Therefore, I am re-transmitting the chapter published on 2015-11-23, with the correction of paragraphs, on the topic of trying to create a submarine base for launching a nuclear missile on the seafloor of the South China Sea.
The following is from p77 to p78 of the book published by Tokuma Shoten on September 30, 2015, which Mr. SekiHei and Mr. Kō Bun'yū in a conversation entitled 'The Real Nightmare of China Starting From Now.'
The sentences in *~* and emphasis in the text are mine.
Why is China in a hurry to control the South China Sea?
Kō
In any case, we have come to the unanimous conclusion that both the New Silk Road Initiative and the AIIB, which is the backbone of the New Silk Road Initiative, are doomed to failure.
Now I would like to move on to China's maritime expansion, and in recent years, China's control of the South China Sea has become a significant issue.
Of course, there have been repeated violations of territorial waters around the Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea. The unilateral development of gas oil fields has been big news.
If you ask which is more important for China, the South China Sea or the East China Sea, I'd say the South China Sea.
On the other hand, if you ask which one is easier to handle, it's the East China Sea.
If you do something in the South China Sea, not to mention the United States, the Philippines and Vietnam will react.
The East China Sea is easier to handle because it's just Japan.
Moreover, from a strategic point of view, the South China Sea is more important to China.
According to what I've heard from military experts, there is an aim to build a submarine base here so that nuclear missiles can launch from the seafloor.
There are reportedly 200 to 300 nuclear missiles on the Chinese mainland, and if the U.S. strikes them, they could destroy them all in 10 minutes.
Then they can't take retaliatory action.
That's why they're trying to build an undersea base for submarines to launch nuclear missiles at the bottom of the South China Sea.
On the other hand, whether in the South China Sea or the East China Sea, China has been drilling for marine resources. Still, if you read the technical papers on energy development, etc., there are so many faults that it's not profitable.
In short, they are dummies.
In particular, the East China Sea is a decoy in strengthening its dominance in the South China Sea, and it wants to create a commotion and keep the world's ears on the East China Sea.
In Chinese, it's 'Voice East Attack West.'
Xia dynasty people, the first protagonist of Zhongyuan (China), is most likely to be the Malay Polynesian descent. Still, since 4000 years, except for the Mongolian Emperor Empire, there are intermittent sea bans (regulating the territorial population's private foreign travel and foreign trade) for 4,000 years, except for the Mongol Empire of the Great Yuan.
A country that has been avoiding the sea for a long time now has a sudden ambition to go to sea, and its global strategy is full of fantasies and delusions and is going astray.
*Recently, when I was watching TV Asahi news station, he grew up reading the second-class Asahi Shimbun and learned a little about exams, but he didn't have the energy and willingness to work in the real world. I was instantly reminded that Nakajima, a typical example of the fact that he got a pretty hairy appearance fee on TV while eating with tax, gave a genuinely appalling commentary.
The man (or perhaps I should say the stupid young man) turned the map upside down to show that the South China Sea from the Chinese side, the area bordering the sea, is much larger than China's, which is unbelievable. He had commented. As usual, Furutachi was nodding at this, I wondered at what country this broadcaster was. On the whole, there should have been a lot of discerning men who were terrified as to what country this broadcasting station was.*.