Veteran journalist and author
Joseph C. Goulden offers a review in the Washington Times of Michael Fabey’s
Crashback: The Power Clash Between The U.S. And China in the Pacific.
Intelligence analysts and
media pundits alike are puzzling whether Xi Jinping, president of China,
deserves the recent Economist cover calling him the world’s most powerful man.
Perhaps so. But Michael
Fabey’s disturbing new book makes plain that China is now a muscular presence
in its part of the world, and with clear ambitions to expand its role.
Mr. Fabey, a veteran defense
writer, maintains that China and the U.S. are engaged in a “warm war” for naval
dominance in the Pacific that we have “been losing.”
The crux of the crisis is
China’s claim of territorial sea rights far beyond those set by international
conventions. The issue is complex. For centuries most maritime powers accepted
that sovereign territory extended three nautical miles off the shoreline — the
range of cannon shot.
… Fortunately, the U.S. Navy
is countering China’s ambitions with new technologies that modernize the
missiles that are our dominant sea weapons. And despite the Chinese
encroachments, Mr. Fabey’s description of the new weaponry — active and under
development — warrants optimism.
You can read the rest of the
review via the below link:
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