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  • 枫下茶话 / 和平之路 / 下一步会是怎么样?拜登下令航母上的战机起飞拦截?台湾空军武力驱逐中国空军的挑衅?亮出刀枪以后再与大陆进行外交努力对台湾只有坏处没有好处。链接下面老百姓的评论里,几乎没有看到一条要和中国武力对抗以捍卫台湾的呼吁。民心如此:
    China ratcheted up activity in Taiwan airspace on Sunday by flying 15 fighter jets between mainland Taiwan and the Pratas Islands in the South China Sea, a report said.
    • 中国空军侵犯台湾是一个幌子,目的就是转移中国国内正在发生的大事儿!要透过现象看本质!中国正在发生大事儿! +1
      • 我只是不知道如果老中继续这么干下去,台湾该如何反应?好好的埋头赚钱不行,非得要折腾到舞枪弄刀的地步
      • 发生啥了?历次巡航台湾发生啥了
    • 底下评论第一条:中国正在占领美国,比如去年中国在美国买美国企业达到了历史最高,很快中国会在美国内部雇佣几百万美国人,拥有美国商业,建设美国城市
      本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛A Little Known Reality.

      Source: Michael Snyder, Guest Post.

      In the near future, China will employ millions of American workers and dominate thousands of small communities all over the United States. Chinese acquisition of US businesses set a new all-time record last year, and it is on pace to shatter that record this year.

      The Smithfield Foods acquisition is an example. Smithfield Foods is the largest pork producer and processor in the world. It has facilities in 26 US states, and it employs tens of thousands of Americans. It directly owns 460 farms and has contracts with approximately 2,100 others. But now a Chinese company has bought it for $ 4.7 billion, and that means that the Chinese will now be the most important employer in dozens of rural communities all over America.

      Thanks in part to our massively bloated trade deficit with China, the Chinese have trillions of dollars to spend. They are only just starting to exercise their economic muscle.
      It is important to keep in mind that there is often not much of a difference between "the Chinese government" and "Chinese corporations". In 2011, 43 percent of all profits in China were produced by companies where the Chinese government had a controlling interest.

      Last year a Chinese company spent $ 2.6 billion to purchase AMC entertainment - one of the largest movie theater chains in the United States. Chinese companies control more movie ticket sales than anyone else in the world.

      Economic beachheads" are being established all over America. For example, Golden Dragon Precise Copper Tube Group, Inc. recently broke ground on a $100 million plant in Thomasville, Alabama. Many of the residents of Thomasville, Alabama will be glad to have jobs, but it will also become yet another community that will now be heavily dependent on communist China.
      And guess where else Chinese companies are putting down roots? Detroit. Chinese-owned companies are investing in American businesses and new vehicle technology, selling everything from seat belts to shock absorbers in retail stores, and hiring experienced engineers and designers in an effort to soak up the talent and expertise of domestic automakers and their suppliers.

      If you recently purchased an "American-made" vehicle, there is a really good chance that it has a number of Chinese parts in it. Industry analysts are hard-pressed to put a number on the Chinese suppliers operating in the United States.

      China seems particularly interested in acquiring energy resources in the United States.
      For example, China is actually mining for coal in the mountains of Tennessee. Guizhou Gouchuang Energy Holdings Group spent 616 million dollars to acquire Triple H Coal Co. in Jacksboro, Tennessee. At the time, that acquisition really didn't make much news, but now a group of conservatives in Tennessee is trying to stop the Chinese from blowing up their mountains and taking their coal.

      And pretty soon China may want to build entire cities in the United States just like they have been doing in other countries. Right now China is actually building a city larger than Manhattan just outside Minsk, the capital of Belarus.

      China is on the rise. If you doubt this, just read the following:
      # When you total up all imports and exports, China is now the number one trading nation on the entire planet.
      # Overall, the US has run a trade deficit with China over the past decade that comes to more than 2.3 trillion dollars.
      # China has more foreign currency reserves than anyone else on the planet.
      # China now has the largest new car market in the entire world.
      # China now produces more than twice as many automobiles as the United States does.
      # After being bailed out by US taxpayers, GM is involved in 11 joint ventures with Chinese companies.
      # China is the number one gold producer in the world.
      # The uniforms for the US Olympic team were made in China.
      # 85% of all artificial Christmas trees the world over are made in China.
      # The new World Trade Center tower in New York is going to include glass imported from China.
      # China now consumes more energy than the United States does.
      # China is now in aggregate the leading manufacturer of goods in the entire world.
      # China uses more cement than the rest of the world combined.
      # China is now the number one producer of wind and solar power on the entire globe.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
      • 雇佣几百万美国人,拥有美国商业,老中不是始作俑者,建设美国城市比较悬,建起来只给中国公民/移民住,现在又不修铁路。
      • 我不觉得天朝的侵略性恁强。 +1
      • 我觉得世界都在盯着中国,中国资本是小心翼翼的购买,忽略了印度,印度13亿人口大部队正在向世界进军扩张 +1
      • 这贴的都是哪一年的事情。自从外汇不足(2016)年以后,中国对外是收缩,因为怕把美元花光了
    • 福克斯的读者还是保守派居多的,信奉川普的美国优先。
      • 保守派信奉着川普的美国第一,激进派热衷于本土的社会正义,不知道台湾人对美国出手捍卫台湾的自信,是寄托在哪一拨美国人民身上?
        • 他们不懂"帝国主义是纸老虎"的道理。
        • 台湾各界在美国渗透得很严重,经济也是捆绑的很紧密。把台积电,富士康,和硕和纬创献给中共,想想都会让美国佬头昏脑胀
    • 歼16和轰6k是对地攻击主要空中力量。歼16负责点的清除,轰6k负责大面积轰炸。现在的演训很有必要呀。
      • 又开始做梦了?贵国党卫军要cosplay火鸡🦃️的愿望也忒强烈了吧
        The U.S. Navy’s offensive in the Central Pacific gathered tremendous strength in early 1944 and moved to within striking distance of Japan. With the threat of an American push into the Marianas Islands by June, the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) hoped to protect their home islands. Realizing the powerful American fast carrier task forces had to be stopped no matter the cost, Japanese commanders again pinned their hopes on a plan for a decisive battle. The island of Saipan, only 1,200 nautical miles south of Tokyo, would give American forces a prime location from which to stage air strikes. Thirteen miles long and less than half that distance at its widest point, Saipan was home to three Japanese airfields, with “room for more.” American commanders intended to destroy the IJN, take Saipan, and allow the new B-29 bombers to pummel Japan into submission. The U.S. Navy would accomplish this, and more, as Japan’s carrier force and air power was forever eliminated in the Battle of the Philippine Sea.1 The American move into the Marianas convinced Japan’s naval commanders the time for the decisive battle had come. Previous naval battles at Coral Sea (4–8 May 1942), Midway (4–7 June 1942), Eastern Solomons (24–25 August 1942), and Santa Cruz (25–27 October 1942) proved to both sides that aircraft carriers had become the dominant warship in the Pacific Theater. Admiral Soemu Toyoda, commander in chief of the Combined Fleet, ordered Vice Admiral Jisaburo̅ Ozawa to implement Operation A-Go and accomplish what Japan had failed to do two years earlier at Midway. While Admiral Ozawa mustered 440 aircraft in nine flattops, his opponent Admiral Raymond Spruance commanded 905 fighters, torpedo, and dive bombers from 15 carriers (including six of the new 27,000-ton Essex-class) under Vice Admiral Marc Mitscher, commander of Task Force 58 (TF 58). Mitscher’s fast carriers included nearly 100,000 Sailors and fliers against Ozawa’s force of 30,000. Unable to replace the many veteran pilots lost to attrition from Coral Sea and Midway through Guadalcanal and the Solomons campaign, the Japanese realized the coming fight could be their last. The U.S. Navy, retaining a coherent system for replacing aviators, rotated experienced pilots from the theater and back to the United States to train new pilots and aircrew.2 Vice Admiral Ozawa established the First Mobile Fleet on 1 March 1944. Nicknamed “Gargoyle,” as he was known for being the third-ugliest admiral in the IJN, Ozawa advocated concentrating Japan’s carriers into a single, unified striking force—the first of its kind anywhere in the world. Organizing the Mobile Fleet into three units, he personally led A Force—built around Carrier Division 1—led by his flagship Taiho̅. The commander of Force B, with Carrier Division 2, was Rear Admiral Takaji Joshima. A veteran of the fierce battles around Guadalcanal, Joshima led the 26,900-ton sister ships Jun'yo̅ and Hiyo̅ with light carrier Ryu̅ho̅. The vanguard, C Force, was led by Vice Admiral Takeo Kurita. Rear Admiral Sueo Obayashi led Carrier Division 3 in the light carrier Zuiho̅. Additionally, his command included the 15,000-ton small carriers Chitose and Chiyoda, as well as battleship Hyu̅ga. By 18 June 1944, U.S. operations in the Marianas were well underway. Some 50,000 American Marines and Soldiers were ashore on Saipan. Having achieved local control of the air in the Marianas area, repeated attacks on Japanese airfields were made to maintain air superiority. Although impossible to destroy all enemy defenses on or near the airfields, other Japanese air bases to the north and south were attacked by carrier and land-based aircraft, which limited their ability to attack American forces. Admiral Mitscher’s fast carrier task forces maintained a covering position to the westward of the Southern Marianas, sending up daily air searches as well as combat air patrols (CAP). U.S. submarines were forward-deployed in order to obtain early information of Japanese fleet movements. Admiral Ozawa steamed from Tawi Tawi on 13 June, shadowed by American submarines over the next several days. Reports of Japanese ship movements were sent to Admiral Spruance regularly, making him aware that two major enemy fleets were headed in his direction. Recalling the complexity of past Japanese plans for battle, Spruance wondered if one of the fleets was simply a tempting decoy meant to lure him from the main force. Causing further confusion, the submarine Cavalla (SS-244) reported on 17 June that Ozawa’s fleet had grown to include 15 ships . Spruance, unaware the two enemy fleets had already merged together, ordered the older battleships to remain and provide fire support while Lee’s fast battleships and Mitscher’s carriers steamed 180 miles west of Saipan to do battle. The Battle of the Philippine Sea opened on 19 June, and rapidly progressed in favor of the Allies. Although both sides sent aircraft to locate opposing fleets, the Japanese found the Americans and struck first. Admiral Ozawa sent 43 aircraft out on a scouting mission, with one pilot spotting and reporting the location of Mitscher’s task force, 160 miles west of Saipan. Ozawa did not launch his planes all at once, but piecemeal, spacing groups out each hour. Believing his land-based aircraft would make up any disparity in numbers, Ozawa was unaware that the raids on 19 June against Japanese air bases on Guam, Saipan, and Tinian left him with far fewer planes than he actually possessed. The result for the Americans was a two-to-one advantage in airpower. Throughout the day, Ozawa’s fighters and bombers came on in four successive waves to attack TF 58, but were devastated by the more experienced American fighters flying protection for the carriers. Flying off Lexington (CV-16), F6F Hellcat fighter pilot and highest-scoring Navy ace (at that time), Lieutenant (Junior Grade) Alexander Vraciu, dove into an enemy formation and shot down six Yokosuka D4Y “Judy” dive bombers in eight minutes (using only 360 rounds of ammunition). After landing back on “Lady Lex,” Vraciu spotted Admiral Mitscher looking down at him. Vraciu held up six fingers to symbolize his score against the enemy, the admiral smiled back, and a photographer captured the hugely grinning pilot re-staging the moment for posterity. A shipmate of Vraciu’s soon gave the highly one-sided battle its nickname, “The Great Marianas Turkey Shoot,” after wistfully exclaiming, “It was just like an old-time turkey shoot.”3 Despite being picked off by better-trained F6F Hellcats from the CAP, a few Judy dive bombers broke through to strike battleship South Dakota (BB-57). A second bomber scored a near-miss on cruiser Minneapolis (CA-36), and a third blew apart after smashing into Indiana (BB-58), striking her at the waterline. Although the damage to South Dakota was not extensive, 27 crewmembers were killed and 23 injured. Bunker Hill (CV-17) and Wasp (CV-18) were also attacked by Japanese dive bombers, resulting in near-misses from 500-pound bombs and the deaths of two officers and an enlisted man by shrapnel on board Bunker Hill. A further 85 men were wounded from bomb fragments on Wasp. In all, three of the four attacking enemy aircraft were shot down by antiaircraft fire.  While U.S. scout planes seemed unable to find Admiral Ozawa’s Combined Fleet, the American submarines following him finally sprang into action. At 0816, submarine Albacore (SS-218) targeted Ozawa’s own carrier group, firing a spread of six torpedoes. While four missed, a Japanese pilot deliberately flew his plane into one of the remaining two, causing a significant explosion. The sixth torpedo struck Ozawa’s flagship Taiho̅ in her starboard side, initially causing little harm. Inexperienced damage control measures led to gasoline fumes spreading around the carrier, setting off a number of catastrophic explosions. Taiho̅ suffered several secondary explosions before sinking, taking 1,650 men with her to the bottom. Admiral Ozawa survived, eventually transferring to the carrier Zuikaku, where he quickly planned to continue raids on Guam and Rota, despite having only 160 aircraft left at his disposal. Carrier Sho̅kaku, veteran of the surprise attack at Pearl Harbor and participant in the Battle of the Coral Sea, was struck by three torpedoes from Cavalla. In the process of refueling and re-arming aircraft, the torpedo hits ignited fires that proved difficult to control. Struck by a bomb from American aircraft, aviation fuel vapors not contained by proper damage control procedures triggered a massive detonation leading to an order to abandon ship. Sho̅kaku quickly sank bow-first with the loss of 1,272 of her crew. Admiral Mitscher finally received a sighting report late in the afternoon on 20 June, giving the approximate location of Ozawa’s fleet. Mitscher realized his enemy was 275 miles away, far out of the 200-mile fuel range for his bombers. Unbeknownst to the Americans, Admiral Ozawa had already begun pulling his fleet back, further increasing the distance between the warring navies. Due to the vast distance, Mitscher knew his airmen would run the risk of running out of fuel and be forced to ditch their aircraft at sea in the dark. Despite these considerations, he decided to risk all by launching his planes for an attack. Shortly after the bombers left, a second report came through stating the Japanese were more than 330 miles away. In spite of the message, Mitscher did not order his pilots to return to the carriers, but instead held further squadrons from taking off. Those aviators already on their way to attack the Combined Fleet set out on what came to be called the “Mission Beyond Darkness.” As evening began to fall on 20 June, 216 Helldivers, Avengers, and Hellcats attacked Ozawa’s fleet. With only 75 planes protecting his ships, Ozawa looked on powerlessly as the small carrier Hiyo̅ sank along with 250 men, and carriers Zuikaku, Jun'yo̅, and Chiyoda, were heavily damaged. Twenty U.S. aircraft were destroyed in the attack by antiaircraft fire, while 65 of the 75 Japanese fighters were shot down. With darkness descending and the American pilots already low on fuel, they broke off further attacks to return home. Mitscher ordered his carriers to turn on all lights, a danger with enemy submarines lurking nearby. Although the attack on Ozawa’s fleet was an unequivocal success, the “long flight back and the night recovery,” were “disastrous.”4 Many U.S. Navy pilots had not received extensive training for night landings on carriers. The resulting 18 flight deck crashes by returning aircraft attested to this unfortunate oversight. Other pilots waiting for a chance to land back aboard their carrier, or a nearby alternate, were left circling until their fuel completely ran out, forcing them to ditch at sea. Nearby cruisers and destroyers typically serving as screens for the carriers quickly switched to rescue operations, and managed to recover 143 of 185 of the airmen forced down into the ocean. With darkness came the cessation of further naval operations. Admiral Mitscher desired to finish off the devastated Japanese fleet, but was denied by Spruance.5 The “greatest carrier battle of the war” ended with a defeated Admiral Ozawa in full retreat, with a significantly reduced force. The events of 19 June 1944 destroyed the naval air power of Japan, while the attack by U.S. forces the following day focused on the ships of the IJN, almost completely eliminated Japan’s remaining carrier force, wiped out its rebuilt air groups, and gave the American fast carrier task forces virtual control of the seas. For the loss of 123 aircraft and 109 dead, the U.S. destroyed nearly 600 enemy aircraft, sank two enemy fleet carriers, a light carrier, and two oilers, killing nearly 3,000 of the IJN’s pilots and sailors.6 June 1944 represented a conspicuous moment of military achievement for the Allied powers with historian Craig Symonds declaring, “June 1944 might well be labeled the decisive month of the entire Second World War.” As the Allies landed in Normandy, breaching Hitler’s Festung Europa, the Empire of Japan’s airpower suffered near annihilation in the Philippine Sea. The resulting B-29 air raids from Saipan, Guam, and Tinian quickly caused massive damage to the home islands’ population and industrial centers, and set the stage for the invasion of Iwo Jima in February 1945. In less than a year, Nazi Germany would finally surrender, ending the war in Europe. Japan stubbornly fought on until the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki forced her capitulation, bringing the war to its close. Several of the American warships taking part in the victorious fighting at the Battle of the Philippine Sea were present for the surrender ceremonies in Tokyo Bay on 2 September 1945.7 —Guy J. Nasuti, NHHC Histories and Archives Division, April 2019   Further reading: William T. Y’Blood’s Red Sun Setting: The Battle of the Philippine Sea; Craig Symonds’ World War II at Sea: A Global History; Barrett Tillman’s Clash of the Carriers: The True Story of the Marianas Turkey Shoot of World War II. ____________  1 Samuel Eliot Morison, History of United States Naval Operations in World War II: New Guinea and the Marianas, March 1944–August 1944, Vol. VIII. (Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1953), 152–53. 2 Lee Gaillard, “The Great Midway Crapshoot,” Proceedings magazine, June 2004 Vol. 130/6/1, 216. 3 Morison, New Guinea and the Marianas, 256. 4 William T. Y’Blood, Red Sun Setting: The Battle of the Philippine Sea (Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1981), 193. 5 Morison, New Guinea and the Marianas, 318–19. 6 Ibid., 277–78. 7 Craig Symonds, World War II at Sea: A Global History (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018), 550–53.   
        • 西方人做事就是干脆。对待各种不服,西方的回应就是fire and fury. 美国人明确告诉你不会来,来了也送死,美国人至少比台湾人有军事常识,你拿美国二战的例子模拟解放军攻台吗?
      • 谁在你们家车道上耍把式,你都会不高兴的, 更不要说和你是敌对关系的人。
    • 美国自己都不承认别国的ADIZ, 国际法也不承认,对这种ADIZ,没有侵犯的概念,只有强权的概念
      • 所以,将来被铁拳打残废的时候,别哭着喊着说人家不讲武德,OK? +1
    • 美国老百姓对中国的认识还停留在制造便宜货的阶段,对土共并没有一个清醒的认识,中国的社会政治情况是什么样的,他们更是一无所知。这时候需要的是社会精英,而不是民心。 当然了,这又是另外一个话题了。
      • 我是觉得美国人现在无暇顾及身外之事,哪怕是有心。台湾应当尽量和大陆和平共处,不要刻意激怒大陆导致擦枪走火。It isn't worth it
        • 我觉得美国会很高兴帮忙台湾擦枪走火,然后插上一脚,这样正好转移美国国内视线。
          • 那是集权体制玩的把戏。民主社会人民的生命比天高,你看二战以后美国人什么时候为了转移国内危机打过“大”仗?伊拉克战争即便是真地捣了鬼,也是为了资源和贪欲,而不是为了转移视线。其他小摩擦,斩首个恐怖分子之类的,不是“战争”。
            • 又不是美国人民的生命,玩的都是中国人的命。就看老败有多大的把柄在共党手上了。
          • 美国人唯一的愿望就是两岸打得越惨烈越好。美国人说会帮助台湾自我防卫,可美国人自己来都打不赢,何来帮助台湾自我防卫?无非是希望两岸打成消耗战,至于台湾会不会成为一片焦土,美国人才不关心呢。
        • 如果是这样, 不用24小时,台湾就香港了。
          • 有美国的保护和台湾人的决心,才能保有台湾。
            • 精神胜利法?在现代热兵器前就是一团肉。
              • 也只有像你们这样没人性的, 整天打呀打的, 把台湾打成肉团,你们就高兴了。
                • 因为台独自己没人性,就不用把它们当人待了。