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歪酷博客

The streets of New York were not paved with gold,
but hard work, thrift and enterprise
--Free to Choose
hulun @ 2007-02-22 06:58

http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,1576831,00.html
Thursday, Jan. 11, 2007

China Takes on the World

The railroad station in the Angolan town of Dondo hasn't seen a train in years. Its windows are boarded up, its pale pink façade crumbling away; the local coffee trade that Portuguese colonialists founded long ago is a distant memory, victim of a civil war that lasted for 27 years. Dondo's fortunes, however, may be looking up. This month, work is scheduled to start on the local section of the line that links the town to the deep harbor at Luanda, Angola's capital. The work will be done by Chinese construction firms, and as two of their workers survey the track, an Angolan security guard sums up his feelings. "Thank you, God," he says, "for the Chinese."

That sentiment, or something like it, can be heard a lot these days in Africa, where Chinese investment is building roads and railways, opening textile factories and digging oil wells. You hear it on the farms of Brazil, where Chinese appetite for soy and beef has led to a booming export trade. And you hear it in Chiang Saen, a town on the Mekong River in northern Thailand, where locals used to subsist on whatever they could make from farming and smuggling--until Chinese engineers began blasting the rapids and reefs on the upper Mekong so that large boats could take Chinese-manufactured goods to markets in Southeast Asia. "Before the Chinese came here, you couldn't find any work," says Ba, a Burmese immigrant, taking a cigarette and Red Bull break from his task hauling sacks of sunflower seeds from a boat onto a truck bound for Bangkok. "Now I can send money back home to my family."

You may know all about the world coming to China--about the hordes of foreign businesspeople setting up factories and boutiques and showrooms in places like Shanghai and Shenzhen. But you probably know less about how China is going out into the world. Through its foreign investments and appetite for raw materials, the world's most populous country has already transformed economies from Angola to Australia. Now China is turning that commercial might into real political muscle, striding onto the global stage and acting like a nation that very much intends to become the world's next great power. In the past year, China has established itself as the key dealmaker in nuclear negotiations with North Korea, allied itself with Russia in an attempt to shape the future of central Asia, launched a diplomatic offensive in Europe and Latin America and contributed troops to the U.N. peacekeeping mission in Lebanon. With the U.S. preoccupied with the threat of Islamic terrorism and struggling to extricate itself from a failing war in Iraq, China seems ready to challenge--possibly even undermine--some of Washington's other foreign policy goals, from halting the genocide in Darfur to toughening sanctions against Iran. China's international role has won the attention of the new Democratic majority in Congress. Tom Lantos, incoming chair of the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee and a critic of Beijing's human-rights record, told TIME that he intends to hold early hearings on China, on everything from its censorship of the Internet to its policies toward Tibet. "China is thinking in much more active terms about its strategy," says Kenneth Lieberthal of the University of Michigan, who was senior director at the National Security Council Asia desk under President Bill Clinton, "not only regionally, but globally, than it has done in the past. We have seen a sea change in China's fundamental level of confidence."

Blink for a moment and you can imagine that--as many Chinese would tell the tale--after nearly 200 years of foreign humiliation, invasion, civil war, revolution and unspeakable horrors, China is preparing for a date with destiny. "The Chinese wouldn't put it this way themselves," says Lieberthal. "But in their hearts I think they believe that the 21st century is China's century."

That's quite something to believe. Is it true? Or rather--since the century is yet young--will it be true? If so, when, and how would it happen? How comfortable would such a development be for the West? Can China's rise be managed peaceably by the international system? Or will China so threaten the interests of established powers that, as with Germany at the end of the 19th century and Japan in the 1930s, war one day comes? Those questions are going to be nagging at us for some time--but a peaceful, prosperous future for both China and the West depends on trying to answer them now.

WHAT CHINA WANTS--AND FEARS

If you ever feel mesmerized by the usual stuff you hear about China--20% of the world's population, gazillions of brainy engineers, serried ranks of soldiers, 10% economic growth from now until the crack of doom--remember this: China is still a poor country (GDP per head in 2005 was ,700, compared with ,000 in the U.S.) whose leaders face so many problems that it is reasonable to wonder how they ever sleep. The country's urban labor market recently exceeded by 20% the number of new jobs created. Its pension system is nonexistent. China is an environmental dystopia, its cities' air foul beyond imagination and its clean water scarce. Corruption is endemic and growing. Protests and riots by rural workers are measured in the tens of thousands each year. The most immediate priority for China's leadership is less how to project itself internationally than how to maintain stability in a society that is going through the sort of social and economic change that, in the past, has led to chaos and violence.

And yet for all their internal challenges, the Chinese seem to want their nation to be a bigger player in the world. In a 2006 poll conducted jointly by the the Chicago Council on Global Affairs and the Asia Society, 87% of Chinese respondents thought their country should take a greater role in world affairs. Most Chinese, the survey found, believed China's global influence would match that of the U.S. within a decade. The most striking aspect of President Hu Jintao's leadership has been China's remarkable success in advancing its interests abroad despite turmoil at home.

Surprisingly for those who thought they knew his type, Hu has placed himself at the forefront of China's new assertiveness. Hu, 64, has never studied outside China and is steeped in the ways of the Communist Party. He became a party member as a university student in the early 1960s and headed the Communist Youth League in the poor western province of Gansu before becoming provincial party chief in Guizhou and later Tibet. Despite a public stiffness in front of foreigners, Hu has been a vigorous ambassador for China: the pattern was set in 2004, when Hu spent two weeks in South America--more time than George W. Bush had spent on the continent in four years--and pledged billions of dollars in investments in Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Cuba. While Wen Jiabao, China's Premier, was visiting 15 countries last year, Hu spent time in the U.S., Russia, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Nigeria and Kenya. In a three-week period toward the end of 2006, he played host to leaders from 48 African countries in Beijing, went to Vietnam for the annual Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit, slipped over to Laos for a day and then popped off for a six-day tour of India and Pakistan. For someone whose comfort zone is supposed to be domestic affairs, that's quite a schedule. "Look at Africa, look at Central America, look at parts of Asia," says Eberhard Sandschneider, a China scholar who is head of the German Council on Foreign Relations. "They are playing a global game now."

As it follows Hu's lead and steps out in the world, what will be China's priorities? What does it want and what does it fear? The first item on the agenda is straightforward: it is to be left alone. China brooks no interference in its internal affairs, and its definition of what is internal is not in doubt. The status of Tibet, for example, is an internal matter; the Dalai Lama is not a spiritual leader but a "splittist" whose real aim is to break up China. As for Taiwan, China is prepared to tolerate all sorts of temporary uncertainties as to how its status might one day be resolved--but not the central point that there is only one China. Cross that line, and you will hear about it.

This defense of its right to be free of interference has a corollary. China has traditionally detested the intervention by the great powers in other nations' affairs. An aide to French President Jacques Chirac traces a new Chinese assertiveness to the U.S. invasion of Iraq, saying, "They felt they can't allow that sort of meddling in what they see as a nation's internal affairs." But the same horror of anything that might smell of foreign intervention was evident long before Iraq. I visited Beijing during the Kosovo war in 1999, and it wasn't just the notorious bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade that year that outraged top officials; it was the very idea of NATO's rearranging what was left of Yugoslavia. Wasn't the cause a good one? That didn't matter.

China's commitment to nonintervention means that it doesn't inquire closely into the internal arrangements of others. When all those African leaders met in Beijing, Hu promised to double aid to the continent by 2009, train 15,000 professionals and provide scholarships to 4,000 students, and help Africa's health-care and farming sectors. But as a 2005 report by the Council on Foreign Relations notes, "China's aid and investments are attractive to Africans precisely because they come with no conditionality related to governance, fiscal probity or other concerns of Western donors." In 2004, when an International Monetary Fund loan to Angola was held up because of suspected corruption, China ponied up billion in credit. Beijing has sent weapons and money to Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe, whose government is accused of massive human-rights violations.

Most notoriously, China has consistently used its place as a permanent member of the U.N. Security Council to dilute resolutions aimed at pressuring the Sudanese government to stop the ethnic slaughter in Darfur. A Chinese state-owned company owns 40% of the oil concession in the south of Sudan, and there are reportedly 4,000 Chinese troops there protecting Beijing's oil interests. (By contrast, despite the noise that China made when one of its soldiers was killed by an Israeli air strike on a U.N. post in Lebanon last summer, there are only 1,400 Chinese troops serving in all U.N. peacekeeping missions worldwide.) "Is China playing a positive role in developing democracy [in Africa]?" asks Peter Draper of the South African Institute of International Affairs. "Largely not." Human Rights Watch goes further: China's policies in Africa, it claimed during the Beijing summit, have "propped up some of the continents' worst human-rights abusers."

China doesn't support unsavory regimes for the sake of it. Instead China's key objective is to ensure a steady supply of natural resources, so that its economy can sustain the growth that officials hope will keep a lid on unrest at home. That is why China has reached out to resource-rich democracies like Australia and Brazil as much as it has to such international pariahs as Sudan and Burma, both of which have underdeveloped hydrocarbon reserves. There's nothing particularly surprising about any of this; it is how all nations behave when domestic supplies of primary goods are no longer sufficient to sustain their economies. (Those Westerners who criticize China for its behavior in Africa might remember their own history on the continent.) But China has never needed such resources in such quantities before, so its politicians have never had to learn the skills of getting them without looking like a dictator's friend. Now they have to.

WORKING WITH CHINA

Assuming a bigger global presence has forced Beijing to learn the art of international diplomacy. Until recently, China's foreign policy consisted of little more than bloodcurdling condemnations of hegemonic imperialism. "This is a country that 30 years ago pretty much saw things in zero-sum terms," says former Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick. "What was good for the U.S. or the West was bad for China, and vice versa." Those days are gone. Wang Jisi of Beijing University, one of China's top foreign policy scholars, says one of the most important developments of 2006 was that the communiqué issued after a key conference on foreign affairs for top officials had no reference to the tired old terms that have been standard in China's diplomatic vocabulary.

Washington would like Beijing to go further. In a speech in 2005, Zoellick invited China to become a "responsible stakeholder" in international affairs. China's national interest, Zoellick argued, should not be narrowly defined, but would be "much better served by working with us to shape the future international system," on everything from intellectual-property rights to nuclear nonproliferation. Says Zoellick: "I'm not sure anyone had ever put it quite in those terms, and it clearly had a bracing effect."

That would imply that China's behavior has changed of late. Has it? A U.S. policymaker cautions, "It's important to see the 'responsible stakeholder' notion as a future vision of China." In practice, this official says, "They've been more helpful in some areas than others." When the stars align--when China's perception of its own national interest matches what the U.S. and other international powers seek--that help can be significant. Exhibit A is North Korea, long a Chinese ally, with whom China once fought a war against the U.S. As North Korea's leader Kim Jong Il developed a nuclear-weapons program in the 1990s, China had to choose between irking the U.S.--which would have implied doing little to rein in Pyongyang--or stiffing its former protégé.

Hu's personal preferences seem to have helped shape the choice. He is known to have been stingingly critical of Kim in meetings with U.S. officials. Michael Green, senior director for Asian affairs at the National Security Council until December 2005, says Hu had long indicated to visiting groups of Americans his skepticism about Kim's intentions. When the North finally tested a nuke last fall, China joined the U.S. and other regional powers in condemning Kim and supported a U.N. Security Council resolution sanctioning Pyongyang. Says a senior U.S. official: "If you asked experts several years ago, Could you imagine China taking these actions toward a longtime ally in cooperation with us and Japan? Most people would have said no."

But nobody in Washington is getting carried away. Beijing has been helpful on North Korea because it's more important to China that Pyongyang not provoke a regional nuclear arms race than it is to deny the U.S. diplomatic support. Contrast such helpfulness with China's behavior on the dispute over Iran's nuclear ambitions. In December, China signed a billion contract with Iran to buy natural gas and help develop some oil fields, and it has consistently joined Russia in refusing to back the tough sanctions against Tehran sought by the U.S. and Europe. "It's hard to say China's been helpful on Iran," says a senior U.S. official, and there is little sense that such an assessment will change any time soon.

Within its own neighborhood, there are signs that China's behavior is changing in more constructive ways. China fought a war with India in 1962 and another with Vietnam in 1979. For years, it supported communist movements dedicated to undermining governments in nations such as Indonesia, Singapore and Malaysia. Yet today China's relations with its neighbors are nothing but sweetness and light, often at the expense of the U.S. Absorbed by the arc of crisis spreading from the Middle East, the U.S. is simply less visible in Southeast Asia than it once was, and China is stepping into the vacuum.

While American exports to Southeast Asia have been virtually stagnant for the past five years, Chinese trade with the region is soaring. In the northern reaches of Thailand and Laos, you can find whole towns where Mandarin has become the common language and the yuan the local currency. In Chiang Saen, signs in Chinese read CALL CHINA FOR ONLY 12 BAHT A MINUTE. A sign outside the Glory Lotus hotel advertises CLEAN, CHEAP ROOMs in Chinese. It is not aid from the U.S. but trade with China--carried on new highways being built from Kunming in Yunnan province to Hanoi, Mandalay and Bangkok, or along a Mekong River whose channels are full of Chinese goods--that is transforming much of Southeast Asia.

Nor is China's smiling face visible only to its south. In a cordial state visit last year, Hu reached out to India--an old rival with which it still has some disputed borders. The two countries pledged to double trade by 2010 and agreed to bid jointly for global oil projects on which they had previously been competing. Hu has also sought to mend ties with Japan, another longtime rival, with whom China's relations have deteriorated in recent years. Last October, Hu met the new Japanese Prime Minister, Shinzo Abe, in Beijing just days after Abe took office, a visit Hu called a "turning point" in frosty relations between the two countries and which Premier Wen described as a "window of hope."

WHOSE CENTURY?

So, a China whose influence is growing but that is trying to ease old antagonisms--what's not to like?

In one view, nothing at all, as long as China's rise remains peaceful, with China neither provoking others to rein in its power nor slipping into outward aggression. And yet as remote as a confrontation seems today, there are some China watchers who fear a conflict with the West could still materialize in coming years. They point to two factors: the modernization of China's defense forces and the risk of war over Taiwan. The authoritative Military Balance, published annually by the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London, estimates that China's military spending has increased nearly 300% in the past decade and from 1.08% of its GDP in 1995 to 1.55% in 2005. (By contrast, the U.S. spends 3.9% of its GDP on defense, and the U.S. economy is more than five times as big as China's.) China's most recent defense white paper, published last month, showed a 15% rise in military spending in the past year. Place such an increase in the context of Taiwan policy and you can start to feel queasy. The island has been governed independently since the defeated forces of Chiang Kai-shek retreated there in 1949. Beijing wants to see the island reunited with the mainland one day. The U.S., although it has a one-China policy and has no formal diplomatic mission in Taiwan, is committed to defend Taiwan from an unprovoked attack by China.

In all likelihood, war over Taiwan is unlikely. After a miserable 200 years, China's prospects now are as bright as ever, the opportunities of its people improving each year. It would take a particularly stupid or evil group of leaders to put that glittering prize at risk in a war. Those in Taiwan who favor independence--including its President Chen Shui-bian--have singularly failed to win the support of the Bush Administration. "China," says Huang Jing of the Brookings Institution in Washington, "is now basically on the same page as the U.S. when it comes to Taiwan. Neither wants independence for Taiwan. Both want peace and stability." China's military buildup is best seen as a corollary of changes in Chinese society. Where Chinese military doctrine was once based on human-wave attacks, it now stresses the killing power of technology. There's nothing new, or particularly frightening, about such a transformation; it's what nations do all the time. If the Sioux hadn't learned how to handle horses and shoot Winchesters, they wouldn't have wiped out Custer's forces at the Little Bighorn.

But other aspects of China's rise are real and troubling. China is a one-party state, not a democracy. Some U.S. policymakers and business leaders like to say there is something inevitable about political change in China--that as China gets richer, its population will press for more democratic freedoms and its ruling élite, mindful of the need for change, will grant them. Could be. But China is becoming richer now, and if there is any sign of substantial political reform--or any sign that the absence of such reform is hurting China's economic growth--it is, to put it mildly, hard to find.

Does China's lack of democracy necessarily threaten U.S. interests? One answer to that question involves looking back to the cold war. The Soviet Union was not a democracy, and although the U.S. contested its power in all sorts of ways, American policymakers were content to live with the reality of Soviet strength in the hope (correct, as it turned out) that communism's appeal outside its borders would wither and Russia's political system would become more open. Is that how the U.S. should treat a nondemocratic China? In the forthcoming book The China Fantasy, James Mann, an experienced China watcher now at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, warns that living with a more powerful, nondemocratic Beijing would not be easy for the U.S. In crucial ways, the U.S. has less leverage over China than it ever had over the Soviet Union. China holds billions of dollars of U.S. government assets. American consumers have come to rely on cheap labor in China to provide goods at Wal-Mart's everyday low prices. The Soviet Union, by contrast, was an economic basket case: it had minimal foreign-exchange reserves and was desperate for U.S. and European high technology.

This lack of leverage over Chinese behavior may make for an uncomfortable future. Mann sees a time when a powerful China not only remains undemocratic but also sustains unpleasant regimes in power, as it does today in such nations as Zimbabwe and Burma. Such behavior could make the world a colder place for freedom. Green, the former National Security Council staff member, agrees that China "wants to build speed bumps on the road to political globalization and liberalization" and is "particularly against any attempt to spread democracy." Sandschneider, the German China expert, says the Chinese "talk about peace and cooperation and development, which sounds great to European ears--but underneath is a question of brutal competition for energy, for resources and for markets."

How can that competition be managed? And how can the U.S. and its allies convince the Chinese not to support rogue regimes? The key may be to identify more areas in which China's national interests align with the West's and where cooperation brings mutual benefits. China competes aggressively for natural resources. But as David Zweig and Bi Jianhai of the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology argued in Foreign Affairs in 2005, it would make just as much sense for the U.S. and China--both gas guzzlers--to pool forces and figure out how to tap renewable sources of energy and conserve existing supplies. For a start, the U.S. could work to get China admitted into the International Energy Agency and the G-8, where such topics are debated.

The U.S. can also encourage China's leaders to recognize that irresponsible policies will diminish China's long-term influence. As China expands its global reach, it will find itself exposed to all sorts of pressures--of the sort it has never had to face before--to behave itself. Already, there are voices in Africa warning China that it is acting just like the white imperialists of old. In the Zambian city of Kabwe, where the Chinese own a manganese smelter, the local shops are stocked with Chinese-made clothes rather than local ones. In the oil-rich delta region of Nigeria, where Chinese rigs have a reputation for poor safety and employment practices, a militia group recently warned the Chinese they would be targeted for attack unless they changed their ways.

There are some glimmers that such criticism is having an impact in Beijing. The Chinese, says Joshua Kurlantzick of the China Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, "are beginning to understand that some of their policies in Africa are turning people off" and have quietly turned to the U.S. and Britain for help in devising foreign-aid policies. A former senior U.S. official says Chinese officials have been closely monitoring the growing international distaste over its support for the Sudanese government. Congressman Lantos says younger Chinese diplomats "are embarrassed that the Chinese government is prepared to do any business with Sudan for oil despite what is happening in Darfur." Slowly, slowly, engagement with China, debate with its leaders--and the hope that as they see more of the world, they will understand why so many want to shun dictatorships--may all act to shade Chinese behavior.

Such engagement will always be controversial. Like it or not, it involves cozying up to a nation that is not a democracy--and does not look as if it will become one soon. But China is now so significant a player in the global economy that the alternative--waiting until China changes its ways--won't fly. There is still time to hope that China's way into the world will be a smooth one. Perhaps above anything else, the sheer scale of China's domestic agenda is likely to act as a brake on its doing anything dramatically destabilizing abroad.

On the optimistic view, then, China's rise to global prominence can be managed. It doesn't have to lead to the sort of horror that accompanied the emerging power of Germany or Japan. Raise a glass to that, but don't get too comfortable. There need be no wars between China and the U.S., no catastrophes, no economic competition that gets out of hand. But in this century the relative power of the U.S. is going to decline, and that of China is going to rise. That cake was baked long ago.

With reporting by Hannah Beech / Bangkok, Simon Elegant, Susan Jakes / Beijing, James Graff / Paris, Megan Lindow / Dondo, Alex Perry / Johannesburg, Bill Powell / Shanghai, Andrew Purvis / Berlin, Simon Robinson / Kabwe, Elaine Shannon, Mark Thompson / Washington


 
hulun @ 2007-02-20 01:34

zz 柔软的海军兼时事杂言

作者:爱军事和美女

作为一个陕西关中长安福地出来滴至今木见过大海和军舰是啥样滴土包子,对海军倒是
一直怀有浓厚的性趣,没事就YYYY,反正闲着也是闲着,这种无本的买卖,多做做也能
图个精神爽朗,身心焕发。只是以前对海军多是些肯定和鼓励的态度,物质上不行,精
神上就不再能短了这口气,而现在,物质上有了点成绩,精神上就该泼瓢冷水了。

这几年,海军发展有目共睹,大的小的天上飞的海上跑的水下游的一起上。什么江南四
剑,塞北双刀,东海四杰都渐入佳境,新护也基本定型,可能将在新驱之前先批量生产
。这也难怪,饭要一口一口的吃,路要一步一步的走,想划大船也要从小的开始玩嘛,
新一代中最先下饺子的就是艇字级别的022。坞登也亮相了,看模样还不错。而上一代
的大登则赶在换代潮流之前硬是猛补一把,以后在南海澡堂子和第一岛链内溜达溜达,
看来也是差不多够用一阵子了,想再跑远点就别打那念头了。奶妈们的身段明显粗了,
典型体现了瘦的好看,胖的好用的原则。其他为海军和整个海洋事业打先锋做保障的实
验舰,训练舰,侦察舰,科考船等等,也都加入了新装备上马,老装备改造的合唱当中
。水下力量上,035,039继续改,这一批鸡落的到货基本上也将结束海军大规模采购最
后的盛宴,至于水下的目标艇,到039A的话,大样可能也就那样了,至于里面的东西,
大家就照着U31和拉达级猜吧。拉屎的不负责,谁踩谁负责。一直说海军的目标舰,其
实确切的只能是海军驱逐舰的目标舰,海军真正的目标舰只有一个,就是天字一号的航
母工程,去年01,02工程总算他娘滴正式上马了,这么多年了,不是不想造,虾兵蟹将
都没造好,没用好,龙头老大怎么能轻易动工,象阿三那样连个门楼都盖不好就嚷嚷着
要盖大厦,然后盖上N年盖不出来光叫唤,或者搞一堆豆腐渣出来的,在中国,是要死
人滴。何况光杆司令出门,碰到软的能吓住,碰到硬的,就是好大一盆肥羊火锅啊。剑
宰鸡的事从一开始就没啥悬念,肯定是27系的,最终上舰的虽然还没搞好,但长得差不
多的已经玩了不少时间了,至于玩得好不好,玩得人自己心里有数。如果真是等着刚刚
暴光的那个不老传说上舰,那首先第一批就得给海军。宁可装备等军舰,不可军舰等装
备,这是无数血与泪换来的经验教训,何况HM的命根子就是剑宰鸡,没这玩意整个就一
大号棺材,难不成在海上漂上N年,或者在港口开上几年赌场后,再开始慢慢把一个根
本没开过处滴短腿妞往舰上拉。至于大黑鱼,依然是那句话,国家没正式解密之前,谁
谈这个谁就是想把脑袋拿下来当球踢。花花世界如此美丽,额滴淫生还木开始,这个瘾
饿可没有。不过有句话倒还是要说的。持续了N年的潜航之争其实根本没有什么可争的
。中国的大黑鱼虽然是海里游的,但却不是海军的。中国核动力攻击潜艇的使命是为战
略导弹核潜艇开路护航,而战略导弹核潜艇是国家核基石。潜航之争看似海军内部优先
发展水下力量还是水上力量之争,实际上是中国核武器与常规武器哪个优先发展之争。
而这个结果是显然的。中国海军还远没有能奢侈到能把核潜艇论根批发给海军的地步。
现在也就是汤圆要不停的出锅了。

以上就是这些年海军装备建设的一些大体情况。其他港口基地建设,军民两用建设,海
上预警,侦察,特种飞机,等等配套的东西就由专业口口们去淘米吧。应该说,发展是
显著的,大体的骨架也出来了,未来一段时间,GLA现在的样子就是PLA 发展的方向。
三大舰队的骨架基本出来了,预备人员的口子也都张开了。而从81到82到83的训练舰更
是暴露了*滴狼子野心。*之BT,霉菌和毛子明白,欧洲也能猜到些,但阿三可能就不甚
了了了,丫沉醉于印度之洋的梦想中也挺好,至于更大的澡堂子,Y没有那样的底气和
经历,缺乏那样的魄力和想象力。能把曾经不可一世的红海军终极HM(乌里扬没造完就
拆了不算)当训练舰,全世界恐怕也就*能干得出来。但霉菌更狠,直接拿HM当靶子了
。真是当NB遇到了DXB (大象B)之后,NB就不算B了。

从自我的纵向比较看,海军这几年发展很快。但横向的比较则形势很不乐观。我们这边
才造了两条相控阵,老美已经宣布62条勃克要造完了,开始下一代猪母卧特的建造。我
们这边才造了几条远洋护卫舰打算去外面的世界溜达溜达,外面的世界很精彩,但外面
的世界也很无奈。老美已经开始了航速高达40节的到对方海岸线作战的多功能模块化濒
海战斗舰的制造。我们这边的导弹艇像下饺子一样往海里倒,老美对这样的小东西早就
不屑一顾了。我们正在为旅大咋改装发挥最大效能熬夜呢,老美把万吨级的斯普鲁恩斯
和提康德罗加都封存了,剩下了四个海军根本看不上眼的积德(瞧这名起的,真不知道
积了哪辈子的德),顺手宰了一把我们亲爱的台湾同胞。我们的航母才刚刚开始要搞呢
,老美已经拿航母当靶子了,新一代航母也呼之欲出。我们才要为大黑鱼真正具备了战
斗力高兴呢,美国已经把饿孩儿改成能发射常规巡航导弹核潜艇了,至于这个常规巡航
导弹装不装核弹头,或者装有核威力之实,又无核武器之名的高爆弹头和钻地弹头,既
能灵活打击,又能钻不使用核武器这个大帽子的空子,则由着老美了。冷战期间经典而
庞大的战术核攻击潜艇落山鸡也在一条一条被退役或换代。而我们的核潜艇才开始第一
次成为海军的核潜艇,核牙还是乳牙,咬两口才能知道。乳牙只能要奶吃,得换上一茬
才能咬人咬出血来。坦率的说,现在把中国所有能拉得出去的海军力量包括所有的攻击
性核潜艇拉到太平洋上跟老美干一仗,人家只要出动两个HM战斗群,就能把我们在三个
小时内全奸到海底下去,而对方的损失将微乎其微。对此我是确信不疑的。在20年内,
我们的海军都不具备独立的远洋作战能力,我们的海军如果在远洋和世界最强大的海上
力量作战的话,我们就是靶舰,这话说的很残酷,但这就是事实。这个BKC是一定要举
的。引用POP3的经典名言就是:高举BKC粪涌前进!

BKC目前是举定了,但怎么个粪涌前进法呢。一方面是海军加强建设,另一方面是从国
家整体军力建设形势来搞。先扯后者。中国国家安全力量的发展原则是核常兼备,以核
优先。海陆空天核建设的顺序依次是核,陆地本土,空军,海军,至于天外飞仙,还处
于探索阶段。没有一支足够可靠的核自卫与反击力量的话,中国现在的下场比伊拉克和
南联盟更惨,挨炸的可就远远不是一个远在异国他乡的大使馆了,而可能直接就是中国
大陆和我们每一个人。在陆基空基海基核力量建设差不多能保障国家安全之后,陆军建
设自卫有余,这是老本,物质上有底子,精神上有底气,现在是有针对性的发展,够用
就行,有更好的99G,但只装备到96G就是一个很好的例子,其他这里就不扯了。而空军
则是常规武器的制高点,没有制空权,制海权和制陆权都是扯淡。不过空军这个东西也
挺有意思,陆军和海军都得被它罩着,但它也只能从地上或海上先起飞。空军是重点建
设军种,被无数人YY和SY了十来年的奸十终于在2006年最后的时刻亮相,既是对全国人
民一个交代,也是对世界人民的首次出台,更是对下一代鸡鸡的鞭策。因为即使面对棒
子的F15K,十号也占不了多少优势。而况对已经山雨欲来风满楼的爱抚22极其预警,加
油等作战体系呢。

至于海军建设,红海军的发展模式是走不通了,大白舰队的发展道路倒是很值得我们学
习学习。靠,木然发现美国佬连举BKC都举到我们前头去了,还很理直气壮的把渔船都
染成白色的,这才真正是高举了。看来不学习是不行的,不学习连BKC该咋举都不知道
,自己辛辛苦苦举了半天BKC,人家还以为你那是炫耀自己敢不穿内裤就耍流氓呢,把
你废了还说是打流氓。而能让海军和平发展的关键,则还是要陆上力量先为海上力量做
好保障,国家综合实力不断提高,对外扩大友好和谐。本土安全搞定了,或者起码有一
定基础了,侧重点才能向海外发展。中国第一代海面力量是以海卫陆,以海保核。以海
卫陆搞空潜快,以海保核发展了第一代大型水面舰艇。现在的海军建设才是第一次把海
军作为独立的海洋力量来进行。但在相当长的一段时间内,这支力量还远不能成为坚强
的拳头,而只能是柔软的触角。海军力量最简单的划分是三个层面,水下,水面,水上
。而制高点是水上。在HM编队未成形之前,即使我们首先去建设一支具有远洋攻击能力
的核潜艇力量,那么这支力量在HM剑宰鸡的高速机动面前也还是相当迟缓和被动的。我
们再怎么搞核潜艇也不会搞过苏联,而苏联的道路已经证明是失败的。以水下制水上会
有不对称性和一定的奇效,但从根本上不足以抗衡,无法拥有制海权,始终处于被动地
位。水面力量如没有空中力量的保障,也是堆靶子。只能防,不能攻,反舰导弹射程再
远也远不过剑宰鸡作战半径。要制海,就必须有HM。而这个,我们才刚刚起步。我们还
没有自己的拳头,有的只是柔软的触角,只能用来预警和遏制。比起海军舰载武器的建
设来,海军真正值得期待的是内部看不见的C4ISR建设(老美现在又给后面加K了,KILL
),在外部最大的两个表现一是卫星通讯设备,一是米波雷达。自打美国人玩命似的给
飞机搞隐身之后,中国人也不得不玩命似的想着法子破隐身之道。如果等到中国陆基雷
达发现美国的隐身战斗机和轰炸机的时候,我们最重要的东部海岸线包括北京上海广州
香港澳门还有我老人家所在的天堂等城市及这些地方滴桶子们就已经全部处于对方区域
外打击武器的攻击范围之内了。对伟大的GLA来说,最新版本的真理定义是:真理就在
区域外打击力量的射程之内。所以象冤二这样追求真理滴淫滴裤子就常常为真理而湿。
只有在海上就发现,将其有可能的进侵信息上报,紧急出动海军航空兵和空军力量进行
拦截,才有国家免遭打击,饿们保住小命,或将损失减少到最低限度的可能。空中指挥
的大脑,全球卫星网的神经,加油保障的长腿,加上F22和B2两大无形铁拳,美国人的
空中打击力度是世界上任何一个国家的常规力量都难以抵挡的。幸好最后两样东西也实
在太贵了,老美目前也没装备多少,所以还勉强能撑一撑,而至于对方总共载有数百架
现代化战机的HM编队,则只能依靠陆基导弹部队来搞定,其他海面及海下力量均不能形
成对HM的有效威胁。陆基导弹部队上打卫星下打航母,委实也够辛苦了。在预警之外,
水面力量的作用就是在海上与对方舰艇对峙,但问题一如前面所言,不打的话,我们撞
不过人家,打的话人家在我们攻击范围之外就能搞定我们,这种遏制的象征性意义大于
实际意义,和鬼子拼一拼倒还差不多。至于水下力量,同水上力量一样,也是预警和遏
制,尤其是对对方特战潜艇和所有具备发射常规巡航导弹能力的潜艇的预警和遏制,在
他们武器打击范围圈之外发现他们,迫使他们远离我们。能做到这一点就上上大吉了。
在海军预警和遏制能力的建设之外,海军建设的另一大亮点就是船体本身平台的进步,
这一代的平台和以前相比有了质的提升,极大的缩小了除老美新一代蛆护以外,同世界
其他海军强国之间的距离。而能做到前出预警,其根本就是水面水下舰艇平台本身进步
的结果。否则,没开出去几天,要么船受不了,要么人受不了,无法形成持续有效的战
斗力,连存在都难以保持,也就根本谈不上持续预警和遏制了。至于现在被捧到天上的
相控阵,还是先把区域防空这个盼了多年的老蘑菇顶起来,未来海军真正具备攻防实力
的海上制空权和海基反导系统,则还任重而道远。现在中国海军能做的只是远海预警遏
制,近海有效防守(干这个,一大堆到处乱窜的022比老旧的驱护更合适,那些东西更
适合护渔),至于远洋,依旧是一个梦想。

这里不得不谈谈中国走向远洋的核心兵种——海军航空兵的舰载固定翼作战飞机的建设
,也就是HM舰宰鸡。这个现在还在陆地上抱窝,以后想在海上震翅搏击的家伙目前的地
位相当尴尬,和不具备HM战斗群的对手作战的话,水面舰艇基本上就能搞定,而要和具
备HM战斗群的对手作战的话,不出动空军根本就不行。而如果空军乐意,将现有的鸡鸡
稍微改改,也能具备打击海面目标的能力,虽然说从协调作战的角度讲,军种内部协调
要比跨军种协调方便,但从后勤保障,空中总体力量调动来讲,空军一捅天下可能更方
便,而况真要打起来,肯定是海空军的空中力量一起上,那时与其兵分两路,还不如进
行统一的军种指挥。不上舰,中国现有的陆基海军航空兵就没有太大的价值,视如鸡肋
,他们的价值只有上舰才能体现出来,变成鸡腿。这应该是国家早就安排好的,但目前
还抓得还远远不够紧,不够爽。自身的作风和自己的翅膀一样,还很软。

另外就是海军的投送力量的建设,目前为台湾问题也是在拼命的抓,这两年下水最多的
除了022,就是大登了,不声不响的造了一串串,成建制输送能力倍增,但要满足解决
台湾问题的需要,恐怕还不够。能走向远洋的坞登首舰才刚下水,在剩俺冻泥袄面前又
落后了一个代次,且人家长期经验下的建造速度令我们瞠目结舌,长兴岛快点投产吧。
海军保障船,包括训练舰,补给舰,侦察船,科考船,等,以及基地建设,船厂建设,
军民转换体制等,有了很大进步,显示了未来的方向,但还需要大的升级,在装备与制
度建设的细节上不断完善。

关于海军的问题就扯这些,总之就是一句话,现在的海军,还只是柔软的触角。

海军是全球性军种,只有在全球格局下审视海军才能品出他的价值和味道来。近期国际
上的演出真是热闹的很,其中表现最棒的当然还是我们的胡哥。

先说说前一段时期温总和胡哥的两次出访。温总到东南亚转了一圈,强大的中国所能带
动的东南亚的发展和引发的未来商机是鬼子棒子所无法衡量的,鬼子棒子只是将东南亚
当成廉价劳力和加工厂,然后拿出去卖了以后给点微薄的利润,而中国的介入使东南亚
本身可以成为直接的贸易对象,不用再为他人作嫁妆了。温总神采奕奕的旁边,阿罗约
笑得那个媚啊。先把身边这几个幼齿整顺了,以后再跟熟女玩。胡哥到非洲去看了看我
们的黑人兄弟,那真是战略开发,全面建设,相当的有魄力。跑了一大圈,最后在塞舌
尔这个风光优美美女如云的地方修养修养,然后精神焕发,春光满面的回到北京对老同
志们热情的说“你们是我们的宝贵财富啊”。在岁末春来的这两次重要出访,都取得了
极其重要的成就。意义极其重大。

而最近国际上最热点的事莫过于伊朗问题了。美国到底打不打伊朗,这事大家都在谈。
但往往谈得过于乐观,似乎美国已经陷入伊拉克泥潭,如果再打伊朗的话,就要万劫不
复,我们只要作壁上观就能尽享其利了。其实大不然。要想作出我们的未来判断和如何
行动就要知道对手的意图,要知道对手的意图就要从对手的角度,以对手的思路、传统
和习惯,从对手所希望的利益最大化和在此目的之下所可能采取的行动来考虑。只有把
对方想得更聪明些,才有可能使我们少犯点错误,少吃点苦头。美国的利益是全球利益
,只有垄断才能保障利益的最大化,要想猜测美国会干什么,怎么干,只有从怎么样从
以最小成本获得最大全球利益的角度考虑,才能有所收获。而要想独霸全球,一统天下
,老美就惦记着三个对手,老欧洲,毛子,和我们,其他都是小来来。

欧洲看似和美国一起都是北约框架内的盟友,但它也是美国最为顾忌和防范的。美国的
崛起和称霸就是在千方百计的反抗欧洲和搞垮欧洲和利用欧洲中完成的。老欧洲自一战
动了筋骨,二战伤了元气,经过这半个多世纪,总算缓得有点人样了,新一代主战武器
也总算跟住老美的步子了,欧洲是欧洲人的欧洲,欧洲要搞欧洲人自己的防务,欧盟联
军虽然现在还不成样子,但毕竟是一个巨大的潜在威胁,尤其是日尔慢人和高炉人这两
个老光棍都不是善茬,前者的军事传统和现有实力又那么强,尤其是其地面力量。这个
现在依然的合作者和未来最强有力的竞争对手如果不及时加以限制的话,在其经济科技
文化等本就发达的同时有了统一的军事攻防体系,那老美大西洋的半壁江山就得拱手相
让了,老欧洲重执世界牛耳并非没有可能。但是作为传统盟友和利用对象,对欧洲只能
卡。卡什么,卡能源。前面说了,欧洲经济科技文化等都不缺,缺的就是能源,尤其是
作为现代工业血液的石油资源。这也是为什么近代化以来欧洲四处殖民侵略的根本原因
,就是因为欧洲,尤其是西欧的空间有限,资源匮乏。而中东,特别是伊朗,正是欧洲
石油的主要来源地。美国在中东的折腾,对伊朗的有可能的打击和对中东的进一步控制
将直接影响到欧洲的能源底子,这是欧洲列国除鸟不列颠外都反对的。鸟不列颠的追随
老美一是它的石油有北海油田供应,二是它的海军和海洋政策是捆绑在老美脚后跟上的
,连海基战略核导弹这个命根子都是美国爸爸给的,还能不听话吗,跟着美国走,到哪
儿都能有口汤喝。所以打伊朗的话,对卡欧洲能源来源,限制欧洲发展有利。美国有打
伊朗的必要。

对毛子,这个继承了当年苏联血统的“邪恶的伊万”,美国人从来没有一天是放过心的
。白天鹅是能多拆一个就多拆一个,大黑鱼是能多宰一条就多宰一条,干水井是能多填
一口就多填一口。毛子的核力量只要不被全搞光,美国心头肉上就有那么大一根刺,还
隐隐作痛,还记得你笑容,这世界,多么美丽,还留在我心中…………骚蕊,好象串词
了。所以苏联解体后,在成功拔下了其他前加盟共和国的核内裤后,对俄罗斯在大肆削
弱的同时,老美通过北约东扩,虚假承诺,诱导改革等手段对俄罗斯采取了渐进式的削
弱战略。如果没了这条核裤头,恐怕响起空袭警报的就不只是巴格达了,还有莫斯科。
所以小狐狸普精对核力量的关注真是比对自己的性功能的关注还要强。国家的裤头没了
,个人的裤头也就没几天穿了。重大核试验,核演戏是必然亲临的。可惜被视为重中之
重的新一代大黑鱼的表现连续N次不尽人意了。空基的现在基本废了,海基的也不晓得
还有几条能用,目前所守的只有陆基,而核生存能力和2次核反击也只有几个团的小白
杨靠到处跑路来维持。要维护和发展核力量,加强常规力量建设,国内和垄断利益集团
斗,对外靠卖血卖精来换钱。血是啥,能源,尤其是石油天然气。精是啥,常规武器装
备,都是苏联留下来的精品了。毛子现在小商品玩不过中国,大商品玩不过欧美,也就
只能靠这俩东西过冬了。口念当年多少高贵如公主般滴东西,现在也不得不出来卖了,
再不卖,就彻彻底底的等着当性奴吧。只是受精的两大客户兼高端市场,一个是阿三,
老美和欧洲一来踢场子,抛个媚眼,就立马换了张床去爬。一个是俺们,正憋着一口劲
要搞妹得硬柴那。其他低端市场也被中国人和美国人糟蹋得不成样子。只不过我们是拿
刚造出来的,老美是拿要扔,要是不卖还要掏拆除钱的。而石油国的那些傻鸟们的油水
也是越来越难敲了。至于输血的能源,现在也是鬼子,我们,独联体国家和欧洲,哪有
买家就往哪儿卖,只要陆上管子能插过去,价格还不错的,先卖再说,现在不卖,以后
连卖的机会都没了。说中国现在惨的,看看毛子,也好不到哪儿去。忽然想起了舒其的
一句话“我把衣服一件件脱光了是为了把衣服再一件件穿起来”。美国对俄罗斯从内部
搞,普精铁腕治国不好动,只好从外部压,压什么,压外部空间,从领土到传统势力范
围,到海外市场,使俄罗斯的改革发展丧失外部资源,十年下来,毛子丧失这一代发展
契机,常规武器和核武器发展的这个口子接不上,以后差距越来越大,形成常规武器武
器绝对代差,核体系无力维系,一旦丧失2次打击能力,美国就可以直接把反导导弹射
到对方鸡蛋窝里。“我们只是在防御。”

还有一个是我们,大家可以象征性的挥动一下HKC,毕竟能被当作对手之一了。霉菌的
最新型武器即将来到在我们跟前,欢迎大家没事去参观,切实感受一下啥叫个隐性,隐
性有啥作用。自从毛爷爷,邓爷爷,江爷爷等爷爷们不遗余力的把我们的核体系打造的
有点样子以后,互相进行核战与大规模被人玩的危机总算基本消除了,但这并不等于我
们就没事了,甚至能想出去揍谁就揍谁了。我们还没那资本,我们自己的卵子还没揉顺
,别人屁股上的屎就别急着擦。如果美帝给台湾几个不要命的许以重诺,倒时候台湾说
根据国际法,50年自治可以独立,和外国互建大屎管,进行贸易往来,尤其是军贸往来
,以第二以色列自居,追随老美分享全球红利,背后美日照着,我们再打,国际上就很
被动,和很多国家发展了很多年的关系就会受损。我们国际往来的根本准则之一就是要
别人首先对台湾问题表态,说老实话,有几个国家领导人知道你台湾到底在哪儿呀。贸
易你们可以做,但这个态必须表,先把理占住,名正才能言顺,言顺才能功成。否则以
后打起来,人家会说你们在侵略主权国家,你们就是中国威胁论,就是伊拉克打科威特
,就是哈怂。我们不和你玩了,从而使中国付出巨大的国际成本和代价。而关键的是美
日台联防体系的建立,一旦这个链子合上了,中国东部出海口被极大的堵上之后,中国
人将如同俄罗斯一样被迫向内陆收缩,最多成为区域陆地大国,而且就这么个大国,也
一定会被美国想法支解得象欧洲那样零七八落,没事内耗的。要想成为真正的大国,强
国,就必须挺进大洋,只有海洋是全球性的,没有海洋的民族将没有明天。而正是从这
一点,美国人绝对不能容忍中国人染指水缸子,不愿看到中国的统一。中国现在在东北
亚对棒子的纵容(搞得棒子国的SB娘们都跑到东北光天化日之下踢场子了,有种卢无旋
跑到北京来举个牌子:长白山是俺们的。借他八个胆他也不敢。),在东南亚极力拉拢
阿罗约等上床,在南亚一边加强和小巴的传统友谊,一边和阿三搞激情似火,看看中国
5年前和印度的关系,现在的进展令人强烈怀疑是不是吃了兰色小药丸。至于和毛子,
欧洲,以及我们亲爱的广大亚非拉的兄弟们的传统友谊,那是不用说了,就是一切为了
营造有利于和平发展的外部环境,把统一战线这个法宝拿到全世界来现了。如果有战事
的话,美国不会派陆军当炮灰,关键是阻止*登岛,让即使上岛的部队重演金门一幕,
陷入“人民战争的汪洋大海”(狗日的学的挺快)。这样就是打的制空权。前面说了,
空军这个东西挺有意思,海军和陆军都要靠它照着,但它也只能从海上或地上起飞。打
鸟打不过,先把鸟巢掏了再说。鸟巢无非大大小小的岛上的基地和HM,基地是固定的,
随时都可以瞄准和打击,HM转来转去的,打起来有难度,但并非不可克服。而且目标倒
也明确,就是老美一家,而前者还包括了鬼子,棒子等,亚洲大陆东部所有非中国的岛
屿在理论上都可能被美国在战时高价使用,我们总不能把这些国家都打了吧。这牵扯到
所有权和使用权的问题。所以中国现在对东南亚,尤其是把菲律宾先搞定,就是南海周
边和东海周边的问题,打起来打鸟掏巢,鬼子的鸟巢能掏,关岛的鸟巢能掏,但其他国
家的裤裆不能随便掏,要让她们顺顺当当,心甘情愿的平时就把身子自己靠上来。另外
,夏偎姨的屁股也是不能摸的,虽然离美国那么远,但在美国人心里就是他们的本土了
,且在国际上,以前这个地方有着特殊的意义,打这鸟地方等于是给对方以中国人和当
年的日本法西斯没区别的口实,这和关岛的性质不同。我们要打,但也要有打的分寸,
除非老美能不要鸟巢,直接从下痿遗全程加油加过来,那要这样的话,不间断的制空权
就难以保障,制空权保障不了,制海也就谈不上了,只要来一条当年的米格走廊的再现
,在中国老中青三代鸡共同努力之下,少壮们打外围,老朽们在对台压制后,舍了命的
开始炸,甚至直接就装满油和炸弹,设置无人飞行线路,到了目的地发动机熄火,栽到
哪儿算哪儿,整个就一无人版的人体炸弹,比TNND精确制导还黑狠。搞台独的怕*的导
弹精度高,老百姓怕的是*的导弹精度不高,只要能保障对台军力输送通道,把后续部
队源源不断送上去,这个仗就好办了。粟裕大将在金门之战前最重要的指示就是一定要
保证船,“有兵无船不算兵”,那么今天,有兵有船,但是开不上去,也还不算兵。第
一批次抢滩登陆上去了,登陆点搞好了,我们现在有的是大小渔船,所有的鱼船都是国
家控制的,国家说声征用就征用了,重要的是保障第一批次和空中力量,所以我们的大
登对速度的要求之高,也就不奇怪了。我们能不能打台湾,能,敢不敢打,敢,打得过
打不过,打得过,即使有外来干涉,也最终是能打赢的,只不过是惨胜还是大胜,这差
别可就大了。为什么现在不打呢,就是因为现在要打所要付出的代价和成本太大了,引
发的不确定因素太多,不符合我们的根本利益和长远利益,一个被打得离心离德,两岸
同胞兵戎相见的台湾并不是我们想要的,我们要收回台湾不是为了面子上好看,不是为
了台湾那点地皮,而是为了国家整体建设发展,包括台湾地区的建设发展。真要想活捉
林志玲,有必要打到台湾去吗,稍微花几个小钱,她就自己爬过来了。所以我们不想打
,但越是我们不想打的时候,也就越是他们想打的时候。再不打,等以后中国坐大了,
就打不动了,而一个强大而热爱和平,追求公正合理,和谐友好,共同发展的中华民族
会对所有企图独霸的利益集团都构成巨大的威胁。这是他们不能容忍的。06年很多风气
刹住了,07年要开始转变风向了,这段时间对军队和各种军人事迹的大力报道和无数“
用实际行动保障17大胜利召开”的誓言并不是一句空话。不惜一切代价,确保平稳过渡
,祖国统一。

美国对欧洲卡,对毛子压,对我们是敲,要敲,就在你的小弟弟上敲,敲得你硬不起来
。打人的主动权还是掌握在万恶滴美帝手中。但要打成什么样子,就不是你老美一家说
了算的。不是占领与封堵,而是敲打与遏制。以前从物理空间上搞全面封堵的法子行不
通,那么现在就在关键节点和力量上进行压制与控制就行了。国家的本质不是钱,是权
力,这一权力的基础就是军力,“政权是从枪杆子里出来的”这句话,只要帝国主义独
霸思想还存在,就始终不过时,就要永远握紧手中的钢枪(当然,现在复合材料所占比
重是越来越多了)。

作为霉菌走狗的鬼子磨刀霍霍的在升格,全然忘了激怒一个有着千年世仇的已成长起来
的核国家的下场是什么。战争和爱情,都是成人之间的游戏。根本的是心智的成熟,与
人生态度,民族态度的端正,否则就是场闹剧。鬼子就常干些闹剧,而且还干得很恶心
,很自虐。中国的力量在美国面前仅能自保,但在日本面前绝对有将对方完全摧毁的能
力。而且核平日本这事霉菌早就做过了,我们以后就算做了,也是有章可循的,是向
GLA学习的具体体现。关键是一些东西,狗改不了吃屎,别的地方放礼花了大家说那是
新鲜,鬼子国点天灯了,大家说那是习惯。自己找点,还嫌别人下手重,要玩SM就别叫
唤疼,只能喊呀妈塌。美帝的把防卫导弹发射到人家家里防卫的做法我们也是要学习的
,用常规武器瞄准日本的核武器核设施,把我们的防御网也搞到你家厨房里去,这事以
色列也早干过了。日本的核察问题才是世界上最大的核察问题,我们的卵子护住了,老
毛子这口气喘过来了,欧盟把自己的雨伞打起来了,这个问题也就该谈谈了。

我们在陆地边境的谈判中,根据有理有利有节的原则,为了整体的和平与友好发展,一
些地方可以通融,尤其是在和印度关系的发展上,避免东部有事的时候,西南也添大乱
,中印世代友好是符合两国人民长远利益和根本利益的,但就是台湾不能让,或者说,
其他地方的能有所通融就是为了保障台湾的无所通融。台湾要是让了,整个海洋和中国
发展的未来就要让没了。小巴的战略地位也是越来越重要了,无论是对印度,阿富汗,
中东,还是印度洋,小巴都是我们不可或缺的左膀右臂。一定要把小巴武装好。至于新
疆方面,东突几个小杂毛根本不是问题,美国能玩两线作战,中国现在还玩不起。新疆
方向和台湾方向的安全体系是联动的。

说实话,毛子现在能打的牌还没我们多,脑子也没我们活,苏联的老底虽大,但历史的
底蕴和思辨的智慧还不够深。其主动性也不如我们,我们现在是软的硬的一起上,文化
底子这时就体现出价值来了,能拿得出手的东西多啊。尤其是我们原本在经济发展上比
较落后的很多少数民族,现在他们的文化在成为世界瑰宝的同时也带来了大量的收益,
用他们的真诚善良与美赢得了世人的喜爱和尊重,和这样的一个国家打仗,世界舆论也
会谴责,加强与世界所有热爱和平与友好的国家与人民之间的沟通交流理解,是我们一
贯的姿态,也是历史发展的大势所向。近来中俄,中法,中印,中意,中比等国家之间
相互举办友好年了。这是一件非常好的大好事。

从伊朗问题扯呢,结果扯了半天,连根伊朗的毛还没扯到,为啥,就是先从美国的角度
先把老美眼中的几根钉子拔了,大问题找到了,伊朗打不打,怎么打,以什么方式,打
算付出什么成本,又能获得什么,怎么样才能符合垄断利益集团垄断利益最大化,最有
利于其独霸,这些问题才有了认识的可能,对我们的形势如何,会遭遇什么,又该怎么
办,也才有了积极的应对之道,在美国对伊朗发动有可能的行为后,我们所做出的反应
也才可以有迹可循。这种思考问题的思路是必须要具备,也恰恰是FC们的一根筋所不具
备的。

欧洲的事先不急,毕竟传统盟友,或者说传统小弟,还是在卡的同时要罩的,必要的时
候还要拉一拉,对毛子的打压也是有信心的,毛子周边陆地不稳定因素众多,其地面力
量现在整体衰落,一个小小的车臣都搞得那么紧张,这要在苏联时期,会让克里母林公
相当愤怒的,红军动动小手指头,布拉格都搞定了,柏林巴林甚至伦敦,天天冒着冷汗
过日子。而况还有个北方四岛问题呢。且从文化角度讲,欧美俄是同宗的,都属于古希
罗文明的分支与延续,只有东方文明是“神秘的”,由此也理所当然的是“恐怖的,邪
恶的”,所以我们要展示,是神秘的,但更是美的,我们有我们的艺术,和我们艺术的
祖先。而根本则是这个神秘但追求正义的民族必将是世界上一切垄断和妄图垄断的利益
集团的大敌。

那么既然要卡欧洲,压毛子,敲中国,伊朗还动不动呢——动。作为一个稳定的石油输
出国的伊朗对欧洲和我们有利,对美国就不利,一个维护世界油价稳定的伊朗对毛子有
利,对美国也就不利。更关键的从地缘角度来看,一个动荡而危险的中东地区,特别是
波丝弯北岸,对毛子南部,中国西部,都是一个潜在的危害。既然已经把伊拉克强奸了
,要不把伊朗也强奸了,那玩伊拉克的意思又在哪儿呢。高潮是一定要迭起的。但如前
所言,美国本身不缺石油,伊朗核威胁对美国也不是个威胁,如果说以前打伊拉克还有
科威特那笔老仗和那时就埋下的要老萨必死之心,那么这次对伊朗又有什么理由呢?核
察,人家也让查了,何况印巴朝等也都搞过了,最多也就是制裁,没理由动手,又何况
人家还没搞出来,没有确切的证据,上次打伊拉克所谓生化武器的事已经证明是满嘴放
P,声明狼籍,这次要动伊朗又是举世瞩目,没个过硬的名目无论如何是说不过去的。
婊子要当,牌坊也要立,事虽两难,但办法也不是没有。咋办,大哥不方便,小弟上啊
。小弟出马,大哥坐镇,以防代攻,以逸待劳。当一个做大哥的做到不需要自己直接出
手就能把事摆平的时候,这个大哥才是做得有点地位,也有点品位了。大哥罩着小弟上
,把对当年在南联盟用过的招再用一遍,美国打伊朗,“NO, NO,我们是文明人,不
会去侵略滴,只是去传播民主与自由。你们看,虽然伊朗再搞核武器,但我们都没去打
,我们文明吧”。由以色列打先锋,把当年对伊拉克做过的事再做一遍,只是这次就不
是针对一个核设施玩一次空袭的事了,油田和管道节点等民用设施也极可能是“误炸”
对象。F16I这个用阿拉伯的钱为以色列量身定制好东西,那背上的两个保型副油箱可是
没白加,何况回来就算油不够用了,在美国驻伊拉克的机场歇歇脚喝口水叙叙旧,然后
再踏上回家的旅途,切实保障好民工兄弟安全回家和谐回家,是我们这个社会时代进步
的体现。以色列这个撮尔小国,对周边阿拉伯国家本来就有绝对优势。以前还有个老萨
动不动咋呼要收拾以色列,现在老萨也挂了,伊拉克被美国强奸了,以色列处于建国以
来最为安全放心的环境中,平时闹个啥这冲突那冲突的都没关系,真要动起手来,周围
那帮废物没一个是对手。而况美国爸爸近在咫尺呢。而且以色列有的是理由,“坏孩子
伊朗老说要打我”。美国大兵坐镇伊拉克,小色色进入从容,中程弹和区域外武器的射
程对伊朗的空中及地面防卫力量均有压倒性优势,伊朗即使追着屁股赶过来,美国爸爸
也一堵大墙挡在前面:对不起,你天上来的给我下来,地上来的给我滚回去。美国突破
伊朗的防空网,陆军入侵伊朗的地盘是一回事,伊朗突破美国的防空网,陆军入侵美国
防守的地盘则是另一回事。反正要的只是糟蹋,能达到这一目的,何必非要亲自插入呢
。这难道比美国直接吃果果滴跳到前面不更好吗,比跳进去更好。打下来图啥,还去花
大钱占领,维持,驻军,搞建设吗,扯,一个伊拉克都没想着好好捞石油,何况一个要
付出的成本更大,油水却并不多的伊朗。我打你不是因为我要占你,要用你,而只是为
了不让别人用,通过打你来限制其他人的发展,从而使我有更大的优势,从根本态势上
压倒和遏制对方,达到这个目的,就够了。打个伊拉克,陆海空全上,而现在守个伊拉
克,陆军和少量空军就够了,海军去了帮不上多少忙,要冒的风险还很大,你不是要封
锁波丝湾吗,我不进去了还不行吗,美国军队真正的主力,海空军及海军陆站队从中东
战场解放出来,用在世界其他地方上进行敲打。“以满足同时打赢两场高技术条件下的
战争”(MS是这样说的吧,记的不是很确切,反正差不多是这意思)。就是这样玩的。
分别凝聚优势力量,在不同场合针对不同对手打不同的仗。说实话,我很佩服美国这样
的打算,如果他真这样打算的话。他要没这打算,那我也要佩服我自己站在美国立场上
所做的这样的打算,因为如果我是美国人,确切的说,是美国垄断利益集团的话,我就
这么干。别人都在谈美国会打伊朗,但我看到的是美国通过指示以色列对伊朗的侵略,
迫使伊朗反击,从而使“伊朗打美国”,伊朗跑到伊拉克来打美国了。重要的是打伊朗
,而不是由谁来打。伊朗既然被打了,霉菌不背这个名,这样中俄欧之间明知道是美国
搞的鬼,也不好直说,因为“不是我们打伊朗,是伊朗在打我们啊”“小色色打伊狼那
是伊朗老欺负小以,还造了大炮仗要往小色家里丢,人家小色色也是自卫,就算有几颗
炸弹误炸了,谁能保障那不是伪装设施呢,人家地图也有过期的时候,谁要你们不提供
最新版本的地图呢。好啦好啦,就算小色色这次炸的多了点,回头我会好好批评他的,
你们就别嚷嚷啦。”反正中俄欧可以联合起来反对,搞决议啥的,但谁也难以直接跑到
中东去打仗,跑去了也打不赢,这事就继续拿到联合国扯蛋。

蛋可以天天扯,但不能饿着肚子扯淡。所以有人说WC多GDH,不是没道理,要是肚子还
饿着,谁他娘还有那闲工夫天天来扯淡,越是哭穷的越可疑,都打倒了踩上一万只香港
脚也不亏。作为世界地理心脏与供应血液的机体心脏的中东被一分为二,一个是产油的
,都是得听老美话的,一个是不听话的,都被美以破坏了。重要的是石油,而不是油价
,如果石油生产本身被破坏,或被他国掌握,那么油价的高低也就完全被他人所决定。
世界石油价格的主宰者不是呕呸克,而是纽约石油交易所。价格和价值不是一回事,马
克思的政治经济学还没过时。美国自身石油储备加整个大西洋和太平洋,甚至世界其他
全部深海地区所有的石油,只要老美愿意,都是他的,想怎么采就怎么采,别人谁也管
不着。中东石油的价值只有对美国以外的世界发达国家和中国起作用。另外说是打中东
,影响世界石油稳定和石油价格,但石油本没有价格,纽约石油交易所说石油值多少钱
,石油就值多少钱。至于产量问题,难道老美自己不知道是不是打了就能增减多少,中
东的石油地位在一定程度上一直在被人为的虚幻的高估着。但老毛子也是不吃那一套的
,在国际油价和天然气不断下跌的同时,将对鸟克兰等不听话国家的供应价格大幅度提
高,俨然一幅爱买不买随你的架势,不买就等着冻死吧。同时积极筹备世界天然气联盟
,这步棋走的相当有意思,转移能源视线。天然气是个好东西,额现在每天吃的饭就是
用这玩意烧的,燃效高,污染少,用起来也放心一些。但谁都知道,这玩意不能代替石
油在汽车里烧啊。所以现在世界上另一对关键的能源合作对象就是毛子和欧洲之间的合
作,这两个真是一拍即合,一个要钱,一个要油。这回老美没办法了,两头都卡不住,
只好在途经的管道上做文章吧。截断毛子和西欧之间的直接联系,在白饿,鸟克兰和波
兰,罗马尼亚等一些国家身上做手脚。说是北约东扩,其实是美国打下的楔子。北约与
欧盟在欧洲事务,尤其是欧洲防务上的主导权的争夺在未来几年将日趋显化。中国则不
断扩大能源进口渠道,除中东外,非洲,中亚,毛子,拉美等,都有我们的供应商,中
东这一点断了,对中国能源的短期直接损失并不大,大不了禁止所有私家车上路,大家
一起坐公交车好了,如果路上全是公交车的话,车一少,车速也能上去,将现有公交车
数量加大一倍,也不会拥挤,反而会提高整体速度和降低每辆车的乘车人数,提高乘车
舒适度,减少社会整体运行成本呢。何况中国南海也是战略储备区,南海舰队这一波次
搞上去了,老瓦回头也开过去了,在陆基航空兵和导弹护卫下,这口肉也就能烂在自己
肚子里了。要不然为何冒着和鬼子海军发生直接冲突的风险放着南海不吃,先在东海打
洞呢。所以伊朗的石油,甚至中东的石油对我们虽然意义重大,但还没到决定性,能卡
住我们的地步,我们的问题出在卵子上。

在伊朗那边动弹,调动全世界眼球,同时有可能的话再在中西亚和东欧地区制造各种动
荡,泼上各种颜色,多管齐下,这世界就立马热闹了。这个时候,小小的岛国,肮脏的
台北,贪官污吏一手遮天,这不再是适合好人住的岛,礼仪廉耻没有钞票重要,这不再
是个适合穷人住的岛,一辈子辛苦连个房子都买不到,大家向钱——看。骚蕊,好象又
跑词了。谁要俺滴艺术细胞这么发达尼。说到哪来着,哦,说到那个小小的鸟岛,也就
是我们的卵子,那个台湾啦。就象前面说的,以美国爸爸为靠山,幻想成为美国下一个
州和第二个以色列,和美国分享海洋红利,在全球风雨的洗礼中也有所作为,就实在不
是没有可能的,不知他能否看到菲律宾等美国的传统后园现在都和中国打得火热,地缘
政治的回归将是大势所趋。而一旦台湾宣布独立了,美国的HM也就来了,美其名曰,“
我们支持一个中国,但更要维护世界和平”“专司防守与调停”,控制台湾上空制空权
,破坏中国军队登陆,日本个狗腿子也迅速受邀去保护他们的小兄弟,或者不受邀的跑
去保护他们的“贱阁列岛”了,“中国威胁论”这会可是找到好话题了“你看,中国就
是要打人了嘛”。打鸟掏巢的勾当也就不由得我们不干啦。美国想以守代攻,而我们则
以攻代守,守住我们的领土与主权完整,守住我们国际法上唯一合法的直面大洋的出海
口。所以美国这次在中东没有进行大规模的HM集结,已经没有那个必要了。还是通过传
统的看美国的HM集结来判断是不是会开打的思维定势要改改了,这次的仗就是靠陆军来
打,这不又派去一波嘛,要集结的正集结着呢,一直就没消停过。同时美国二战后HM不
沉的神话将继续延续下去,除非美国人自己弄沉,虽然从理智上说,美国人也知道世界
上没有什么是不沉的,在HM设计的安全性上不断下大力气,但,HM不沉,也成了美国人
自己的一道心理负担,就象第三帝国坚信俾斯麦不沉一样,当俾斯麦沉了以后,帝国的
海军就只能靠潜艇的下三滥的把戏过日子了。如果一条HM能被打沉,或丧失战斗力,那
就意味着对方具备了打沉其他甚至所有HM的可能与实力,那就意味着美国用了半个多世
纪辛辛苦苦搞起来的全球海洋绝对优势力量在这一夜之间就丧失了,美国又从唯一霸主
退缩于一般海军强国,为其他国家战胜美国海洋力量,挑战美国海权,争夺海洋资源提
供了可能,这才是最可怕的。建设一个海军要用一个世纪,玩完一个海军可能只要几天
,当年西班牙对英国就是这么玩完的。这种可能性的出现对一个谋求独霸地球的国家来
说是绝对不能容忍的。尤其是不能容忍一个到现在连核牙还没几条,HM还没一艘,万吨
级以上具有实战能力和经验水面舰艇数量为0的国家,具备这种能力,所以说,中国搞
DDDD打HM,也是实在没办法,因为其他法子都没用。所以必须让美国认识到这一点,只
有美国认识到这一点,才不会冒这个险,否则,是骡子是马,拉出来溜溜才知道。只是
真把面子拉下来了,大家都会不自在。视频玩激情,只有白痴才露脸。胡哥很从容,带
着政治局的常委们白天开会,晚上看戏,年前再学习一次,怎么加强区域建设,那太平
洋上的风暴,要刮就刮吧,该做的早就做好了,否则等到现在才想到要做也来不及了,
还谈什么区域建设。只不过看戏也是看的军队武警的戏,这个弦还是不好松啊。我们现
在要做的不是打仗,而是恰恰相反,止战为上。不是小弟弟大了就可以插了,不知道为
啥插,该插哪儿的话,就会插出问题来的。何况现在我们的小弟弟还不够大,等它大了
以后,我们也只用他好好的疼我们自己的女人。对台在极力拉拢,平安过渡为第一要务
。10年前的恐吓政策已经被证明是不合适的了。但中国人是从来不怕打仗的,有些人一
定要打疼了,才能有所悔悟。犯贱两个字,就是这么来的。当年毛爷爷写的《别了,司
徒雷登》,现在读读,还是很有益处的。

现在,伊朗想用伊拉克拖住美国,毛子再想用伊朗拖住美国,真是一个使唤一个。在伊
拉克发现伊朗抵抗力量,在伊朗发现俄罗斯抵抗力量。不排除俄罗斯力量直接介入伊朗
进行防卫的可能,尽管老毛子还可以龟缩在伊朗后面。但中国不得不面临着台湾问题的
直接考验,比半个多世纪前在朝鲜半岛上的考验更严重。那时我们还有苏联帮助,陆军
可以直接到达,台湾问题也可以再放一放,蒋光头别的事做的混蛋,但在坚持一个中国
的立场上,还是有功的。对海洋的需要还远没有达到今天这样饥渴的程度,对海洋能源
的开发也根本没有能力,陆地上的事还没搞起来,国家一穷而白呢,就算把整个太平洋
给我们,又有个P用啊,蓝汪汪滴一缸子水,就是一口也不能喝。

美国自2战后,基本上过十年就得折腾一次,这次海湾战争只能算是把上次没打完的打
完了,至于新的高潮,还没开始呢。这次第,怎能不让人先爽了再说。主动式玩多了,
偶尔被动两次也不错嘛。最好的攻击就是防守,都防到别人裤裆里,防着你硬,想让你
永远勃不起来。这样,天底下的女人就都是他的,剩下的男人也都成了伺候他玩女人的
公公了。现在,对欧洲,毛子,和我们的既然不能直接打击,又不能阻止相互来往,就
只有分别进行卡,压,敲。在俄欧,中俄,中亚等地区广打楔子。先限制,再削弱,最
后达到对其高端控制的效果,基本上也就可以了。以后再想怎么弄,以后再说。有啥事
,安理会一表决,中,法,俄只能是道义上的在一起,行动上则很难共同行动,不象美
英,美以,美日,美国和他在世界环亚欧大陆西、南、东三个要点地区的三个小兄弟说
声干,就彪着膀子干了。这两年中俄进展神速,欧盟军队在自身发展起来之后,以欧洲
军队和毛子(尽管毛子也是欧洲)搞联系军演也会是常事。这些都是好事,也都是没办
法的事。所谓态度,没有实力和那股子精神撑着,没人拿你的态度当回事,包括看起来
是把一条裤头穿得热呼呼的“自家兄弟”。

地球是个大茅坑。胡哥说:大家爽,才是真的爽。屎要一起拉才和谐。布屎说,茅坑是
我家的,我想怎么拉就怎么拉,只要老子自己的屁股眼子爽。然后丫就去用自己的屁股
眼子想着怎么让自己的屁股眼子爽了。小心回头掉到下水道里也没人帮,还得招人骂—
—这谁拉得这么大泡屎,把下水道都给堵上了。老板,该冲水啦。

以上言论皆为个人扯淡,一切以光荣正确滴新华社指引滴方向为我们前进滴目标。感谢
您的阅读。祝大家新年快乐,猪年大吉!

爱军事和美女
于丙戌年大年三十


 
hulun @ 2007-01-10 17:25

嗯,商品期货在下跌,美元开始走强,符合预期

A股的确吓人,中国人寿的老板简直到了不要脸的地步,从H股溢价那么多回归大陆套钱
居然说是了让国内投资者收益

哎,无耻竟然成了时尚...

一个臃肿的保险公司,p/e 接近100,还口口声声拿buffet, graham看好保险公司的例子来扯淡
可恨的是,居然有傻x 股民相信
哀其不幸,也只能不屑哀之


 
hulun @ 2006-12-26 04:46

未来的一年里commodity市场要震荡走低

美元贬值的趋势不会再继续了

下一次联储加减息的可能都不大


 
hulun @ 2006-12-26 04:42

http://it.sohu.com/20061224/n247226673.shtml

原以为wikipedia是nonprofit的,没想到他们绕了个圈子来搞搜索---好样的

google的真正的威胁来了,搜索市场的专业化要开始了

wiki搜索要有上市的那一天,一定奋不顾身的跳入long 的大军中。。。


 
hulun @ 2006-12-16 11:13

今儿和委内瑞拉的一小伙聊天
听他说 在西班牙语里
中国故事 = 谎言

另外,在华盛顿州有一个词
shanghaier

是拐骗的意思

哎。。。。


 
hulun @ 2006-12-15 23:35

最近 national public radio ( NPR) 有个系列节目 :Shanghai Builds for the Future
下面是link:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6610882

第一个就说 上海是super~ super~ficial的地方,呵呵


 
hulun @ 2006-12-14 08:21

从上面数据看,越是发达的国家,gdp(ppp)和gdp(exchange rate)差距就越小

那么下面让我们看看这些数据给我们有什么启示。首先要明白ppp是什么意思:
Purchasing power parity (PPP) is in economics the method of using the long-run equilibrium exchange rate of two currencies to equalize the currencies' purchasing power. It is based on the law of one price, the idea that, in an efficient market, identical goods must have only one price

也就是说,ppp's gdp 和er gdp等价要有两个条件:
1,long run, 长期性;
2,equilibrium,在不同的国家,相同的产品和服务应该有相同的价格

1是过程,2是结果
那么导致这个结果的因素是什么呢?

而ppp's gdp和er gdp的不一样又意味着什么呢?