U.S. Army Futures Command Major General Richard Coffman recently told the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a Washington think tank, that if the U.S. and China go to war in the Indo-Pacific, it will not only be a naval war, but a land war will be decisive and crucial.
Kaufman argued that China’s first public statement, “If you’re a Chinese general and you say ‘it’s inevitable,’ what does that mean? ‘, what does that mean? I think it means they intend to attack first, because if it’s inevitable, why wait for the adversary to attack first?”
Kaufman mentioned that if the U.S. and China go to war, fighting a land war in the Pacific is the only decisive key besides a naval war, and that “if land is to be taken, possessed or cleared,” there must be military forces on the ground, and sending in combat vehicles or armored vehicles conveys the will to fight for victory, and that China now has 7,000 combat vehicles China now has 7,000 combat vehicles, 3,000 armored vehicles, and if the U.S. military does not commit land forces, the 10,000 Chinese military vehicles are the decisive key factor in the battle.
Therefore, Kaufman said, the U.S. military currently hopes to reduce the weight of armored vehicles during airlift, hoping to use the lightest military vehicles to protect soldiers, the current M1 fighting vehicles weigh 80 metric tons, making airlift operations more difficult, but if the Boeing C-17 Globemaster (Boeing C-17 Globemaster) to transport the M1 fighting vehicles, four C-17 Globemaster to transport the M1 fighting vehicles to The right location could also be a decisive key factor in the battle.
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