12 research outputs found

    The Oil Weapon: Myth of China's Vulnerability

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    The geopolitical canvass on which China plots its strategy for energy security displays a ubiquitous presence of one country: the United States. Chinese energy security planners must reckon with America's ravenous consumption of imported oil, its strategic alliances with other heavy importers of oil in Asia, its overseas military operations in the heart of the world's leading oil producing region, its naval dominion over the world's oil transportation routes, and the global domination of U.S. oil companies or multinational oil companies heavily capitalized by American investment. This is the context in which China pursues its energy security, sometimes blandly described as 'conservation and diversification of supply', which masks the nation's real struggle to satisfy its rapidly growing energy needs without exposing its energy lifelines to external forces that may, intentionally or not, betray China's interests

    China’s Antiship Ballistic Missile—Developments and Missing Links

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    That China is interested in an antiship ballistic missile seems a logical and natural outgrowth of its history of robust missile development. At what stage is its development? How near to operational readiness are its key components and technologies? What would be its implications for the U.S. Navy and the naval strategic balance between the United States and China

    Civil-Military Integration and the Rise of China’s Techno-Security State: Implications for Great Power Competition with the United States

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    Naval Postgraduate School Acquisition Research Progra

    China’s Efforts in Civil-Military Integration, Its Impact on the Development of China’s Acquisition System, and Implications for the United States

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    China, under the leadership of Xi Jinping, is significantly stepping up its efforts to pursue civil-military integration—or what he calls military-civil fusion (MCF)—as an integral component of its grand development strategy of building a technologically advanced and militarily powerful state within the next one to two decades. This paper examines the making, nature, and implementation of Xi’s grand MCF undertaking. This paper offers an analytical framework that seeks to provide a coherent and holistic view of the many moving parts and disparate elements of MCF through an innovation systems perspective. This framework identifies seven categories of factors that are important in shaping the structure and process of the MCF system: catalytic, input, institutional, organizational, networks, contextual, and output factors. Key dynamics that are examined in detail in the paper include the high-level leadership engagement, the influence of the external threat and technology environments, the application of new financial mechanisms such as hybrid state-private sector investment funds, the role of key state and military agencies, and the evolution of the Chinese defense acquisition system to embrace MCF.Naval Postgraduate School Acquisition Research Progra
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