decades (being a communist nation affords that flexibility), whereas we tend to think in 4 to 8 year intervals. A rising China that is party to the global world order would be an incredibly good thing. They can help take on some of the role that for over 6 decadeshas been left only to us. Safe commerce over international waters, intervention in humanitarian crisis, bailouts of poor nations, technology-sharing, military relationships with other nations etc. If we have leaders who are able to see the bigger picture rather than just their electoral survival this can happen. This shouldn't be a black and white issue where China is either a friend or an enemy. We can be competitive economically and yes, inevitably, militarily but it does not and should not have to lead to a perennially adversarial relationship.
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SFC Jeff L.
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I, for one, would like to know how China and the U.S. can possibly come together with the same goals in mind. The goals of a communist government simply aren't in line with our system of government, our history, or our Constitution. Another thing - why would China want to move forward with the U.S. regarding climate change? They do not impose or adhere to any policies that would restrict their economic growth and prosperity the way we have. Whether you believe in man-caused global warming or not, the Chinese have a vested interest in pushing us forward into more and more climate-oriented regulations and restriction. Why conquor the U.S. with military might when they can get us to do it ourselves by smothering our own economic engine with regulatory restrictions and opressive debt (which the Chinese own)?

It's unrealistic to think the Chinese are taking us seriously. They hold so much of our debt, their military capability is quickly expanding, they have repeatedly gone against our interests in the ME, and they have repeatedly indicated they want to abandon the dollar for international commerce. Those are not the actions of a friendly government.
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