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Book review: Asia's Cauldron, the South China Sea and the End to a Stable Pacific

In Asia's Cauldron, Robert Kaplan asks if there will be a war between China and the United States over the South China Sea.

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Book review: Asia's Cauldron, the South China Sea and the End to a Stable Pacific


by Robert Kaplan
Random House
4 stars

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In , Robert Kaplan asks if there will be a war between China and the United States over the South China Sea.

The American journalist and political commentator, who has written 15 books on foreign affairs and travel which have been translated into many languages, is chief geopolitical analyst for Stratfor, a private global intelligence firm.

His thesis is that the contest over the sea lanes of the South China Sea, through which more than half of the world's merchant tonnage and the bulk of East Asia's supplies pass, will emerge as the primary line of conflict in the coming decades.

Beijing has set down as its territory an area of two million square kilometres of the sea, a claim contested by Vietnam, Brunei, the Philippines, Taiwan and Malaysia. According to Kaplan, Beijing's rising military power will face a coalition led by the US, which has entered a period of relative decline.

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China is expanding its military, including the navy, to a level never seen before. It is building up its submarine base at Hainan, home to the latest diesel-electric submarines and nuclear ballistic missile subs.

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