Haha, certainly. It's become something of a cliche that you need a house and a car before you can get a wife!
But having a fuel for said car is not important whatsoever.
Haha, certainly. It's become something of a cliche that you need a house and a car before you can get a wife!
But having a fuel for said car is not important whatsoever.
It's a status symbol. That means most people don't actually need a car to earn living. In fact, I can't imagine anyone in Shanghai or Beijing being masochist enough to willingly drive to work.
I know. But, if you have boght your car, as status symbol, have spent a lot of money on it, I presume that you wouldn't approve that you don't have the fuel to drive it if you really want.
Also, more important is the trend, just look at the numer of cars in China from 2010 ( 90 mil. ) to 2016 ( 180 mil. ) and think how many of them will be in say 2020 ( I would say about 400 mil. ) and how many fuel will they need...
So China built structures to support possible stationing of military forces. What of it? The SCS land and features belong to China, so they could build and station what they think best for their interests.Couple pages back I ask about what is that hexagonal structure meant to be? AMTI is now convinced it is radar and missile mounting
There is too many images to post just click the link to see all
Couple pages back I ask about what is that hexagonal structure meant to be? AMTI is now convinced it is radar and missile mounting
There is too many images to post just click the link to see all
China has built nearly identical headquarters buildings at each of its four smaller artificial islands. The two smallest of the islets, Hughes and Gaven Reefs, feature four arms built off of these central structures. The end of each of these arms sports a hexagonal platform, approximately 30 feet wide. The northeastern and southwestern arms host what are most likely anti-aircraft guns (roughly 20 feet long when measured to the tip of the barrel). The other two platforms hold smaller (roughly 10-foot-wide) objects without clearly visible barrels. These cannot be definitively identified, but are likely CIWS to protect against cruise missile strikes, according to the Center for Naval Analyses’ Admiral Michael McDevitt (Ret.) and RAND’s Cortez Cooper in a new podcast.
Johnson Reef
China modified this blueprint for its facility on Johnson Reef. There the central facility has only two arms, with the southern one sporting the same anti-aircraft gun (which is covered by a tarp in recent imagery but was previously visible) and the northern one an apparent CIWS. Another gun and probable CIWS, along with a radar, were constructed on a separate structure, consisting of three hexagonal towers on the eastern side of the artificial island. This structure seems to be a less complex precursor to those built more recently at Fiery Cross, Mischief, and Subi Reefs.
Fiery Cross Reef
Construction of all four structures has been completed at Fiery Cross Reef, where covers have been placed over the point defenses installed on the central hexagonal tower and the two in front of it. But the size of the platforms (which matches those at the four smaller artificial islands) and covers suggests they boast systems similar to those at Gaven, Hughes, Johnson, and Cuarteron Reefs.
Mischief Reef
A Chinese military source confirmed with the Global Times that they received on Saturday a “claim request” from the US for an underwater drone after a Chinese warship seized the craft during a security check in the South China Sea.
According to a Reuters report, the request was made after the Chinese navy seized the drone Thursday, about 80 kilometers northwest of Subic Bay in the Philippines just as the USNS Bowditch, an oceanographic survey ship, was about to retrieve it.
The Pentagon had confirmed the incident at a news briefing Friday and said the drone used commercially-available technology and sold for about $150,000, Reuters reported.
China believes that the incident will be “resolved successfully,” said the PLA source.