Thursday, June 8, 2017

DJIBOUTI : CHINESE ARE HERE








SOURCE:

https://www.bloomberg.com/features/2016-djibouti/










      DJIBOUTI : CHINESE ARE HERE









MIGRATION: AN ALTERNATIVE PATH TO PROSPERITY









         DJIBOUTI : CHINESE ARE HERE

GOOGLE/CLICK TO OPEN



  https://www.saiia.org.za/occasional-papers/132-chinese-migration-in-africa/file  



To this  day  there are are approximately   ONE million chinese working in African continent from Cape Town to Cairo & they have no intention of going back. As a matter of fact they have displaced Indians who were there in one form or the other for the last two thousand years. 


GOOGLE/CLICK TO OPEN


https://qz.com/217597/how-a-million-chinese-migrants-are-building-a-new-empire-in-africa/ 



   There is  a  unrecognised country known as  MONSOON COUNTRY whose extent runs from East African  coast to Vietnam- Borneo-Philippines. Those who have moved around in this part of the world albeit at a slow pace do have felt the existence of Monsoon Country.  Till 1950 in this complete region it was the domain of Indians & Indians were ruling the roost. With the exit of rule Britannica  &  with the advent of most corrupt Indian regime, Indians have lost the cosy  roost which they were dominating for a thousand years or more & this roost I have named it as  "MONSOON COUNTRY"  Roughly this area comprises  the complete region of   AFROASIA  covered by MONSOON s


                         MONSOON COUNTRY
 IS THE STRAIGHT & DIRECT ANSWER                                      TO  
CHINA's ONE BELT ONE ROAD [OBOR] 
                                 
INDIA DOES NOT REQUIRE ANY BIG                    EFFORT TO RE-DOMINATE 
     THE "MONSOON COUNTRY.  
JUST ANNOUNCE THE PROJECT 
                                   
              START EXECUTING. 

 INDIAN OCEAN & ITS MONSOON 
      IS GOD GIVEN GIFT TO INDIA . 
                               USE IT


                                                                                                 -   VASUNDHRA



























Djibouti Is Hot

How a forgotten sandlot of a country became a hub of international power games.





The bartender measures a shot of Johnnie Walker Red Label in a steel jigger and dumps it over ice. A waitress sets the glass on a tray and steers it through the dining room, where Abouye Wang, the restaurant owner, commands a booth in the back corner, elbows on the table, surveying the dinner crowd.
The buzzcuts perched around the high table in the middle of the room are Americans, he guesses. The two women lost in conversation behind them are French. He recognizes the men in the adjacent booth as German. He spots an Italian port executive and a Palestinian diplomat from the newly opened embassy.
The restaurant, La Chaumière, sits on a corner of the central square in Djibouti, the capital city in the tiny African country of the same name, which until recently was of little consequence to anyone who didn’t live there. La Chaumière’s menu pushes the outer limits of fusion as Wang caters to his evolving clientele. East African seafood dishes, Asian stir fries, French stews, American sandwiches, they’re all here. “If we don’t have what you want,” Wang tells me, “we’ll make it for you.”
It’s my first night in Djibouti, and I’ve come to La Chaumière because I was told it would be full of soldiers, speculators, diplomats, spies, aid workers, contractors—all the outsiders who are turning Djibouti into an unlikely epicenter of 21st century geopolitics. Thomas Kelly, the American ambassador here, likes to say that Djibouti today feels like what Casablanca must have felt like in 1940. “All the different nationalities elbowing into each other,” he says. “All the intrigue.” Wang stands in the center of the mix, walking from table to table, slipping from language to language, witnessing Djibouti’s transformation at close range. Born to an Ethiopian mother and a Chinese father, he roamed East Africa with his family before settling here in 1977, the year Djibouti declared independence from France. He was 7 years old, an exotic import in a place no one ever visited, where nothing ever happened.





The president, many government ministers, and other wealthy Djiboutians live in the ­still-developing neighborhood of Haramous.




Back then, Djibouti, a country about the size of New Jersey, had one paved road and less than a square mile of arable land. The Associated Press deemed it perfectly devoid of resources, “except for sand, salt, and 20,000 camels.” The New York Times guessed the new nation might get swallowed up by one of its neighbors—Ethiopia or Somalia, maybe—because it was “so impoverished that it cannot stand on its own.”
Years passed, and those neighbors were too preoccupied with wars, famine, and civil anarchy to pay much attention to it. Such upheavals, and almost everything else, skirted Djibouti. Then the new century rolled around and, seemingly overnight, the country’s sleepiness became a valuable commodity.
After Sept. 11, the U.S. military rushed to establish its first base dedicated to counterterrorism, and Djibouti was about the only country in the neighborhood that wasn’t on fire. Sitting beside the narrow Bab el-Mandeb strait—a gateway to the Suez Canal at the mouth of the Red Sea, and one of the most trafficked shipping lanes in the world—it provided easy access to hot spots in both Africa and the Middle East. A few years later, when Somali pirates started threatening the global shipping industry, the militaries of Germany, Italy, and Spain joined France, which has maintained a base since colonial times, by moving troops to Djibouti. Japan arrived in 2011, opening its first military base on foreign soil since World War II. Last year, refugees displaced by war in Yemen—just 13 miles across the strait—began arriving by the thousands, attracting aid workers and NGOs looking for a stable regional base.
They eventually come to La Chaumière to gossip, to eavesdrop, to see who’s new in town. Wang is a central branch on the local grapevine. When I ask people here how Djibouti has managed to avoid the turmoil that has plagued the other countries in the region, a stock answer comes back to me from nearly everyone, both local and foreign. “No country is completely safe, but everybody knows everyone here, and they all talk,” Ilyas Moussa Dawaleh, the country’s minister of finance, tells me. “Every time a new camera comes into the country, for example, we know whose it is.” The grapevine, in other words, doubles as a safety net.





The Port of Djibouti sits on one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes. And it’s well ­situated for chasing pirates.





Wang knows better than most that the influx of outsiders can stretch the net thin. One evening in 2014, planted in his corner booth, he spotted an unfamiliar figure: a veiled woman walking toward one of the high tables in the middle of the floor. Before he could approach her, she exploded, filling the room with fire, noise, and confusion. A moment later, a second suicide bomber blew himself up just outside the front door. More than a dozen people were wounded, and three died. Al-Shabaab, the Somali-based terrorist group, took credit for the attack, saying it was targeting French commandos for their role in battling Islamic militants in Somalia and the Central African Republic.
Wang, uninjured, decided to rebuild. The Djibouti government, recognizing the symbolic power of the decision, helped him pay for it. The place looks almost exactly the same as it did before, but the clientele keeps evolving. “I’m noticing more Chinese,” Wang tells me.
Three days later, on Feb. 25, China announces it has begun construction on its first-ever military installation abroad, about four miles from the American and Japanese bases. A week after that, Saudi Arabian officials say that they, too, plan to move soldiers to Djibouti and establish the country’s first military station in Africa.
“No country is completely safe, but everybody knows everyone here, and they all talk”
Camp Lemonnier, the American base, presses against the side of Djibouti’s only commercial airport, hidden behind a maze of concrete barriers and razor wire. Inside, it’s a wilderness of containerized living units, or CLUs, stacked atop one another. The laundry building looks like the movie theater, which looks like the credit union. It’s as if someone built a city from Legos and spray-painted the whole works tan.
For years the Americans insisted it was a temporary, or “expeditionary,” camp. But a $1.4 billion upgrade launched in 2013 has turned it into a clangorous construction site. Back in 2002, when the Americans took the camp over from the French, it sprawled across 97 acres. Now it’s pushing 600 and the CLUs are slowly being replaced by multistory, apartment-style barracks.
About 4,000 soldiers and contractors live here, and they include commandos from Joint Special Operations Command, the team that undertakes the military’s most sensitive counterterrorism operations. After the 2012 attack on the diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, a 150-member rapid response team was established at Camp Lemonnier, assigned to handle future threats to diplomatic personnel abroad. Djibouti is also the U.S. military’s regional hub for drones, and it sends thousands of Predators and Reapers across the region each year.


All those secretive aircraft buzzing around an active international airport created serious air traffic problems, which injected some tension between the Americans and their local hosts. In 2011 a Predator drone crashed into a residential area less than three miles from the airport. The following year, a U-28A surveillance plane crashed five miles from the camp, killing its four-man crew. Some of the Djiboutian air traffic controllers at the airport resented the drones, on both practical and moral grounds, and occasionally they would refuse to allow them to take off or land. The Washington Post reported that a $7 million program to retrain the local controllers was a complete failure. Often the controllers failed to show up for class; once, they even locked their American trainers out of the tower. Today most of the drones take off from a more isolated airstrip, about six miles from Camp Lemonnier.
After a couple days in Djibouti, I noticed that of all the foreign militaries stationed here, the American soldiers were the least conspicuous, rarely spotted at La Chaumière or in any of the places locals and outsiders mixed. At Camp Lemonnier, the soldiers said that since the restaurant bombing, they can’t leave the base without special approval. (“They call it ‘liberty,’ and we don’t have it anymore,” one officer explained to me.) Those who do get to go outside the security gates are often members of the Army’s Civil Affairs Battalion, reservists who rotate through for several months at a time. For Djiboutians, they’re the face of the U.S. military.
On a morning in February, a convoy of a half-dozen white Toyota SUVs exits Camp Lemonnier and heads west toward the village of Arta, a little more than an hour outside the city. The Civil Affairs unit is heading for a local clinic, where an Army dentist will offer free care to anyone who wants it.
It’s public relations, an attempt to show the locals that the Americans have more to offer than crashing drones. The Djiboutian interpreter assigned to the excursion, Hersi Aden, tells me he thinks the trip might also show the Americans that the vast majority of locals aren’t the sort that go around blowing themselves up in crowded restaurants. Aden says most Djiboutians, the air traffic controllers notwithstanding, value the presence of all that American military muscle, figuring it might deter radical Islamists from storming in and taking over the country. But Aden says the Americans’ approach to security—the barriers, the lockdowns, the secrecy—is sometimes interpreted as mistrust. “Djiboutians are peaceful people, and they don’t understand this,” he says. “They say, ‘Why are these Americans so scared of us?’ ”










The clinic in Arta is a cinder-block rectangle with a couple rooms full of medical supplies. In the middle of one, the soldiers place a portable, lightweight dental recliner. A table behind it holds a box of latex gloves, gauze, syringes, disposable dental mirrors, and a pair of pliers. The Americans have provided the clinic with $6,000 worth of medical supplies.
While they set up, an Army surgeon who has come to assess the facility tells me this isn’t where residents come when there’s an emergency. “There’s a new hospital down the road,” he says, “and it’s supposedly pretty impressive. Supposedly has lasers and all sorts of state-of-the-art equipment. I’d like to check that one out. The Chinese built it.”
The U.S. soldiers can’t go anywhere without being reminded of the People’s Republic. On the drive to the clinic, I’d noticed lengths of black tubing lying by the side of the road. “That’s a new water pipeline to Ethiopia,” the driver said, “built by the Chinese.” Nobody knows how the new Chinese base will change things, mostly because its scale isn’t yet known, but traces of anticipatory tension are palpable. Several diplomatic officials and members of U.S. Congress have publicly fretted over China’s growing influence in Djibouti, speculating that it might signal an era of increased Chinese military engagement around the world. Kelly, the U.S. ambassador, told me that “snooping,” electronic or otherwise, will be an obvious concern around Camp Lemonnier.
The Americans still have the largest foreign military presence in the country, but China’s intensifying interest in Djibouti is shifting the balance of influence. That brings us back to community relations. At the tiny clinic in Arta, about 50 people wait outside, the men dressed in button-down shirts and macawiis—a loose garment that wraps around the legs like a sarong—and the women draped in colorful headscarves and light shawls. Inside, an Army dentist straps a headlamp to his forehead and stares into the mouth of an unemployed, 29-year-old mother of four. He jabs her gum with a syringe and pries out a tooth.




A Chinese-made railroad is being built parallel to the unused French ­railroad.



Mohamed Khaireh Robleh’s truck rumbles over a set of railroad tracks that run through the center of the city, toward the port. There are no trains in sight, and the crossing lights don’t work. The tracks are broken.
“I grew up with that railroad,” says Khaireh, 67. “It was my life. It was our life.”
In the beginning, Djibouti was a railroad town. Almost a century ago, a narrow-gauge line linked the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa to a small, shallow-water port established by the French on the Red Sea. The trains rattled over a hot and treeless moonscape to carry the food, water, and labor needed to transform the port into a modest colonial outpost.
Khaireh worked those tracks for 40 years, rising into management positions, until the trains stopped running in the early 2000s. The narrow tracks couldn’t handle big payloads, and derailments were common. “We thought the European Union might help us rebuild and modernize it, but they didn’t believe in the project,” he says. “I felt like crying.”
Along came China. For decades it has invested heavily in African infrastructure, bankrolling projects from Angola to Zimbabwe, in exchange for access to natural resources. To move those resources from the heart of the continent to Asia, it needed a terminus, a reliable outlet to the east. Djibouti was perfectly positioned. China is financing a railroad, as well as an expansion of port terminals, fuel and water pipelines, a natural gas liquefaction plant, highway upgrades, two proposed airports, and several government buildings. The new military installation will be a sort of insurance policy, a security station to protect its investments and extend its economic reach.





The road to the new, Chinese-built Doraleh Container Terminal.





When the Chinese began construction on the railroad in 2013, Khaireh was called out of retirement, and now he’s driving me to one of the projects he’s overseeing: a passenger station rising on the outskirts of town. The tracks linking that construction site to Addis Ababa are finished. The first freight train began running last November; it’s powered by a diesel engine because the electrification system isn’t finished. The first passenger trains will run when the station is completed and the electricity works.
Khaireh drives along a dusty frontage road to see how construction is coming. Hundreds of new Chinese freight wagons, tankers, and air-conditioned passenger cars sit beside the tracks, and dozens of locomotives are hidden under blue plastic tarps. The station itself is encased in scaffolding. Workers with whirring circular saws balance high on the beams. Showers of sparks fall to the ground, where a Chinese worker cuts slabs of marble and plasters them to the building’s facade.
“Someday,” Khaireh says, “the railroad will extend to South Sudan, and then all the way to the Atlantic.” He’s pushing the workers, a mix of Chinese and Djiboutians, to finish the station by April. Djibouti’s vacation season begins in May, when lots of people flee the humid, 100F-plus temperatures for the more tolerable hills of Ethiopia. But that’s not the only thing driving construction. He reminds me, with a smile, that Djibouti has a presidential election in April.
“We want to be able to have the president come out here and celebrate by riding on one of the first trains,” he says. “We will get it done.” The certainty of that statement—not that they’ll complete the project, but that the president will win the election—is a near-universal assumption here, and it casts a revealing light on everything that’s unfolding in this country.
“There’s a new hospital down the road, and it’s supposedly pretty impressive. … I’d like to check that one out. The Chinese built it”
The presidential election is just six weeks away, but I don’t see a soul hanging campaign banners or making speeches. The election season, by law, is limited to the two weeks before votes are cast.
Djibouti’s president is Ismail Omar Guelleh, who in 1999 became the second president since independence. When term limits got in the way of a third term for him in 2011, he changed the constitution. That election was boycotted by opposition leaders. This time they say they’ll field a challenger, but it’s not yet clear who it will be.
“The opposition is very unorganized,” says Mohamed Osman Farah, an editor with La Nation, the country’s principal newspaper, which is aligned with Guelleh’s government. “Most of them live abroad. The people don’t trust someone who moves his family to Europe, because he doesn’t believe in the development of our country.”
That’s one way of looking at it, but what if the opposition leaders didn’t choose to move abroad so much as they were forced to flee? The most visible leader of the opposition, Abdourahman Boreh, lives in London. He once was one of Guelleh’s closest confidants and oversaw the country’s free-trade zone and port, which is by far the biggest driver of the economy. In 2008 the government accused Boreh of taking kickbacks when he negotiated on Djibouti’s behalf for the construction of a container terminal, managed by the Dubai-based company DP World. Boreh says the accusation was in retaliation for his opposition to Guelleh’s plan to seek a third term.












Menelik Square, in central Djibouti City.

Threatened with arrest, Boreh fled to London. Djibouti soon seized all of Boreh’s assets inside the country, and in 2010 its courts convicted him in absentia on terrorism charges: He was the mastermind, the government alleged, of a politically motivated grenade attack on a local grocery store. The conviction allowed Guelleh’s government to freeze Boreh’s assets worldwide and to try to extradite him to Djibouti to face a 15-year prison sentence.
The key evidence in the terrorism case was a tapped cell phone call. “Last night the act was completed,” Boreh was recorded saying. “The people heard it, and it had a deep resonance.”
The call, however, wasn’t made after the supermarket blast; it was recorded the day before.
The corruption charges against Boreh were tried in a London court, which had jurisdiction over the case because extradition hadn’t yet been granted. Djibouti’s lawyer, from the American-based firm of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, hid the timing of the intercepted call from the British courts. After the discrepancy was discovered, a British judge last year reprimanded Djibouti and its lawyer for “reprehensible” conduct. Early this March, the judge dismissed every one of the government’s claims, concluding that Guelleh himself had been aware of the terms of the deals with DP World. The court ordered Djibouti to pay Boreh £9.3 million, or about $13.1 million, for his legal fees.
A couple weeks before my visit, supporters of the Djibouti opposition based in Paris issued a letter urging the international community—“especially those countries with a military base or who are partners in development”—to hold Guelleh to democratic standards. The statement referred to an incident in December when government security forces killed 19 people, including a 6-year-old girl, at a meeting organized in part by opposition members. (The government disputes the death toll, contending that seven people were killed.) I asked the U.S. ambassador if Guelleh’s reputation as a crusher of dissent was something the U.S. would simply have to live with, given the importance of Camp Lemonnier.
“We don’t want to have to ‘live with it,’ ” he said. “For our presence here to be sustainable in the long term, this place has to be governed with transparency.”
But the U.S. has already signed on for the long term. In 2014 it extended its lease on the base for at least 20 more years. In negotiating the terms of that deal, Guelleh nearly doubled America’s rent, to about $64 million per year.
“In the colonial period, everything in Djibouti was viewed negatively. They all said we only had a hot sun, dry winds, and a lot of rocks. … But now the negatives are positives”
Before I arrived in Djibouti, I carried a picture in my mind of what untapped African economic potential, in the traditionally exploitative sense, was supposed to look like: The dirt was red, the leaves were green, and the hills sparkled on the inside. But the ministers in President Guelleh’s cabinet all tried to paint me a much different picture of modern opportunity. Imagine a trackless desert, a relentless sun, and a near-complete absence of fresh water. With that lineup of natural resources—along with a port on one of the most geopolitically significant straits in the world—they believe that in the next 20 years or so, Djibouti will become the next Dubai, a magnet for capital and free trade. To hear them talk, making billions by selling the world’s militaries on the country’s lack of incident was just the first step.
“And why not?” asks Foreign Minister Mahamoud Ali Youssouf. “We have some assets that Dubai never had.”
First, there’s that shipping lane. It’s busier than Dubai’s. Second, there are all those landlocked African countries stacked up behind it; they’re desperate for a portal to the wider world. Third, there’s the infrastructure. Not traditional infrastructure, which, China notwithstanding, is still in short supply, but rather digital infrastructure. Seven submarine fiber-optic cables, the kind that carry the vast majority of the world’s digital information, come ashore in Djibouti, making it the most important hub of connectivity in East Africa. “Forget gigabytes,” says Finance Minister Ilyas Moussa Dawaleh. “We offer terabytes.”
Instead of a bountiful freshwater reservoir, Djibouti has Lac Assal, which is 10 times saltier than the ocean and where the only sign of aquamarine life is an abundance of common bacteria; it’s also beautiful, in an extraplanetary sort of way, and the centerpiece of the government’s tourism plan.
The scouring Khamsin winds, which blow through the country from June to August, are being harnessed to power a 60-megawatt wind farm, and the pitiless sun, which beats down with near-kinetic force, will power solar energy developments and more than quadruple the country’s total domestic energy output. Within a decade, the government hopes to be the first country in Africa to be powered solely by renewable energy.
“It’s interesting,” says Ali Yacoub Mahamoud, the minister of energy and natural resources. “In the colonial period, everything in Djibouti was viewed negatively. They all said we only had a hot sun, dry winds, and a lot of rocks. Nothing valuable. Even the nomads felt that way. But now the negatives are positives.”






Ethiopia sits landlocked behind Djibouti, deeply dependent on the port. The Middle East is just 13 miles across the water.


When the dinner crowd leaves La Chaumière each night, the lobby of the Sheraton fills up. For contractors and foreign militaries, the hotel is a quasi-permanent supplementary barracks. One floor is occupied almost solely by German soldiers. When I try to connect to the hotel Wi-Fi, I’m given two network options: one for guests, one for “Germans.” I can’t find a single tourist here.
At night in the lobby bar, six German soldiers are playing cards, leaning into the game over a low table. Along the far wall, 14 Japanese sailors stare at 13 cell phones (two of them share one, watching a video). Two American contractors, tech workers, are snacking on fruit, eyeing it suspiciously, and slandering their bosses.
One starts punching numbers into the calculator on his phone, tabulating hours worked, unclaimable expenses, total wages. He puts the phone down and leans back in his chair. “A thousand dollars a week,” he says.
“A thousand? Hell, we can make that at home.”
“That’s what I’m saying.” He tastes a wedge of orange and makes a face. “Why are we here?”
They don’t come up with an answer, as if they're unwilling to believe history could have deposited them in this remote, forlorn corner of the world. But the country where nothing happens no longer exists.
(Corrects President Guelleh's relationship to his predecessor in the 33rd paragraph, and updates with statement from government regarding death toll in the 40th paragraph.)











Wednesday, June 7, 2017

PLA CHINA : Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s Republic of China 2017





NEW 

  [1]Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s Republic of China 2017

           [ A]  http://bcvasundhra.blogspot.in/2017/06/pla-china-military-and-security.html



                                       111 - I N D E X - 111

http://bcvasundhra.blogspot.in/2017/05/111-index.html  ]











SOURCE:
https://www.defense.gov/Portals/1/Documents/pubs/2017_China_Military_Power_Report.PDF?source=GovDelivery





               
                                               [ GWADAR ]

                              JAI HO 

- MINISTRY OF EXTERNAL AFFAIRS



CLICK/GOOGLE

The historic blunder of India no one talks about - DailyO


http://www.dailyo.in/politics/chabahar-gwadar-port-india-pakistan-china-ties-cpec-afghanistan/story/1/11256.html





Jun 18, 2016
 - After independence, Gwadar port was reportedly first offered to India by Sultan of Oman but India declined to accept the gift.

                     BESIDES ABOVE

 BRITAIN HAD REQUESTED TO STATION                    ONE INDIAN DIVISON
                               AT 
        BAGHDAD & EAST AFRICA 
- VERABLY THOUGH KNOWN SUBJECT                                     TO 
    AUTHENTICATION BY MEA





China May Set Up Military Base(s) 

                                  in 

                            Pakistan









  Military and Security Developments 
                       Involving
   the People’s Republic of China 2017


-------------------------------------------------------------

CLICK/GOOGLE TO OPEN THE FULL REPORT

https://www.defense.gov/Portals/1/Documents/pubs/2017_China_Military_Power_Report.PDF?source=GovDelivery


-------------------------------------------------------------



China could set up a military base in Pakistan and it has capabilities to launch precision strikes at distances of 10,000 km or more with its road-mobile nuclear missiles, warns a report of the US Department of Defence released today by the Pentagon in the US.


Titled “Annual report to the Congress: Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s Republic of China 2017”, it says: “China, most likely, will seek to establish additional military bases in countries with which it has a longstanding friendly relationship and similar strategic interests, such as Pakistan.”



The US report said Pakistan had a precedent for hosting foreign militaries. It did not specify what kind of base could China have in Pakistan — a seaport or a land-based port. The China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) has the provision of making a huge port at Gawadar — some 100 miles west of Karachi. Chinese submarines have used the Pakistan Navy’s facilities at Karachi to dock and refuel.



In another India-related aspect, the report says the focus areas of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) include China’s borders with India and North Korea, East China Sea, the South China Sea. India has un-demarcated 3,488-km-long Line of Actual Control (LAC) which is deemed to be the boundary with China.



In February 2016, Beijing started construction of first overseas military base at Djibouti on the north-eastern African Coast. The report hinted at how China was also supplying submarines to India’s neighbours. “Last year, China signed an agreement with Pakistan for the sale of eight submarines. The first four will be built in China, with the remaining four in Pakistan,” the 106-page report said. It listed Bangladesh and Burma — both India’s neighbours — as the other customers of China.



The US report talks about China’s military reforms started in February 2016, saying: “These seek to enhance the PLA’s ability to conduct joint operations; improve its ability to fight short-duration and high-intensity regional conflicts at greater distances from the Chinese mainland.”



The PLA, which is biggest standing Army in the world, established five regionally based joint theaters, replacing the decades-old ground force-dominated seven military regions (MR). “PLA reforms appear to have oriented each new theatre command towards a specific set of contingencies,” said the report. India faces the PLA’s Western theatre and also the Tibet Area command.



The PLA Navy places a high priority on the modernisation of its submarine force. It currently possesses five nuclear-powered attack submarines (SSN), four nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines (SSBN), and 54 diesel-powered attack submarines (SS). By 2020, this force is likely to grow to anywhere between 69 and 78 submarines.


CLICK/ GOOGLE  TO READ THE FULL REPORT


https://www.defense.gov/Portals/1/Documents/pubs/2017_China_Military_Power_Report.PDF?source=GovDelivery
























Tuesday, June 6, 2017

GOOGLE EARTH : H21's best folders (4728 placemarks)

SOURCE:
GOOGLE EARTH










ACCURATE TO THE SCALE WITH MAX ERROR
                                              OF 
                                     FIVE METERS

PLA's  MISSILE SITE ASTRIDE  KARRAKORUM  RANGE IN THE  VICCNITY OF THE "KARRAKORUM PASS" [ 35 Km AS THE CROW FLIES & approx 15 deg magnetic FROM THE PASS























               PLA[A] ARMY  MISSILE CAMP ASTRIDE   

                             KARRAKORUM  RANGE 

           IN THE VICCINITY OF KARRAKORUM PASS   



   +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++



  NOTE:  TO READ /USE THIS  WRITE UP  THE   USER MUST HAVE DOWN LOADED                        "GOOGLE  EARTH" 
               ON THE DESK TOP PC     Vasundhra





    H21's best folders (4728 placemarks) 

                                      By 
                                    H21


Because some members of Google Earth community have asked me for, I gather here the 74 majors folders I have posted (4728 placemarks). The topics are divided up as follows : History & Archaeology , historical overlay maps (5 maps), biography, literature, Mysteries , geography (including HImalaya). You can download all that folders together (1.8 Mo), but not the overlay maps (to big)

HISTORY & ARCHAEOLOGY :

french battles (15):
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post242021

15 decisives battles :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post242686

birthplaces of all french presidents (22):
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post348196

11 castles and fortress in Greece (high res) :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post431900

54 Archaeological Sites in Greece (high res) :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post431727

35 medieval castles in Sicilia (high res) :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post434662

26 Archaeological Sites in Sicilia (high res) :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post432544

dalai-lamas (14): 
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post363792

234 french castles in high res, châteaux de France :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post203296

where is the treasure of Alaric :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post231236

the french art of formal gardens (26 placemarks) :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post211676

10 famous duels
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post228717

fatal bullrings - toreros morts dans l'arène 
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post240614

109 european castles and palaces in high res :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post186913

42 european official residences in high res :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post188539

Hadrian's villa
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post224496

Ancient Rome in 51 annotated placemarks :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post142224

62 roman amphitheatres in high res :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded.php/Cat/0/Number/143706/page/

120 ancient theatres (roman and greek) in high res :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded.php/Cat/0/Number/145308/page/

Where is Alesia ? 
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post153337

the 50 most important archaeological sites :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post181536

HISTORICAL OVERLAY

Paris & Versailles, 18th cent (2Mo) :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post211750

ancient Athens :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post211770

Constantinople (now Istanbul) 
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post211787

St Petersburg : overlay 1893 with 5 placemarks :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post211943

Berlin 1910 :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post212622


BIOGRAPHY :

virtual visit of the Musée Rodin in Paris :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded.php/Cat/0/Number/414758/page/

all the houses and studios of Pablo Picasso :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post187922

life of Hannibal 
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post229758

Following at Jesus's footsteps (with maps) :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post160953

around the mediterranean sea with Julius Caesar :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post158659

The nomadic life of Leonardo da Vinci 
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post154737


LITERATURE :

Odysseus's Journey home : Homer's Odyssey :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post142666

Corto Maltese
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post214044

Around the World in Eighty Days (Jules Verne) :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post156427

Journey to the Center of the Earth (J. Verne) :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post344702

all the places where Watson & Sherlock Holmes go 
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post238870

all the places in Shakespeare's plays :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded.php/Cat/0/Number/155428/page/

The Twelve Labours of Heracles (Hercules) :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post161882

les voyages d'Asterix et Obelix :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post169455

Travels with a Donkey & Stevenson in the Cevennes 
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post171644

MYSTERIES :

30 french treasures :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post231411

mysterious animals (Nessie & his friends) :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post168077

The 20 most famous mysteries of all times :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post168176

10 phantom islands :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post168300

who has discovered America ? 
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post169090

Where is Atlantis ? 
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post169151

16 famous historical mysteries :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post169463

10 famous archaeological mysteries :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post169467

Yeti, Bigfoot, Sasquatsh... and others hominoids ! 
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post171406

Halloween : the 10 most haunted places in UK :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post177067


GEOGRAPHY OF HIMALAYA:

Geography of Khumbu, Everest area :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded.php/Cat/0/Number/414009/an/0/page/0#414009

266 Monasteries of Tibet :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded.php/Cat/0/Number/371059/an/0/page/0#371059

134 towns in Tibet :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded.php/Cat/0/Number/374663/an/0/page/0#374663

210 lakes in Tibet :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded.php/Cat/0/Number/371160/an/0/page/1#371160

202 mountains over 6000m n Tibet :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded.php/Cat/0/Number/375705/an/0/page/0#375705

the 14 highest mountains of the world :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post134008

all the 158 peak over 7000m (23000ft) :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post139207

29 peaks of Khumbu (Everest) area :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post206119

25 peaks of Annapurna Area 
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post207045

26 peaks of the Kangchenjunga area :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post207056

map of first ascent of Everest by Hillary&Tenzing 
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post153236

overlay map of Kathmandu :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post211994

Geography of Bhutan :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post387202


GENERAL GEOGRAPHY :

1219 Mediterranean Islands :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded.php/Cat/0/Number/414671/an/0/page/0#414671

The 95 seas in the world :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post139684

evolution of Santorini (Thera) volcano :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post212516

all american peaks over 6000m (19,700 ft) :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post150792

highest point of 177 countries
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post220941

63 plazas de toros
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post213098

extreme meteorological records :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post196227

200 churches of Roma :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post443187

FUN
drôles de noms :
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded....true#Post232017

180259-H21best7.kmz
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180259-H21best7.kmz
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