North Korea’s shelling of South Korea and Zero response from America Proves my point I made when it happened that The New World Order has chosen China as the Leading country in The New World Order takeover. Not only is China more prosperous than America there army is 200 times larger than the USA Army. We cannot beat them in a war we can only use nuclear bombs to stop them and they have nuclear bombs as well. If you throw nuclear bombs out of the equation we as a nation do not stand a chance against there massive army .
North Korea’s despicable shelling of civilians and the West’s necessarily wary response because the country is a nuclear power underline two truths about today’s world.
First, our planet is just as dangerous a place as ever it was in the Cold War.
Second, what happens in the Far East matters now more than ever before.
For the past half-millennium, the world has belonged to the West, yet in only a few years power has shifted eastwards.
Are we ready militarily, economically and perhaps most importantly, psychologically, to come to terms with this overwhelming geopolitical fact?
POWER
When the Cold War against Soviet Communism was won 20 years ago after a bruising, violent but thankfully never cataclysmic struggle lasting decades, the West collectively exhaled.
We were promised a kinder, gentler planet, a new world order without the nightmare of nuclear annihilation but with the opportunity of cashing in a peace dividend from lower defence spending.
From a mutually assured destructive standoff, we were meant to move towards what Winston Churchill once called “the broad sunlit uplands” of world peace.
Us thinker Francis Fukuyama even proclaimed the “End of History” as countries embraced social democracy in a new world dominated by America.
All that ended on 9/11, of course. Yet however seriously al-Qaeda attacked the US, fundamentalist Islam never came near to having the technological, economic or military wherewithal to replace America as the greatest world power.
Today, China is vying to do that in a multipolar world that is also seeing India emerge as an economic superpower and Brazil, Indonesia, Iran and South Africa thrusting forward too. Even the defeated Cold War foe Russia can be heard sabrerattling against her neighbours. Cold War certainties are dead. Now we have a new world disorder.
“China is a sleeping giant,” said Napoleon two centuries ago. “When she awakes she will shake the world.”
Ever since Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger went to Beijing in 1973 to open up Mao’s Middle Kingdom to the rest of the world, China has been stirring.
But in the past decade she has taken massive strides towards world primacy.
In 1990 China accounted for 14% of global manufacturing. Today it is 37%.
When the West entered recession in 2007-08, China and India continued growing impressively. Leaving Japan by the wayside, they are recording growth rates that the Financial Times calls “the most important rebalancing of wealth and power since America emerged as a new force at the end of the 19th century”.
Analysts disagree when China’s GDP will outstrip America’s, some say as early as 2020, others as late as 2040, but they all agree it will.
Hardly a day goes by without the realities of our Asia-centric world being underlined. This week Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, called China’s role in the North Korean incident “absolutely critical… it’s very important for China to lead”.
A TICKING BOMB
At the G20 summit this month, President Obama and his Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner had strips torn off them by the Chinese and other Asian leaders and could only respond haplessly, not least because holding $3trillion of US debt gives China a whip hand.
They could destroy the dollar overnight if they so desired, although presently it is not in their interests with America such a huge importer of Chinese products.
Mr Obama’s recent call for India to get a seat on the UN Security Council also indicates the new global power league.
The world’s fastest supercomputer, the Tianhe-1A, is being built by Chinese scientists. Huge contracts are being signed with African and South American countries to provide China with the raw materials it needs to fuel its boom.
Citigroup made over a third of its $9billion global profits out of Asia this year. India’s Tata Motors have bought Jaguar and Land Rover.
And next year China will overtake the US as the world’s biggest manufacturer.
Asia’s rise is sustained and seemingly especially by its major competitors, a humbled US with 9.5% unemployment and the EU.
With China and India having such huge populations, extensive natural resources, cheap labour and impressive skills bases, the future belongs to them.
The 49% of Americans polled last month who do not expect China to become the world’s No. 1 superpower are in for a rude awakening. Of course, there are problems for Asian powers that their Western rivals do not face. China’s one-child policy makes it a ticking demographic timebomb, the only state in the world where the old are set to outnumber the young.
The Communists might guarantee national unity, but newly rich middle classes have historically resented the political repression of a one-party state.
Meanwhile, India’s largely Victorian rural infrastructure needs radical overunstoppable, haul. Its democracy and shared heritage, however – and the English language -make a far more attractive overall victor for the West than China.
History shows rich, thrusting nations project their power militarily.
China and India are already active in space, with the Chinese already having an anti-satellite weapon.
They also have a 200 million-strong army. In addition they are building submarines, stealth aircraft – they produce state-of-the-art drones – and long-range missiles able to track and sink aircraft carriers.
Iran is building a nuclear bomb and Russia is spending more than $276 billion between now and 2015 on six nuclearpowered carriers, eight ballistic missile subs and huge Arctic icebreakers. Meanwhile, Britain is about to decommission the Navy’s flagship HMS Ark Royal.
VICIOUS
In 1956 Soviet leader Nikita Khruschev told the West: “We will bury you.”
But the USSR had no hope of burying capitalism because communist economics were never going to be able to compete with free enterprise in delivering reasonably priced goods and services.
Heeding the lesson, China has harnessed the free market to its remaining Communist ideology to create a hybrid that will soon be poised to bury us.
The prospect of a vicious totalitarian power dominating the world in our children’s and grandchildren’s lifetimes is not an inviting one.
The achievements that brought first Britain and then America to world primacy are today being used by the Chinese to outstrip the United States and Europe, but with one vital ingredient absent – political liberty.
English-speaking people cannot escape the logic of these nerve-racking developments.
As the hymnbook puts it: “Earth’s proud empires pass away.”
Our time in history’s limelight is almost over. All we can do, in the interests of our waning Western civilisation, is hope India beats China to the prize.









