被子上的螨虫图片图库:China enters the Big Leagues

来源:百度文库 编辑:九乡新闻网 时间:2024/04/30 09:12:19

China enters the Big Leagues


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China quickly mobilized military forces, and commercial transport, to evacuate 35,000 Chinese citizens from Libya in late February and early March. A Chinese warship was quickly summoned from the anti-piracy flotilla off Somalia, to protect the commercial ships quickly chartered to take most of these Chinese expatriates out via the eastern Libya port of Benghazi. Others were moved by chartered bus to Tunisia and Egypt, while a few thousand were flown out using chartered aircraft, and four Chinese Air Force Il-76s flown in .


For the last two decades, China has been a growing factor in the sea and air transport industries, because of booming exports and raw materials imports. Sending warships to the anti-piracy patrol for the past two years was another exercise of China's growing global reach. But the prompt and orderly evacuation of nearly 40,000 Chinese from Libya was a masterful demonstration that China had entered the big leagues, as far as global logistics was concerned.

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This operation also strengthens the Chinese Navy's call for more money, and diplomatic support, to establish some overseas bases (mainly in the Indian Ocean). The government has resisted this so far, but not refused all requests. Thus bases, or basing rights, appear likely in Myanmar (Burma) and somewhere in the Persian Gulf or East Africa.

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What is more, arms exports are big business, with nearly $50 billion of sales a year. The biggest importer is now India, representing about nine percent of sales (and 80 percent of that coming from Russia). China used to be the top importer, but has steadily increased their own production (often using stolen Russian technology) and now represents only six percent of world arms imports (the same amount as much smaller South Korea imports). Next comes impoverished Pakistan, with five percent (much of it paid for by the United States.)


Some 43 percent of arms exports go to Asia. The Middle East (largely Israel and the Arab Gulf states) gets 17 percent, with Europe getting 21 percent, Africa seven percent and the Americans 12 percent. The United States represents about 30 percent of these sales.