Re: What is the likely hypothetical outcome of nuclear war between china and russia/u
as above. lets say:
1)china sinks some us carriers with her ASBMs and the latter retaliates due to the war fever gripped at home(1 carrier sunk=5000+personnel dead, high cost of the carriers, etc) USA decides to bring out the nukes.
2)ultra-nationalist elements in china seeing how they are finally free of any lingering reliance on russian military technology transfer, decides she had enough of the urest in instability in inner northeast, attempts the return of outer northeast and kuye island from russia by massing a good portion of her land forces and storming across the heilongjiang and wusuli rivers. war breaks out and russia decides to bring out the nukes.
OK, guys, we need to think of politicians are a lot smarter than they appear to be. Previous experience shows that usually cooler heads prevail in time of crisis. In the Korean War, the Americans were losing a lot of men on the battlefield and many top commanders, including MacArthur himself, wanted to use nukes. However, Washington decided against it and MacArthur got fired partially for insisting on using the nukes on China. The Cuban missile crisis would be another example. The US and the Soviets were at the brink of all out war. However, the cooler head prevailed. Although Cold War was cold, both nations were never too far away from an all out war. Both saw each other as arch enemy and as evil and did everything they could to counter each other. The exchange was open and often extremely heated. Both saw major conflict between the two nations as inevitable and catastrophic. Americans were practicing what they should do in time of a Soviet nuke attack often in the 50's and 60's. Yet, nothing happened... I am sure in that kind of extremely sensitive and heated environment, the leaders of both nations faced the decision of whether to go to war on multiple occasions. Yet, every time, they decided not to because of the potentially catastrophic consequences. The same went with the Soviets and China. In the 60's, the relationship between China and the Soviets was so bad that the border of the two nations was guarded by over a million troops. There were actually small-scale battles fought between the two armies early in the conflict, involving thousands of troops, for control of some islands. Yet, nothing major happened. In the later stages, to prevent all out war, the leaders in both nations actually ordered their troops to carry sticks, instead of rifles, on their patrols. So the kind of scenario you presented actually happened before at a scale even larger than you imagined, but nothing major happened.
The 50's and 60's were a dangerous time because ideology was front and center and everyone was sort of fanatic in terms of protecting their own ideology. Yet, nothing major happened. It shows that even in the most fanatic times, cooler heads prevail. Nowadays, people around the world are a lot more pragmatic. The consequences of an all out conventional war between two major powers would be too great for anyone to accept. It was too great to accept even between the two arch enemies in the Cold War... Not to mention a nuclear war. Everyone knows what would happen and no one will be crazy enough to pull the trigger.
So in my opinion, it will never happen.
-will her longtime adversaries take advantage of the chaotic situation(india/japan/vietnam/philipines(in some ways)
-how is unification with taiwan is gonna be affected
-how this is gonna affect the world economy
-what her allies are going to do(pakistan/north korea/myanmar)
-any other areas
i would like to hear discussions on the possible outcomes
Well, you need to understand that China's neighbors don't consider themselves adversaries of China. Each country has its own agenda and some of that may conflict with agendas of another country, which may lead to some ill feelings. That is about it. No nation hates China so much that they would think about attacking China whenever there is a chance. And history shows these East Asian nations had plenty opportunity to attack China if they wanted to in the 50's, 60's and 70's when China was economically and militarily weak and was in catastrophic domestic turmoil. In the 50's, China was locked in a war against the most power military in the world. Anyone who has the slightest sense of military strategy would want to attack China from the other side. In the early 60's, China experienced one of the greatest famines in the history of the country. Close to 60 million died within 3 years. Then the late 60's to the mid 70's saw the Cultural Revolution, which completely and thoroughly destroyed any meaningful economy and government and social structure in China. You can't find a better opportunity to attack than that. Yet, no one, not even Taiwan, attacked China. China will never be that weak again. So I don't think any of these nations would attack China.
By the way, historically speaking, there was very little conflict between China and its Southeast Asian neighbors. China and these nations have co-existed peacefully for centuries and many of these nations have a large Chinese immigrant population. And yes, nowadays the development of China might be interfering with some of the goals of these nations, but that does not mount to the level of military attacks.