China's Navy can sail just fine. It's a serious threat. It's biggest problem is that it's not yet a great blue water Navy in structure, nor experience. It's largely designed to operate around coastal China / Taiwan and be able to project power slightly beyond the South China Sea. It's largely a regional Navy at this point.Ah, you seems to think Chinese navy can't sail.
I agree that a full naval blockade of China would be damn near impossible, especially with its land based missile and air force assets able to help significantly, but I do think the Chinese economy could be crippled and the standard of living for the Chinese people would fall off a cliff if they ever got into a hot war with the U.S. and suddenly had the full weight of the U.S. Navy, Japanese Navy, South Korean Navy and Australian Navy working in unison to form a loose blockade (especially of food and fuel imports), backed up by a plethora of air assets from USA , Taiwan , Japan , South Korea and Australia ... Let alone the fact that inevitably, the Navy's and air forces of countries like Britain , France , Italy , Canada Spain and Germany would also enter the conflict in a reinforcement role. Heck, in a broader conflict you would also see countries like Norway , Sweden , Finland and the Netherlands use their modern assets to support Carrier Battlegroups, especially integrated in air defense and attack rolls. It would be an incredibly tall task for the Chinese to handle over the long term, with a deeply damaged economy and a finite Navy and Air Force.
Full blockade? I highly doubt it. A loose blockade by a coalition of as many as 12-15+ countries? I think that's plausible.
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