BBC reporter Rupert Wingfield-Hayes recently spent time on the USS George Washington off Guam and came back to state that it is quite clear the US is preparing for war with China.
These preparations have actually been occuring for some time.
See Page 2 To Read More + Watch Video:
We train for war everyday. It’s what we do. China is the one that wants to play. Not really, just sorta Lol
Maybe…? that’s why I do asked Robert Fetherlin..!
My son’s in the Navy; that wouldn’t be good fortune, cookie….
Robert, believe me. The Air Force’s tactical aircraft squadrons will soon number 26, down from 133 in the 1990s.
• The Navy stretches deployments to cover gaps. It’s one carrier short into next year. Vice Chief of Operations Michelle Howard says, “Navy readiness is at its lowest point in many years.”
• The Marine Corps, the crisis strike force, has fallen from 292,000 to 184,000. Fewer to come
“If you had somebody as president who wanted to take America down, who wanted to fundamentally weaken our position in the world and reduce our capacity to influence events, turn our back on allies and encourage our adversaries, it would look exactly like what Barack Obama’s doing.”
The USN is always practicing/training for war! Good grief!
I thought that was the job of the military. To fight this country’s wars and when not fighting to be training for war.
I think it is the job of all branches of the military to be ready for war anytime, anywhere. What do we gain by war with China?
Maybe that’s the idea behind the article I read a couple of days ago that the federal government had to be sure our military is far away when they declare martial law and begin confiscating guns and rounding people up for indefinite detention. Wouldn’t it be smarter to take on a country we can be assured of defeating in a short time? China could win! That part of the big plan too?
Yes, and many have died during “training” exercises.
Mexico’s navy is made up, in large part, of scrapped out US Navy vessels.
Ships are rotated in and out. Some are tied up at the pier while others are at sea. It would become too expensive to spread docking facilities over large areas.