China: The Next Big Enemy?
The domestic politics of the new Sinophobia
by
Justin Raimondo
by Justin Raimondo
Those
Chinese sailors who "harassed"
a U.S. military vessel lingering perilously close to a Chinese base
on Hainan
Island, in the South China Sea, reportedly
stripped down to their underwear when our sailors turned water hoses
on them. Maybe the shower facilities on Chinese fishing vessels
– it was fishing trawlers, not military gunboats, that met the Americans
on China's doorstep – are insufficient, or maybe the Chinese were
mooning us. I'm inclined to think the latter. In any case, Sunday's
incident ratchets up tensions with China – which have been roiled
in recent weeks, not only by a series of similar
incidents, but also on account of issues broader than China's claims
to virtually the whole of the South China Sea.
To begin with,
the U.S. claims that the USNS Impeccable was manned by civilians
and was just going about its undefined business when, suddenly,
those big bad Chinese started "harassing" us – the bullies!
But wait. Take a look
at the Impeccable:

This baby is
5,368 tons, and over 281 ft. long: it is a surveillance ship, designed
to track enemy submarines. China's contingent of nuclear-powered
subs are reportedly
based at Yulin, on Hainan. And while the U.S. government maintains
that the crew is "civilian," half
its crew are military personnel.
Read
the rest of the article
March
12, 2009
Justin
Raimondo [send him mail]
is editorial director of Antiwar.com
and is the author of An
Enemy of the State: The Life of Murray N. Rothbard and Reclaiming
the American Right: The Lost Legacy of the Conservative Movement.
Copyright
© 2009 Antiwar.com
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