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This book addresses the issues raised by Chinese and North Korean
maritime 'gray zone' activities in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region.
For years, China has been harassing its neighbors in South China
Sea and East China Sea, employing both coast guard and maritime
militia forces, in the name of safeguarding Chinese sovereignty.
This behavior is frequently characterized as constituting 'gray
zone' activity. As the term suggests, this refers to a state of
conflict that falls between peace and war. Interestingly, the
Yellow Sea, which is geographically much closer to China than South
China Sea or East China Sea, has been comparatively quiet. However,
there is a danger that the PRC has the capability to replicate its
gray zone activities in this area. Worse, North Korea has also been
engaging in carefully-calibrated provocations there. This book
addresses pressing questions about these activities and offers: (1)
a conceptual framework to understand maritime gray zone operations
and Beijing and Pyongyang's approach, with an unprecedented focus
on the Yellow Sea; (2) a comprehensive, fully updated fleet force
structure for the PRC's Coast Guard, together with projections
regarding how the Coast Guard is likely to develop in the future;
(3) an extensive organizational analysis of the PRC's Maritime
Militia that surveys the many units relevant to Yellow Sea
operations, some revealed publicly for the first time; and (4) a
detailed assessment of North Korean maritime 'gray zone'
activities. This book will be of great interest to students of
naval strategy, maritime security, Asian politics, and
international security.
The Naval War College has expanded its expertise in the
Asia-Pacific Rim region in recent years largely in response to the
growing significance of the region to U.S. national security. The
College has actively hired prominent scholars and hosted a number
of conferences, workshops, and guest speakers focusing on the
problems and possibilities facing the Pacific Rim. South and
Northeast Asia, after all, are home to some of the world's
fastest-growing economies and close American allies, as well as
several potential political and diplomatic flashpoints. Even more
to the point, China is an ascending economic and military power
both in the region and on the world stage. The U.S. Navy plays a
leading role in maintaining stability in the region with its strong
presence and ability to guard the freedom of navigation in vital
sea lines of communication. The efforts of the Asia-Pacific Rim
specialists at the Naval War College in some ways represent a case
of "back to the future." One of the proudest episodes in the
College's history came in the 1930s when Newport played a central
role in developing the military plans necessary to cope with the
ascendance of another Asian economic and military power-Japan.
Although we expect that wise diplomacy and national self-interest
will prevent a reoccurrence of similar difficulties in the coming
decades, there is no substitute for military preparedness and
well-thought-out international and regional strategies for dealing
with the important region. The Naval War College Press has done its
part in providing its readers with many excellent articles on
regional security in Asia in the Naval War College Review; an
important book-Jonathan Pollack, editor, Strategic Surprise?
U.S.-China Relations in the Early Twenty-first Century (released
March 2004); and now Newport Paper 22. Professor Lyle Goldstein of
the Strategic Research Department of the College's Center for Naval
Warfare Studies has been at the forefront of recent research into
China's future. In this project he has guided a handful of naval
officers through the puzzle of China's ongoing nuclear
modernization programs. With the able assistance of Andrew
Erickson, these sailor-scholars have examined various aspects of
nuclear modernization from ballistic missile defense to nuclear
command and control. In general the chapter tells a cautionary
tale; the progress of China's nuclear modernization documented here
should give pause to those inclined to dismiss China's military
modernization. Steadily and with relatively little attention the
People's Republic continues to improve its technologies and weapons
systems. As the authors emphasize, no "Rubicon" has been crossed,
but potentials are already apparent that, if realized, the U.S.
Navy as now constituted would find challenging indeed.
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