Visualizing the ACE Concept (China)

Related:

Documents:

Air Force Doctrine Note 1-21 – Agile Combat Employment

Air Force Doctrine Publication 3-99 – Department of the Air Force Role in Joint All-Domain Operations

Notes:

Island chain strategy: Steps to checkmate China

Source

Island chain strategy

See also: United States foreign policy toward the People’s Republic of China

The island chain strategy is a strategic maritime containment plan first conceived by American foreign policy statesman John Foster Dulles in 1951, during the Korean War. It proposed surrounding the Soviet Union and China with naval bases in the West Pacific to project power and restrict sea access.

The “island chain” concept did not become a major theme in American foreign policy during the Cold War, but after the dissolution of the Soviet Union has remained a major focus of both American and Chinese geopolitical and military analysts to this day. For the United States, the island chain strategy is a significant part of the force projection of the U.S. military in the Far East. For China, the concept is integral to its maritime security and fears of strategic encirclement by U.S. armed forces. For both sides, the island chain strategy emphasizes the geographical and strategic importance of Taiwan.

First Island Chain

Much of the first island chain is roughly situated in waters claimed by China. These include the South China Sea, within the nine-dash line, as well as the East China Sea west of the Okinawa Trough.