China's naval strategy and nuclear weapons: the risks of intentional and inadvertent nuclear escalation / by Paul Dodge

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: 2005Subject(s): In: Comparative Strategy Vol 24, No 5, December 2005, pp.415-430 (113)Summary: China's naval strategy closely integrates China's conventional forces with nuclear weapons in a warfighting role, a combination which is intended to threaten or cause massive U.S. casualties. This paper argues that in reality China's conventional air and naval capabilities are modest and the PLA might suffer heavy losses in the early days of a US-Sino conflict. At that stage the situation could become highly unstable with China faced with a choice between defeat or the use of nuclear weapons.
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Journal Article Mindef Library & Info Centre Journals XX(19687.1) (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Not for loan 19687-1001

China's naval strategy closely integrates China's conventional forces with nuclear weapons in a warfighting role, a combination which is intended to threaten or cause massive U.S. casualties. This paper argues that in reality China's conventional air and naval capabilities are modest and the PLA might suffer heavy losses in the early days of a US-Sino conflict. At that stage the situation could become highly unstable with China faced with a choice between defeat or the use of nuclear weapons.

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