- Reaction score
- 35
- Points
- 560
Cdn Blackshirt said:Regardless, Walmart does promote North American manufacturers to relocate to China....and that doesn't sit well with me.
I suspect WalMart isn't saying "go to China or else", rather US suppliers are looking to maintain thair sales to WalMart and increase their own profit margins; going offshore is one way of doing so. We heard the same thing back in the 1980s about Mexico, and India is now on people's radar as the next big target for outsourcing. Given a choice, I would much preffer strengthening India's economy through free trade, given it is a semi free market democracy, with the added bonus it is on China's southwestern flank, giving the Dragon another thing to watch out for.
Kaplan's article is interesting, especially the observation that PACCOM is far enough removed from Washington to have a degree of independant action, and is capable of assembling "hub and spoke" alliances for different scenarios and situations; Oceanic strategy moving to a higher level. The proposed evolution of the navy makes a lot of sense, although I wonder if the real "Rrevolution in Naval affairs" wouldn't consist of finding ways to make naval platforms a lot faster (similar to the Army obsession with substituting speed for mass). This would make force projection more creditable (getting on station in days or weeks rather than weeks or months), as well as giving opponents a bigger headache in planning tactical or strategic countermoves.
Kaplan is also correct in suggesting the best thing to do would be to find subtle ways to contain China in webs of trade, diplomacy and military alliances and deterrence, the most telling quote in the article is "there are lots of ways a war with China could start, the problem is how do you end it?"