Ta wiedza to skąd wzięta? Z kosmosu? Może 20, 30 lat rzeczywiście tak było, ale Chiny lub Rosja dorównują USA. Chiny są równorzędnym mocarstwem co USA. Dlatego USA koncentrują wojska na Pacyfiku, a nie w Europie. Chiny dysponują technologią, która jest zdolna zatopić lotniskowce i trafić w najbliższe bazy USA na Zachodnim Pacyfiku. Jeśli wybuchnie wojna, to będzie to wojna dość wyrównana, a nie będzie tak, że USA będzie przeważającą stroną.
Rosja z kolei ma dość precyzyjne pociski, które użyła w Syrii, aż Amerykanie byli zdumieni tą technologią.
USA - Rosja: http://www.globalfirepower.com/countries-comparison-detail.asp?form=form&country1=United-States-of-America&country2=Russia&Submit=Compare+Countries
USA - Chiny: http://www.globalfirepower.com/countries-comparison-detail.asp?form=form&country1=United-States-of-America&country2=China&Submit=Compare+Countries
Chiny może i mają technologie ale nie mają żadnego przeszkolenia i umiejętności Adanos. Trening w chińskiej armi wygląda tak, że wkuwasz na pamięć swoje książeczki pana Mao i generalnie ideologie komunistyczną. Po za tym korupcja jest wszechobecna. To po pierwsze.
Po drugie Amerykanie też mają rakiety, I też mają technologię. Również tą przeciwrakietową. A ich lotniskowce bezużeteczne? Nie żartuj sobie. Wygląda mi to na zwykłe chińskie pierdolenie skierowane do własnej populacji bo sami mają tylko jeden, i do tego złom który kupili od Ukrainy (obecnie pełni funkcje szkoleniowe, bo chińczycy planują sami zbudować więcej).
Co do Rosji, podobnie, korupcja, wiele nowych technologii ale to co jest w Syrii to śmietanka jak na targach broni, żeby się pokazać. Tak naprawdę nie mają po prostu pieniędzy żeby tą swoją armie porządnie wyposażyć, co dopiero prowadzić wojnę z innym mocarstwem.
A co do USA koncentrujących siły morskie na pacyfiku. Po pierwsze to reakcja na to co się dzieje na morzu południowo-chińskim już od jakiegoś czasu. Po drugie UK, Francja i inne kraje NATO, też mają lotniskowce i marynarkę wojenną i do nich należy obrona Atlantyku.
EDIT. A, jeszcze czegoś zapomniałem dodać na temat Chińskiej Armii. Oni do niedawna nie mieli nawet czegoś takiego jak dowództwo generalne. Marynarka wojenna, siły lądowe i powietrzne operowały oddzielnie. Wiesz czemu? Bo wszelkie próby ustanowienia czegoś takiego skutkowały wielkimi kłótniami na szeregu partyjnym, typu "kto miałby tym dowodzić". Dopiero tydzień temu (sic!) to zreorganizowali. Przy czym ta reorganizacja to podzielenie wojsk na 5 róznych teatrów działań. Zakładam ze po to, by każdy z oficjeli mógł czymś rządzić.
Niepowiązane z dyskusją bonusy specjalnie dla was, ludzi którzy nie śledzą żadnych wiadomości ze świata.
ISIS and rebels north or Aleppo have signed a non-aggression pact.
This includes open borders for trading of weapons and oil.
Recent advances from the government in Daraa, trying to enlarge its control there and open new supply lines.
SAA in Deyr-ez-Zor are still in a tight spot.
Kurds and government are supporting each other in Aleppo at the moment, kurds are saying the moment of vengeance against the non-ISIS terrorists is coming.
The government has retaken Al-Khalidya west of Aleppo.
Advances on other fronts has been slow at best right now.
Kurds and government are preparing for a Turkish intervention, sources say.
Al Arabiya,53 minutes ago
BREAKING: UAE state minister says ready to send ground troops to Syria to fight as part of International coalition against ISIS
Reuters World 32 minutes ago:
UAE says ready to send ground troops to Syria
Hezbollah and Shia militias from Iraq and Afghanistan, all directed by senior officers of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards, are leading the ground battle on the regime side, while Russian jets continue a week-long blitz from above.
Inside east Aleppo, which lies largely ruined and abandoned, rebel groups said they have bunkered down for an inevitable push by ground forces, which are supported by the Syrian army. Bahaa al-Halabi, an opposition militant in the city, said pro-Assad groups were 10km (6 miles) away.
“Airstrikes are taking place every minute, and they attack civilians, like today’s bombing on the main road, which caused 15 casualties,” he said. “The Free Syrian Army groups are coming from Idlib and Hama to help in Aleppo but we don’t have many Tow missiles and our supplies aren’t up to standards.”
Um Yousef, 18, said: “I tried to cross four days ago with my one-year-old son after the Russian airstrikes increased, but I couldn’t. The Turks were shooting at us as soon as we got close to the borders. No one has managed to reach Turkey. It’s mainly children and women here. I will keep trying till I reach Turkey. I have no choice. The Russians will kill us all.”
Two other men, both residents of the nearby town of Tal Rifaat, said regime loyalists are moving towards them from the south, and are now closer to the Turkish border than at any time in the past three years.
Ahmed Al Mohammed said: “I fled from my town to the border five days ago due to the heavy airstrikes by the Russians and the Syrian government. They are just 3km from our town. We are very scared. If they take control they will kill all the civilians in Tal Rifaat and in the Aleppo countryside.
A w Jemenie:
http://s5.ifotos.pl/img/yemen-030_senhnqx.jpg
Al Mukalla: Yemeni government forces on Saturday announced new gains on battlefields in Sana’a province as Iran-backed Al Houthi militants retreat to fortify positions around the capital, military officials and tribal leaders said.
Colonel Arraf Mohsin Al Obaidi, a member of Sana’a Resistance Council, told Gulf News on Saturday that resistance fighters pushed Al Houthis out of all rugged mountains in Nehim district and the militants “lost tens of their fighters in the battles”.
“We are in control of all the mountainous area and military positions in Nehim including the headquarter of Brigade 312 and Al Goroud mountain,” he said.
Al Obaidi said that the Al Houthis fled after the brigade positions were overrun and resorted to planting landmines and deploying snipers in higher areas nearby to roll back the resistance advance.
“We are defusing landmines and chasing the snipers,” he added.
Government territorial gains in the province have accelerated in recent weeks, bringing them closer to the capital for the first time since the beginning of military operations in March.
Al Obaidi said that the next target of the government forces is Arhab, the district from which Mansour Al Hanaq, the leader of the Sana’a Resistance, hails.
“Clearing Arhab is a matter of time. I expect that the assault would stop at one point before reaching the capital. Liberating the capital requires big decisions and more troops,” he said.
In the capital, residents say coalition warplanes on Saturday increased strikes on Al Houthi-controlled military installations.
On the country’s western coastline, government forces recaptured the entire city of Midi on Friday after a massive assault on Al Houthis’ military positions.
A military source from the 5th Military Region that includes Hajja province told Al Masder Online, an independent news site, that government forces killed dozens of Al Houthi militants and captured seven others including three landmine experts.
The official said that the assault was aimed at clearing the Al Houthi presence in Midi and the neighbouring Abes.
Early last month, Al Houthis fled an important port facility in Midi following a seaside attack by government forces backed by marine forces from the coalition.
Military analysts say that the government’s key victory in Midi has choked the weapons supply routes of the Al Houthis.
Yemen’s government has long accused Iran of funnelling arms shipments to Al Houthis from Midi.