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Description
China's naval rise is not just about ship numbers; it is about rewriting the way Japan, India, and Australia must think about sea lanes, alliances, and their own maritime futures. Over the past three decades, China has built the world's largest navy, transforming the People's Liberation Army Navy from a coastal defence force into a modern, far reaching fleet that now routinely operates beyond the first and second island chains. This book traces the PLAN's expansion-from frigates and submarines to aircraft carriers and long range logistics-and shows how it is being used to project power toward Japan, India, and Australia, as well as across the South China Sea and Indian Ocean. It connects shipbuilding statistics and strategic doctrine to real world deployments, including exercises near Taiwan and live fire drills off Australia, to explain what China's naval rise actually looks like on the water.In response, Japan, India, and Australia have each recalibrated their navies, alliances, and regional posture. The book examines Japan's shift from a defensive focus to a more expeditionary posture, India's push to dominate the Indian Ocean with new bases and partnerships, and Australia's growing investments in submarines, frigates, and Quad linked maritime surveillance. Rather than forecasting war, it presents a documentary style account-blending history, port side reporting, and strategic analysis-of how three rival great power navies are adapting to a region where Chinese warships are no longer a rare sight but a permanent presence. Author of English-language books at the intersection of self-help, business dynamics, and historical analysis. Clara uncovers universal truths to help readers build resilient lives and ventures.



