Uh huh. And then what? China builds up, pwns Japan quickly, and then says to the US as it arrives on China's doorstep "oh, I was just playin, let's stop now". Can this scenario get any more delusional here? You also skipped about 500 steps in your "China Pwns Japan Uberly and Quickly" fantasy scenario. So the nearby Japanese warship opens fire on the Chinese warship. And then? They both destroy each other in a hail of shells? In whose interest is it to further escalate this situation into a full scale conflict?
First off, cut it with your petty personal attacks. You are not going to provoke me, so don't even bother. All you are achieving is making youself look immature and petty.
Secondly, you may wish to learn how quotations work, because you are using them all wrong.
As to your question, of why the US won't attack, well haven't you answered it yourself with the bold part I highlighted?
How is it in America's interests to start a shooting war with China after an unilateral Chinese ceasefire? What would be the aims and benefits of doing that given the enormous costs and far greater risks involved? How does America expect to end that fight after they start it?
As for the escalation of a conflict between China and Japan. Firstly, this isn't the movies, two warships will rarely if ever conveniently take each other out in a hail of shells and missiles.
The balance of probability would be that one of the warships wins the encounter and sinks the other. In which case that surviving warship becomes the obvious fulcrum around which the conflict would escalate, as one side deploys assets to kill it, while the other scrambles to try and protect it.
Even allowing for your highly improbable scenario where both ships sinks each other at the same time, not all the crews will perish with the ships, so both sides will want to get assets into the area for search and recovery operations, and neither would be in the mood for much in the way of co-operation or negotiation.
Both sides will likely deploy military forces to try and secure the area before launching rescue operations, while treating the mirror claims and actions of the other as a transparent cover and pretext to seize military control of the area and the islands.
Given the general level of hostility the Chinese and Japanese populous has towards each other, it's frankly hard to see how one side or the other could pull back even if they wanted to if the shooting really starts.
The only way such a conflict will end is if it gets to the point where one side becomes unable to continue fighting.
China holds the clear military advantage. So Japan's obvious game plan is to drag the fight out for weeks or even over a month to allow the US to gather enough forces to risk direct involvement.
China's game plan is to deliver a knock-out blow a s quickly as possible to the Japanese such that they are unable to continue fighting. At which point China will be able to call a unilateral end to hostilities.
I was assuming you had the intelligence and imagination to follow the clear path I set; to easily see how one attack could lead to a retaliation, in turn triggers another response. It's pretty basic game theory stuff. I just followed it to its natural conclusion without spelling out every last minute detail and permutation along the way because I frankly have far better things to do with my time.
Now, are you asking me to map it all out in such excruciating detail because you honestly lack the mental facilities to do work it all out yourself, or are you just looking to score some cheap points?
And what would China's objective even be in such a scenario?
Well isn't it obvious? Gain control of the Diaoyutai islands, while dealing a decisive blow to the Japanese naval and air forces to remove a main strategic rival; demonstrating Chinese military capabilities, resolve, and ultimately, restraint to anyone else watching to fundamentally undermine the fantasy America has created to underpin its position in Asia as the provider of security guarantees.
Please don't tell me your scenario is as banal as "kick some Japanese ass, go home and drink some Maotai".
If this pathetically transparent straw man represents the peak level of thinking you are capable of, I am clearly wasting my time trying to get you to think of ideas and concepts that are going way over your head.
If you don't want to be treated like a simpleton, kindly stop acting like one.
Please explain exactly what you think China would do to ramp up hostilities and what its objective(s) in this supposedly short conflict would be, and in what timeframe it hopes to wrap up its asskicking of Japan before the US can get there. And try to remember that DYT is less than 1 day's sail from Chinhae and Yokosuka, less 2 days sail from Guam, less than 6 days sail from Honolulu, and less than 7 days sail from Bahrain via the SCS or less than 9 days via the Java and Celebes Sea and then the Eastern coast of the Philippines.
And do you really think the US have enough assets cumulatively in all of those places, ready to set sail instantly, while still leaving sufficient forces in place to maintain the balance of forces and continue operational commitments necessary in those regions, to allow them to risk open conflict with China?
Please, indulge me. Draw up an order of battle of US forces forward deployed in those areas, apply availability ratios to determine assets ready to deploy, then allocate forces to remain on station to meet local operational requirements and show me what you think the US could actually deploy within a week.
The only thing worse for America than sitting back and letting China beat up Japan is to jump in on Japan's side half-arsed and get beat up alongside them.
Uh huh. The death of one or a few pilots is going to cause either side to ramp up to a full scale conflict is basically what you're saying. I'm fairly confident the leaders in both Beijing and Tokyo are not as hotheaded as internet fanbois can be.
Yes, because wars are only ever started by grand events
And I have no doubt that you find it "easy" to see how a small spark could "trigger" a "full blown" "limited" war between China and Japan when even at their worst level of interaction they have been nowhere near the level of hostility and tension that the US and USSR experienced during the Cold War. And somehow we are all still here after several decades of this. Imagine that.
Oh, was WWII not was hostile as the Cold War?
The legacy of WWII still lives on in Asia, hell, the entire Diaoyutai dispute is a textbook example of that legacy at play today.
The level of general hostility between the Chinese and Japanese general public is as high as it has been since formal diplomatic relations were established.
Wars do not start because of incidents. Incidents provide the pretext and excuse for people to fight wars they already want to fight.
The risks of conflict between China and Japan are frighteningly high because the part of the populations of both who actually wants that war are at the highest level they have been since diplomatic relations were established between the PRC and Japan.
Please expound on the details of said "knock-out blow" instead of assuming it's somehow going to magically happen because you think China is uber vs Japan.
Sinking most of the Japanese fleet and shooting down most of its Air Force should pretty much cover it.
China will deploy a strong fleet to the Diaoyutai islands.
If Japan wants to challenge that, it will need to deploy a similarly powerful fleet, with air cover, which China will attempt to destroy.
Given the overwhelming advantage in air and naval strike power the Chinese have over the Japanese, it's hard to see how such a conflict would end other in the destruction of the Japanese fleet.
If the Japanese keeps their fleet at port, China will just keep the islands and call it a good days work.