Of Growing Naval Concern
Wolfgang Legien, Editor-in-Chief, Naval Forces; former Director of Politico-Military Affairs, Supreme Allied Commander Atlantic, “Of Growing Naval Concern,” review of Andrew S. Erickson and Lyle J. Goldstein, eds., Chinese Aerospace Power: Evolving Maritime Roles (Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 2011); Naval Forces: The International Forum for Maritime Power 32.7 (July 2011): 85.
When China and the role and significance of its military are being discussed, usually one finds only two views: those who exaggerate the growing power of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) armed forces, and of the PLA Navy in particular; and there is the other faction which downplays the PLA Navy’s significance, arguing that the protagonists of threat only act in the interest of [the] defence industry by trying to squeeze a higher defence budget out of the government by hyping what the PLA Navy is capable of. While admitting that more modern systems are coming upstream the latter group is pointing out that the PLA Navy is still more than a decade behind the US in terms of sophistication of Chinese weapons systems and sensors, lacking modern C4ISR to conduct and sustain operations beyond its ‘near seas.’
The editors Andrew S. Erickson and Lyle J. Goldstein must have sensed that a new wave of the heated debate between both antagonistic groups was coming up when publishing their overview [of] ‘Chinese Aerospace Power: Evolving Maritime Roles’: President Barack Obama during his November visit to Australia announced a new permanent military presence in Australia, with US Marines sharing the Robertson Barracks of the Royal Australian Army in Darwin, in view of the strategic and economic balance in Asia and the Pacific region having shifted decisively by the emergence of China as a great power. The Sydney Morning Herald however, in a critical opinion editorial warned that “Australia should act like an ally not a client,” and that the US move would “raise eyebrows in Beijing, where it would almost certainly be seen as expressing Washington’s resolve to remain the dominant power on both sides of the Pacific… China and the US may do all they can to avoid a direct clash, but it is increasingly clear that each will resist the other’s claim to primacy in Asia.”
While this is a political debate within Australia, the root of the argument remains the perception of a growing military power in China. And this is what the editors of the reviewed book have examined in a very convincing way. Both are real experts themselves in the fields of China: Erickson is an Associate Professor in the US Naval War College’s Strategic Research Department and a founding member of its China Maritime Studies Institute (CMSI). He is an Associate in Research at Harvard University’s Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies, and a Fellow in the National Committee on US-China Relations’ Public Intellectuals Program. Goldstein is an Associate Professor in the US Naval War College’s Strategic Research Department and a founding Director of the department’s CMSI. He is proficient in Chinese and Russian and has published widely in scholar[ly] journals [on] China, Russia, Central Asia, on surface and undersea warfare. As said, although themselves speaking with high authority on China’s military power they have undertaken to publish a survey in which no less than 33 American and Chinese civilian and military experts on China, strategists and members of ‘think tanks’ examine how China should be perceived, by looking at China’s Emerging Maritime Roles (Part I), Chinese ISR and Counter-ISR (Part II), the Contrasting Strategies of Bastion Protection and Power Projection (Part III), Maritime Anti-Access Strike by Cruise Missiles (Part IV) and by Ballistic Missiles (Part V), and Maritime Implications of Chinese Aerospace Power (Part VI).
This approach guarantees that the reader can make a sober assessment when overlaying the Conclusions at the end of each chapter. As Lieutenant General Daniel P. Leaf, USAF (Ret.) writes in his foreword, the chapters address the reality of the emergence of the PLA and PLA Navy as a modern, complex military. “They are not intended to assuage either hawks or doves on the controversial issue of China; rather they provide a broad and objective assessment of Chinese aerospace and maritime power by professional researchers who take their analyses with the utmost seriousness.”
The PLA navy’s military build up well beyond defensive capabilities is to be seen twofold: They would clearly enable China to exercise sea denial in the Taiwan Strait, even against the US Navy, by taking advantage of the nearness of homeland, and the capabilities of the large number of submarines and by swarms of well-armed ‘street fighters’ of the Type HOUBEI… class catamaran fast missile boats, supported by PLA[AF] and PLA Navy aircraft armed with air-launched cruise missiles. But beyond Taiwan, it becomes a totally different equation, even [assuming] the build up by the PLA Navy of a carrier force and amphibious capability. The PLA Navy is lacking C4ISR capabilities and cannot sustain operations beyond the ‘near seas,’ and they are hampered by unreliable and imprecise targeting capabilities. They will not be able to achieve maritime dominance, despite a large number of satellites and micro-satellites being launched, and long-range radars being deployed, like Surface Wave OTH Radars and OTH Backscatter bi-static HF Radars. Although these radars are developed to detect surface ship and low air activity beyond the visible horizon, they lack the necessary precision to cue long-range missiles and are dependent upon atmospheric conditions, system power and time of day. China’s aerospace performance, while significant in aggregate, has thus far been lopsided, which means military gaps and missed economic and strategic technological opportunities, neither of which supports great power status.
Hence the People’s Republic of China (PRC) restricts its intentions so far to being a regional power—vide the claims in the South China Sea, where mainly Vietnamese claims on many occupied Spratly Islands are opposed by the PRC. None of the neighbouring nations would be able to withstand massive Chinese military interventions, although in recognition of this state-of-affairs especially Vietnam is flexing muscles and attempts to modernise its naval inventory. But China’s increasing reliance on satellites increases the PRC’s vulnerability, and in the same vein US Ballistic Missile Defence developments are perceived as weakening its offensive means that are banking on ballistic [and] cruise missiles against carrier forces. In short: The Chinese aerospace revolution has different implications in three areas: It is most relevant in the Taiwan Strait where it has already reversed the balance of military power; it is very significant in China’s ‘near seas’ (Yellow Sea, East and South China Seas) were it is shifting the regional balance of [power]; and it has some significance in the global maritime and aerospace commons, which needs to be watched as it tends to increase further.
While jointness of operations is being emphasised by the PLA, actual results are lagging—a general officer of the Central Military Commission recently stated that “there is no consensus on what ‘integrated’ means,” when talking about the integrated air and space component of China’s strategy. Meanwhile, the PRC has recognised that ‘beyond Taiwan’ is a question of aerospace power projection. …
You see that there are many very good reasons to read this thought-provoking analysis, and I have not even mentioned the highly interesting excurses on cruise missiles and ballistic missiles. I bet you will not put this book down until you are through its 493 pages, excluding a very informative appendix, acronyms, list of contributors, and a topical index which comes on top of Chapter notes.
Chinese Aerospace Power: Evolving Maritime Roles (CMSI Vol. 5)
Andrew S. Erickson and Lyle J. Goldstein, eds., Chinese Aerospace Power: Evolving Maritime Roles (Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 2011).
- Kindle edition now available!
- China Ocean Press (www.oceanpress.com.cn) has purchased the simplified Chinese language rights and will soon publish an authorized Chinese-language edition.
Japanese summary translation now available: 中国の航空宇宙パワー海洋任務への発展.
Highlighted in GlobalSecurity.org’s Special Selections.
Author of “Beijing’s Aerospace Revolution: Short-Range Opportunities, Long-Range Challenges,” 3-18.
Coauthor:
- with Jing-Dong Yuan, of “Antiaccess and China’s Air-Launched Cruise Missiles,” 275-86;
- and, with David Yang, of “Chinese Analysts Assess the Potential for Antiship Ballistic Missiles,” 328-42.
For a video introducing the volume’s contents, watch Prof. Andrew S. Erickson, Eight Bells Book Lecture, Naval War College Museum, 8 September 2011.
China’s aircraft carrier program is already making major waves well before the first ship has even been completed. Undoubtedly, this development heralds a new era in Chinese national security policy. While Chinese Aerospace Power presents substantial new insight on that particular question, its main focus is decidedly broader in scope. This book offers a comprehensive survey of Chinese aerospace developments, with a concentration on areas of potential strategic significance previously unexplored in Western scholarship. It also links these developments to the vast maritime battlespace of the Asia-Pacific region and highlights the consequent implications for the U.S. military, particularly the U.S. Navy.
The possibility of a future Chinese expeditionary force operating off Africa under the protective umbrella of carrier aircraft is not without consequence for the global strategic balance. However, a simpler set of aerospace systems, from microsatellites to unmanned aerial vehicles to ballistic and cruise missiles are already challenging U.S. maritime dominance in East Asia. Cumulatively, progress in all major aerospace dimensions by various elements of the People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) signifies a new period in which Chinese forces are now decisively altering the complexion of the military balance in the East Asian littoral.
While many articles and books have previously been written on Chinese aerospace development and many more discuss future U.S. naval strategy in the Asia-Pacific region, no other book connects the two issues, simultaneously evaluating the Chinese aerospace challenge and its implications for U.S. naval strategy.
Chinese Aerospace Power offers both broad strategic context for the lay reader and considerable insights for even the most well-informed specialists, with no fewer than five chapters devoting coverage to significant aspects of China’s development of a “carrier killer” anti-ship ballistic missile (ASBM).
Publication date: July 2011
512 pp., 2 b/w photos, 15 illustrations, 6” x 9”
ISBN: 978-159114-241-6
Political Science, International Relations
This is the fifth volume in the Naval Institute Press series “Studies in Chinese Maritime Development” published jointly by the China Maritime Studies Institute and the Naval Institute Press. Click here for information regarding previous volumes in the series.
China, the United States, and 21st Century Sea Power
Edited by Andrew S. Erickson, Lyle J. Goldstein, and Nan Li
ISBN: 978-1-59114-243-0
China Goes to Sea: Maritime Transformation in Comparative Historical Perspective
Edited by Andrew S. Erickson, Lyle J. Goldstein, and Carnes Lord
ISBN: 978-1-59114-242-3
China’s Energy Strategy: The Impact on Beijing’s Maritime Policies
Edited by Gabriel B. Collins, Andrew S. Erickson, Lyle J. Goldstein, and William S. Murray
ISBN: 978-1-59114-330-7
China’s Future Nuclear Submarine Force
Edited Andrew S. Erickson, Lyle J. Goldstein, William S. Murray, and Andrew R. Wilson
ISBN: 978-1-59114-326-0
Andrew S. Erickson is an associate professor in the U.S. Naval War College’s Strategic Research Department and a founding member of its China Maritime Studies Institute (CMSI). He is an Associate in Research at Harvard University’s Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies and a Fellow in the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations’ Public Intellectuals Program.
Lyle J. Goldstein is an associate professor in the Strategic Research Department at the U.S. Naval War College, and the founding director of the department’s China Maritime Studies Institute. He is proficient in Chinese and Russian, and has published widely in scholarly journals on China, Russia, Central Asia, and surface and undersea warfare.
BLURBS
“In this edited volume, Erickson and Goldstein provide us with a comprehensive survey of China’s ongoing efforts to shift the military balance in the Western Pacific decisively in its favor through the development and application of aerospace power as it pertains to the maritime competition. Drawing upon primary research and Chinese sources, this volume will be a valuable and timely addition to the libraries of those with an interest in this issue of growing geostrategic importance.”
—Dr. Andrew F. Krepinevich Jr., President of the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, author of 7 Deadly Scenarios: A Military Futurist Explores the Changing Face of War in the 21st Century
“This coverage of this book is at once broad and deep. It serves well as an introduction to advances in Chinese maritime aerospace technology, and it will also reward expert readers looking for the latest update on these evolving capabilities. Many readers will be surprised by the extent of Chinese progress described by the contributors to this work. Assembling evidence from a necessarily diverse range of sources, they detail the strategic as well as the technical issues that are shaping the Chinese military establishment as it looks beyond the country’s shores, and they examine how it will develop in coming years and decades.”
—Bradley Perrett, Asia-Pacific bureau chief, Aviation Week, Beijing
“Chinese Aerospace Power is an excellent and very readable overview of China’s impressive advances in almost every aspect of air and space operations. Not only have the Chinese developed impressive technical capabilities, but they have also given careful thought to the operational concepts associated with them. There is no reason that China must be an enemy of the United States, but it would be folly on our part if we were to lose to China the across-the-board technology lead that has been vital to our national security for well over a half century. This is a must read for anyone with a concern for American or Chinese military affairs.”
—Col. John A. Warden III, USAF (Ret.), Gulf War I planner, president of Venturist, Inc., author of The Air Campaign and Winning in FastTime
“Chinese Aerospace Power arrives on the scene as the United States is facing declining resources for defense while the Chinese are realizing rapid expansion of its military capabilities in the aerospace and maritime domains. Andrew Erickson and Lyle Goldstein yield timely insight into how these two trends are evolving in these arenas. Resolving the security objectives of the United States and China in the Pacific—and around the world—requires that policymakers and military strategists understand the reality of Chinese military capability, experiences, and perspectives. This work provides that insight and is a must read as Chinese aerospace development is significantly altering the character of the military and political balance in the Pacific.”
—Lt. General David A. Deptula, USAF (Ret.), former USAF Deputy Chief of Staff for Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance
“Absolutely the most important book on air and space power I’ve had the pleasure to read. The power of this detailed survey of Chinese Aerospace Power is doubled because it presents both an intelligent American analysis and an insightful view of the ‘Chinese perception’ of the situation. Our two nations have much in common, but the understanding this difference in perception is essential to our selection of our future alternatives. A must have book!”
—Col. Walter J. Boyne, USAF (Ret.), National Aviation Hall of Fame honoree and former director of the National Air and Space Museum, author of Beyond the Wild Blue: A History of the U.S. Air Force, 1947-2007
“China’s air and space development is an area of significant interest for the U.S. Navy. This book elucidates the critical linkage between China’s military aerospace and maritime capabilities. Whereas China’s rapid progress has already rendered many other studies obsolete, this volume connects the latest ‘data point’ dots and puts them in strategic context. Navy leaders and planners should read it today.”
—Admiral Timothy J. Keating, USN (Ret.), former Commander-in-Chief, U.S. Pacific Command
REVIEWS
“Andrew Erickson and Lyle Goldstein, two prominent China scholars at the Naval War College, fill an important interdisciplinary niche with this book by bringing together an all-star team of authors from both the Air Force and Navy communities. … a compilation of 27 essays authored by an illustrious group including admirals, intelligence analysts, private-sector experts, and former defense attachés. … Changes in the balance of aerospace power over China’s littoral waters have far-reaching strategic consequences for American policymakers. This book explains both how and why…. a real treasure trove. … Paul Giarra, Andrew Erickson, and David Yang excel in addressing one of the key components of China’s emerging antiaccess capacity: antiship ballistic missiles (ASBM), which RADM Eric McVadon, USN, retired, has … argued could have implications similar to those of China’s first successful nuclear test in 1964….”
—Capt. Paul A. Stempel, USAF, Strategic Studies Quarterly 6.3 (Fall 2012): 149-51.
“an impressive series… the various discussions contained within its section on Chinese anti-ship missile (ASBM) capabilities provide much information on a technology that could have a significant impact on the balance of power in the Pacific.”
—Conrad Waters, Review of Four Naval Institute Press Books, “Naval Books of the Year,” Warship 2012: 190-91.
“Let’s face facts, there are many books on China’s military rise. There are also many books that detail the technological evolution of China’s armed forces. There are not many books, though, that bring together the world’s best writers and thinkers on the subject in one volume who give a balanced approach to the subject. Andrew Erickson and a cast of global thinkers give the reader a fair, highly readable, and credible approach to the important subject of Chinese Aerospace Power. The book tackles a highly controversial subject and does it well, with very little bias or hype. In my own research, I turn to it time and time again when I am writing my own pieces.”
—Harry Kazianis, “Always on My Desk For Reference…,” 5-Star Rating, Amazon.com, 19 April 2012.
“The book addresses, successively, the maritime context for China’s rapid aerospace developments, its intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) implications; future maritime missions (including anti-submarine warfare, so far a major weakness for China); force projection (aerial replenishment and carrier developments); tactics for China’s anti-ship cruise and ballistic missiles; and the consequences for U.S. operations. As Lieutenant General Daniel Leaf, USAF, Ret., points out in his preface, ‘this is important work.’ … Overall, Chinese Aerospace Power: Evolving Maritime Roles is an outstanding and important book. ”
—Alexandre Sheldon-Duplaix, Marine Technology (April 2012): 86-87.
“The collection is held together by a common focus on maritime oriented Chinese aerospace military capabilities. Edited by Andrew Erickson, CAP is part of a series of similar volumes on Chinese maritime military issues. Taken together, the essays supply a vision of how the United States and the People’s Republic of China envision high technology warfare against one another. … Interservice conflict invariably produces friction.… The collection does an excellent job of highlighting where the rifts lay, and describing the effect that they’ve had on planning and procurement. … These essays shine a light on how China is thinking about fighting the United States, deterring US intervention in regional conflict, and shaping US behavior in the Western Pacific. Given that the book is the product of a Naval War College colloquium and that it includes the work of many individuals close to the development of USN doctrine and strategy, it also gives good indication of how the United States views the prospect of war against China. It bears note that the book is relevant whether or not we evaluate a war between China and the United States as likely; the technologies, doctrines, and procurement priorities outlined will guide US and Chinese policy for at least a generation, and calculations regarding the likelihood and likely course of war will guide how the two nations related to one another diplomatically.”
—Robert Farley, “Sunday Book Review: Chinese Aerospace Power,” Information Dissemination, 11 March 2012.
“the authors explore the strategic implications of Chinese forces for the US Navy and the military balance in East Asia….”
—“Chinese Aerospace Power: Evolving Maritime Roles,” Brief Notices, Survival 54.1 (February-March 2012): 228.
“Like the others in the series, it is also rich in detail, comprehensive in approach, strong in analytical rigour and light on speculation. … the range of sources is impressive. Nearly always primary source—many translated from Chinese—and including more unusual techniques, such as the analysis of Chinese UAV exhibitions at trade shows, it allows for an authoritative discussion. This authority is, however, self-tempered by the inclusion of a chapter discussing ‘Challenges in Assessing China’s Aerospace Capabilities and Intentions’, which recognises that Chinese military capability remains a difficult area to gain reliable data. Such honest self-assessment is admirable. … [The] final two essays form a good basis for contextualizing all the information presented earlier.… Uninformed and speculative comment on China can be found almost daily in our major newspapers, blogs and magazines. The need to have a deep understanding of what China is—and is not—militarily capable of is therefore growing to ensure that reasoned debate can occur. … Books such as Chinese Aerospace Power provide the basis of that discovery and anyone who is interested in gaining a deeper understanding of the rise of China would benefit from reading it.”
—Captain Gordon A. Andrew, RAN, “Chinese Aerospace Power: Evolving Maritime Roles,” Australian Defence Force Journal 186 (November/December 2011): 100-01.
“This enormously valuable and very up-to-date work… provides a very comprehensive analytical overview of the rapid development of the aerospace functions of the PLA Navy. Politicians, military officers, journalists, naval architects, ship-builders, ship-owners and even businessmen who have any connection with or concern for China would be well advised to buy and carefully study this book.”
—Ausmarine (November 2011): 36.
“offers a broad overview and appraisal of recent developments in Chinese aerospace and maritime power and examines implications for the US military, especially Chinese prowess in fielding advanced cruise missiles and China’s long-range precision-strike capabilities that pose a threat to forces in the Western Pacific theater….”
—“Reference & Research Book News,” Book News Inc. (October 2011), 306.
“Andrew Erickson and Lyle Goldstein… have teamed up for the fifth time to produce an excellent addition to their series on China’s maritime development. … The book is timely … a substantial overview of China’s maritime aerospace developments, with a focus on important strategic areas, some of which are receiving notice for the first time. …important reading for military practitioners and government and policy analysts who follow China’s rise to great-power status.”
—Robert L. Worden, Washington Journal of Modern China, 10.1 (September 2011): 76-77.
“offers a comprehensive survey of Chinese aerospace developments”
—Military Technology 35.9 (September 2011): 20.
“This volume has numerous strengths. Its greatest contribution to existing literature is that it uses a great deal of open source Chinese based literature to add credence to the authors ideas. … The work assembles … an all-star cast of scholars to discuss one of the most timely security studies subjects of the 21st century. … When considered as a whole or in part, this work should give US strategic planners a moment of pause. Erickson and Goldstein have created a volume that is balanced, dense in scope but still readable and enjoyable. Combined with the assemblage of a ‘who’s who’ in Chinese security studies, the appeal of such a work is hard to deny. This volume should serve as the textbook to any security studies student who wishes to gain a scholarly perspective on China’s aerospace and military rise to power from a maritime perspective. It is a work I will keep close at hand for years to come.”
—Harry Kazianis, “Review: Chinese Aerospace Power, Evolving Maritime Roles,” 5 Stars, e-International Relations, 6 September 2011.
“this volume evaluates the advances that China has made in its aerospace operations and the implications of this advancement for U.S. naval strategy.”
—Katherine Duke, “Chinese Aerospace Power: Evolving Maritime Roles,” “Short Takes,” Amherst Magazine (Fall 2011): 46.
“… despite the numerous one-off articles, there hasn’t until now been a place in English that brings together all the pieces of the puzzle. That is until the recent publication by the China Maritime Studies Institute of Chinese Aerospace Power: Evolving Maritime Roles. The volume… offers a comprehensive overview of all the latest developments, and touches on the whole spectrum of the Chinese aerospace capabilities…. The essays, from some of the most highly regarded analysts in the field, help provide a good understanding of the state of Chinese aerospace modernization. The book not only examines the technical feasibility of Chinese plans, as well as their strengths and weaknesses, but also delves deep into domestic Chinese debates about the weapons systems in question. The volume manages to get to the core of the issue through open source analysis that compares and contrasts Chinese writings on the topic from a variety of official and unofficial sources, offering a far broader perspective than volumes focusing only on Western analysis. Indeed, Chinese Aerospace Power delves deeply into the Chinese system, examining inter-service rivalries and integration and training issues. … The book is a must-read piece for every government official involved with China-related issues, military or otherwise. If knowing your interlocutor is a prerequisite for successful negotiations, the book should be a big step towards providing a balanced and necessary understanding.”
—Eleni Ekmektsioglou, “Understanding China,” The Diplomat, 26 August 2011.
“…this book was astonishing. …Almost everyone of the paper was informative (make that eye-opening)… Kudos to the authors and editor. But the heart of the book for a novice like myself was the realization of what the Chinese Second Artillery Corps has pulled off. Terminally guided precision Anti Ship Ballistic Missiles (ASBM) have essentially made our carriers obsolete for a war-time Taiwan mission in the Western Pacific. The PLAAF cruise missile, fighter and air defense systems are impressive. All of it feels like the Soviet reconnaissance/strike package implemented by a country that has its act together. This book should be required reading by every staffer in Washington.”
—Tech Historian, “Outstanding! A Must Have on Your Shelf,” 5 Star Rating,Amazon.com, 23 August 2011.
“In the past, I have found works by Andrew Erickson, Lyle Goldstein and the good folks at China Maritime Studies Institute (CMSI) to be of the highest quality and this book was no exception. … It does a great job of understanding China’s motivations/intentions, while fairly examining PLA’s capabilities and training. For those seeking for a greater understanding of China’s air force, space development and Second Artillery Command, I think this is a must read. … On top of that, I was pleasantly surprised by all of the new information/analysis that I found in this book regarding China’s ASBM program. I have read many differently analyses on ASBM (including several by CMSI), but this book really provided a much more comprehensive look than anything else I have read. The discussions on subjects like conflict escalation of ASBM, hard kill vs soft kill and non-carrier targets were very refreshing. So, for all those who are interested in learning more about China’s Air Force, space development and Second Artillery, I think this book would be an excellent read.”
—Feng, “Review of Chinese Aerospace Power: Evolving Maritime Roles,” Information Dissemination, 16 August 2011.
“…the papers presented by this installation are of the highest quality with primary Chinese sources. They are written by the most respected authorities on the subject…. While unveiling fancy new equipment can generate headlines, the press generally doesn’t ask the deeper question of how new equipment may change existing PLA doctrine or examine potential implications. This is where the good folks from the CMSI come in and provide analyses that are lacking in the blogosphere….”
—China Defense Blog, 31 July 2011.
“A useful analysis of Chinese air power, especially with regards to the sea. Balanced and highly technical, the book aims neither to hype nor downplay PLA capabilities.”
—David Axe, “Useful Analysis,” 4 Star Rating, Amazon.com, 28 July 2011.
“…Beijing has a brutally simple—if risky—plan to compensate for [its] relative weakness: buy missiles. And then, buy more of them. All kinds of missiles: short-range and long-range; land-based, air-launched and sea-launched; ballistic and cruise; guided and ‘dumb.’ Those are the two striking themes that emerge from Chinese Aerospace Power….”
—David Axe, “China’s Plan to Beat U.S.: Missiles, Missiles and More Missiles,” Danger Room, Wired.com, 27 July 2011.
“The editors Andrew S. Erickson and Lyle J. Goldstein must have sensed that a new wave of the heated debate between both antagonistic groups was coming up when publishing their overview … the root of the argument remains the perception of a growing military power in China. And this is what the editors of the reviewed book have examined in a very convincing way. …they have undertaken to publish a survey in which no less than 33 American and Chinese civilian and military experts on China, strategists and members of ‘think tanks’ examine how China should be perceived…. This approach guarantees that the reader can make a sober assessment when overlaying the Conclusions at the end of each chapter. … You see that there are many very good reasons to read this thought-provoking analysis, and I have not even mentioned the highly interesting excurses on cruise missiles and ballistic missiles. I bet you will not put this book down until you are through its 493 pages….”
—Wolfgang Legien, Editor-in-Chief, Naval Forces; former Director of Politico-Military Affairs, Supreme Allied Commander Atlantic, Naval Forces: The International Forum for Maritime Power 32.7 (July 2011): 85.
Japanese summary translation now available: 中国の航空宇宙パワー海洋任務への発展.
概 説
中国の空母計画は、一番艦が完成する前に大きな波紋を十分に齎しつつある。疑いなく、この開発は中国の国家安全保障政策に新しい時代の到来を告げるものだ。
一方、この本は、特定の質問に対して十分に新しい洞察力を示し、その焦点は、はっきりとより広い知的範囲にある。
中国の航空宇宙パワーは、以前には西洋の学問が未踏であった戦略的分野に焦点を置き、中国の航空宇宙開発の包括的な調査を試みている。
また本書は、これらの開発をアジア-太平洋地域における広大な海洋戦域にリンクさせ、米軍、特に米海軍に対する結果としての影響について強調している。
著者について
アンドリュー・エリクソンとライル・J・ゴールドスタインは米国海軍大学の戦略研究部准教授であり、中国海洋研究所の発起人である。彼らは、「中国、米国及び21 世紀のシーパワー」及び「中国は海へ進出」を含む幾つかの書籍を共著している。