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11十/11

waratah fence post-Australia Y post for farm

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7'

Measurement

PCS/MT

386

6.5

7'

424

0.45M

363

PCS/MT

240

10'

9'

5'

1.80M

351

1089

Painted Post with Spade

PCS/MT

6.5'

ROLLING MACHINES,Stone Cage, one U post Production Line, one Baking Line, one Plastic Spray, Line, one Galvanization Line, 20 Punch Machines. Our production ability is 150 Ton/Day at least. After three years development, our capital has reached to 5,000,000 CNY, and have began to show our Influence in world.

6'

817

Sample or mini order: Order now

5

257

6.5'

4'

6

STUDDED T POST (USA)

9'

10'

5.5'

T type steel post length

6.5'

468

1054

0.60M

6.5'

7'

9'

262

9'

297

4'

PCS/MT

0.95 pound/feet

5'

284

6'

Heavy Duty

Measurement

2.40M

311

301

via Buyer Protection Before paying, please agree with the supplier on your order details, shipping costs and final payment amount.

Product Details:

Type Fencing, Trellis & Gates
Place of Origin Hebei, China (Mainland)
Brand Name Hebei Qiaoshi Fence Factory
Model Number QS
Frame Material Metal
Metal Type Steel
Pressure Treated Wood Type Nature
Frame Finishing Not Coated
Feature Easily Assembled, Eco Friendly
T post weight 0.85lb/ft,wire mesh products,0.90lb/ft,0.95lb/ft,1.10lb/ft,1.15lb/ft,1.25lb/ft,1.33lb/ft
Garden Fence Post Usage Garden Fence or Animal Protection
Garden Fence Post Main Market T post for Canada or USA. Star Picket for Australia, Y post for Israel
Other Related Products Post Clips, Barbed Wire, Post Anchor, Post Spikes, Fence Staples
Garden Fence Post For Field Fence, Grassland Fence, Sheep Fence/Cattle Fence/Deer Fence
T post height 4ft,5ft,5.5ft,6ft,6.5ft,7ft,8ft,9ft,10ft.
Star Picket 1.58kg/m, 1.86kg/m, 1.90kg/m, 2.04kg/m
Star Pickte height 0.45 m,waratah fence post, 0.6 m, 0.9 m, 1.35 m, 1.5 m, 1.65 m, 1.8 m, 2.1 m,2.4m,2.7m,3m
China QiaoShi Fence Posts Other Name Studded T post, Punched T post,Y post, Star Post , U post, Fences Post
High grade Coating UV or Hot dipped Galvanized or Color Painted

Payment & Shipping Terms:

Price: FOB USD 1.5~3 / Piece

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Minimum Order Quantity: 200 Piece/Pieces 1 pallet
Port: Tianjin port
Packaging Details: 5 pieces per bundle,200 pieces per pallet or 400 pieces per pallets. 4500-6000 pieces per container. We can also package according to customers' requirements.
Delivery Time: 150 metric ton per day 6 containers
Payment Terms: L/C,D/A,D/P,T/T,Western Union,MoneyGram,cash
Supply Ability: 150 Ton/Tons per Day 7 containers
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Detailed Product Description

Surface:electrical galvanized,no-paitned,hot-dipped galvanzied

Packing:5pcs/bundly 200pcs/pallet

Material:low carbon steel

4'

5.5'

Australia Y post for farm Australia Y post for farm

6'

5'

2.10M

PCS/MT

1.25LBS/FT

389

7'

t-post_clip_photo_01.jpg

SPEC

326

1.58kg/m

10'

Detailed Product Description

1)Fence Post

2)Lengrh:0.75-2.5m

3)Size30x30x3.5/4.0

4)Peach type:Y Type. T Type

5)Galvanized or PVC coated

703

PCS/MT

1.15LBS/FT

311

7'

421

QiaoShi Steel Fence Post/Steel Fence/Steel Post

PCS/MT

233

PCS/MT

8'

1.65M

PCS/MT

277

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0.90M

199

8'

359

1406

1.35M

4'

PCS/MT

PCS/MT

1.33 pound/feet

we are regular supplier for T fence post,we could produce according to buyer's requirement and different packing.

5'

545

274

5.5'

Australia Y post for farm

Australia Y post for farm Australia Y post for farm

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27

1.25 pound/feet

6'

263

1.50M

5.5'

5.5'

PCS/MT

Regular Duty

1.50LBS/FT

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PCS/MT

10'

330

242

8'

5.5

Y type steel post length

8'

211

PCS/MT

6.5'

8

PCS/MT

5'

SPEC

1.33LBS/FT

Light Duty

6'

301

4'

0.95LBS/FT

studded_t_post13.jpg

2.04kg/m

333

204

t-post

7

226

26九/11

fence post Barbed Wire

Barbed Wire

Barbed Wire Barbed Wire Barbed Wire

Information

Barbed wire, also known as barb wire ,Gabion Mattress Gabions and Reno Mattress, is a type of fencing wire constructed with sharp edges or points arranged at intervals along the strand(s). It is used to construct inexpensive . It is simple to construct and quick to erect,hesco bastion, even by an unskilled person fences and is used atop walls surrounding secured property. It is also a major feature of the fortifications in trench warfare (as a wire obstacle).

A person or animal trying to pass through or over barbed wire will suffer discomfort and possibly injury. Barbed wire fencing requires only fence post,Gabion box with pvc coated Barbed Wire,waratah fence post, wire,fence post Barbed Wire,石笼网, and fixing devices such as staples

Specification















Gauge of

Strand and Barb in B.W.G.

Approximate Length per Kilo in Meter

Barbs Spacing 3"

Barbs Spacing 4"

Barbs Spacing 5"

Barbs Spacing 6"

12x12

6.0617

6.7590

7.2700

7.6376

12x14

7.3335

7.9051

8.3015

8.5741

12-1/2x12-1/2

6.9223

7.7190

8.3022

8.7221

12-1/2x14

8.1096

8.814

9.2242

9.5620

13x13

7.9808

8.899

9.5721

10.0553

13x14

8.8448

9.6899

10.2923

10.7146

13-1/2x14

9.6079

10.6134

11.4705

11.8553

14x14

10.4569

11.6590

12.5423

13.1752

14-1/2x14-1/2

11.9875

13.3671

14.3781

15.1034

15x15

13.8927

15.4942

16.6666

17.5070

15-1/2x15-1/2

15.3491

17.1144

18.4060

19.3386

 

Barbed Wire

13七/11

Gabion box with pvc coated-Outdated U.S. Military Bases in Japan-Wire Mesh

While Americans worry that North Korea may build a missile that can strike the USA, it has dozens of missiles that can reach Japan. Persistent American saber rattling with North Korea worries the Japanese, especially those living near American military bases that are prime targets should North Korea decide to strike, or ideal retaliatory targets should the USA decide to bomb North Korea. Another source of friction is that Japan has a very low crime rate and the presence of thousands of young American GIs result in numerous robberies, assaults, rapes, and murders of Japanese citizens each year. Finally, Japan is densely populated while American military bases occupy large tracts of land in urban areas that are frequent targets of complaints and lawsuits because of loud aircraft.

Benefits from Downsizing

The U.S. military operates six major airbases in Japan, the same number as when the Cold War ended. As the U.S. military shifted focus to the Persian Gulf and constructed a dozen of new airbases in that region, it did not close any bases in Japan, even though their rational dissipated. This is a waste of American money and manpower, which irritates the Japanese since they help fund America’s massive fiscal deficit with the purchase of U.S. Treasury bonds.

A carrier is based in Japan only because the U.S. Navy established bases there after World War II to contain communism. That threat ended, except for the small, weak state of North Korea. Japan has a first class military equal to China’s and doesn’t need American protection. South Korea has become a key trading partner with China. It has twice the population of North Korea and 50 times its economic power. Its mobilized army is twice as big and all its equipment is modern, compared to North Korea’s untrained and ill equipped peasant force.

After his election, President Obama proclaimed: "We cannot sustain a system that bleeds billions of taxpayer dollars on programs that have outlived their usefulness, or exist solely because of the power of a politicians, lobbyists, or interest groups. We simply cannot afford it." Downsizing the U.S. military presence in Japan is overdue. It would lessen political tensions, save the U.S. military millions of dollars a year, and shift a billion dollars in annual military spending and several thousand support jobs into the U.S. economy. Moreover, moving ships, aircraft, and military families out of the range of North Korean,Gabion Mattress-Abortion and Military Facilities The Effect of the Burris Amendment in the Departme, Russian, and Chinese tactical missiles and aircraft would protect them from surprise attack.

An obvious new homeport for the USS Washington battle group is Mayport, Florida. The aircraft carrier based there was decommissioned in 2007, and a dozen frigates based there will soon be scrapped. The Navy plans to move a Norfolk based aircraft carrier there in 2014 to balance the fleet. This has resulted in a political battle between Congressmen since business leaders in Virginia say the move will cost them 11,000 jobs and $600 million in annual spending. Amazingly, no one mentions the solution is to move the aircraft carrier from Japan, where it is costly to maintain, not wanted by the Japanese, and vulnerable to surprise attack. Remember Pearl Harbor?

Unfortunately, Generals and Admirals instinctively dislike change, especially if it will close "their" bases. They will characterize this proposed downsizing as drastic, even though it would remove only around 10,000 of the 50,000 U.S. military personnel from Japan, close only two of six airbases, and leave two major naval bases and a dozen bases for ground forces. They will insist a detailed study is required,拦河坝-Consolidation of Military Medical Facilities And Training Center in San Antonio, Texas To Rec, followed by years of negotiations. Meanwhile, Japanese and American corporations that benefit from the current arrangement will use their influence to sabotage the effort. This is how they have evaded demands to close Futenma and Atsugi.

Keeping military families, aircraft, and ships permanently based in Japan is not only extremely expensive, it is strategically unwise. The USA maintained dozens of aircraft at Clark Field in the Philippines in 1941 to deter a Japanese attack. They provided an easy target for a surprise attack and all aircraft were destroyed on the ground. The defense of the Philippines was poorly organized as a key concern for American officers was the evacuation of military families.

 

The USA and Japan agreed to close this base by 2014 because of noise complaints by local residents. Atsugi is located in a crowded urban area near Tokyo with little room between the runway and local homes. The Navy is looking at options to move its 70 aircraft to another airbase in Japan. This will be extremely expensive and residents at potential sites are strongly opposed. The simple solution is to move those 70 aircraft back to the USA, along with their assigned aircraft carrier, the USS George Washington.

However, American Generals and Admirals resist change because they enjoy the imperial flavor of "their" bases in Japan. They stall political efforts to close outdated bases by insisting on years to study proposed changes, and then years to implement them. A recent example occurred when U.S. Army Generals quietly defeated Donald Rumsfeld’s attempt to downsize Army bases in Germany. If President Obama expects results, he must dictate changes and insist on rapid action. Closing and downsizing foreign military bases requires no congressional approval. The first steps are to close the American airbases at Futenma and Atsugi, and transfer the aircraft carrier battle group based near Tokyo to the USA.

Okinawa is a small island south of mainland Japan where U.S. Marines established bases as World War II ended. They protected the island from possible Chinese invasion and it remained under the direct control of the U.S. military until 1972. Okinawans have their own culture and wanted independence and the closure of most American bases, but the island was given back to Japan with an understanding that American bases would remain.

The Japanese government in Tokyo agreed to build a new airbase for the Marines elsewhere in Japan, yet the Marines insisted the airbase must be on Okinawa. The idea building a multi-billion dollar airbase in northern Okinawa was studied for years. While that area is less populated, the noise from an airbase would destroy the peace of tropical beaches enjoyed by tourists. That idea was dropped, so the Okinawans were promised that 8000 Marines would move to Guam. The Japanese government agreed to build new facilities on Guam, until presented with an outrageous price tag. Japanese political opinion hardened and some leaders now assert that Japan had the right close any U.S. military facility without compensation.

Does Obama Have the Courage?

Most Japanese were born after 1945, and the rest were just children during World War II. They had no responsibility for that war and refuse to accept a perpetual occupation of Japan by foreign troops. All these factors have worsened relations and resulted in frequent street protests. Visits by American nuclear-powered warships always angered many Japanese. To make matters worse,gabion box, last year the U.S. Navy permanently based a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier at its base near Tokyo. Promises to close some bases never materialized as American Generals and Admirals consider them American property.

Japan is one of America’s closest allies, yet this relationship is threatened by a refusal to accommodate reasonable demands from the Japanese people to close outdated American military bases. During the Cold War, the USA maintained some 50,000 military personnel in Japan to help defend that nation from the Soviet Union and Communist China. Those threats are mostly gone, while Japan now fields a first-rate military that can defeat any threat. As a result,Gabion box with pvc coated, the Japanese people are less tolerant of the noise and crime produced by large American military bases. President Obama must close some bases before the new Japanese nationalist government demands that all American GIs leave immediately.

In the rare chance that war breaks out, the airbase at Atsugi is a prime target for missile attack, which is another reason local residents want the Americans to leave. The Navy claims an aircraft carrier is needed for regional security, yet it routinely deploys the USS George Washington to the Persian Gulf region for six months. There are almost a hundred modern airfields in Japan and Korea where American aircraft can operate in time of war, so an aircraft carrier and the Atsugi airbase are unneeded. Finally, the old Taiwan-China conflict has mostly disappeared. China never had the naval resources to even consider invading Taiwan.

If they can stall for a couple of years, President Obama may lose interest, or possibly the 2012 election. If the President persists, the solution they devise will cost billions of dollars and a decade for new construction, environmental studies, and base clean ups. In reality, the U.S. military can implement this plan within two years because excess base capacity already exists. Since personnel are rotated every three years, it costs nothing to divert them elsewhere. The Japanese government would happily pay for any relocation and clean-up costs. Meanwhile, Americans are waiting to see if President Obama will show the courage to eliminate government waste by closing military bases "that have outlived their usefulness."

The irony is that closing or downsizing some of these bases would save the USA millions of dollars a year and shift thousands of jobs to the U.S. economy. However, many powerful Japanese and American corporations support the status quo from which they profit. They work with American Generals and Admirals to argue that Japan helps defray the cost of U.S. bases in Japan by paying for some utilities and the salaries of some Japanese workers. In reality, Japan never pays one cent to the U.S. military, and most of the claimed contributions are artificial. For example, goods imported for sale at U.S. military stores are not taxed by the Japanese government, so this is counted as a financial contribution. Another major "contribution" is rent paid to Japanese landowners. Cost sharing contributions have been reduced in recent years, and further cuts have been promised to prod the American military to reduce its presence.

Maintaining 50,000 U.S. troops in Japan requires millions of dollars each year to rotate GIs for three-year tours, which includes shipping their children,gabion, pets, and household goods. In addition, mainland Japan is an unpopular duty station because of cold weather, high costs,Stone Cage-Consolidation of Military Medical Facilities And Training Center in San Antonio, Texas To, and polite yet unfriendly locals. Since housing costs for military families and American civilian employees are twice that of the USA, the U.S. military also spends millions of dollars for additional housing costs and "locality" pay.

The U.S. Air Force has excess space at other airbases. Since it favors increasingly expensive aircraft, its numbers have fallen from 4387 active duty aircraft in 2002 to 3990 aircraft in 2008, and that number will continue to shrink. Since a typical airbase hosts around 72 aircraft, this loss of 397 aircraft indicates a need to close at least five airbases to shed overhead. The 2005 Base Closure round shut down only one active Air Force airbase, so there is plenty of space for American aircraft from Kadena. If the Air Force wants to keep these aircraft in the Pacific, it can move them to its underutilized airbases in Alaska or Guam. This would shift jobs and spending into the American economy, save the Air Force money, keep its aircraft safer from surprise attack, and move military families out of a potential war zone.

Mayport is far more popular with Navy families and is the same distance from the Middle East as a carrier based in Japan. The Navy and Marine Corps have eliminated a dozen squadrons this past decade because of soaring costs, so there is room at existing airbases to accommodate the aircraft from Atsugi.

The U.S. Navy has 11 aircraft carriers: five are homeported at Norfolk, Virginia, three are at San Diego, two in Washington State, and one is based near Tokyo for no rational reason. The USS George Washington (below) and its escorts can easily redeploy to a base in the USA, leaving behind the 7th Fleet command ship and a couple of destroyers. This allows Yokosuka to downsize yet continue to serve as a repair and support facility for deployed Navy vessels.

The simple solution is to move Marine Corps aircraft to the much larger U.S. Air Force airbase just up the road. The Air Force can move two squadrons to other airbases to make room, or may vacate Kadena and transfer the entire base to the Marines, leaving behind a small detachment to support visiting Air Force aircraft that deploy to Kadena for training exercises.

Downsize U.S. Naval Base Yokosuka, Japan

Over 27,000 U.S. military personnel and their 22,hesco bastion,000 family members are stationed on Okinawa. The U.S. Air Force maintains the large Kadena airbase on the island while the Army and Navy maintain several small bases. The Marines have a dozen camps and a small airbase at Futenma where loud helicopters anger nearby residents. (left)

Close U.S. Marine Corps Air Station Futenma

Discontent among the people of Okinawa regarding the foreign military presence has been rising for years. Their chief complaint is that Okinawa hosts over half of U.S. forces in Japan, which hampers economic development. After a series of violent criminal acts by U.S. servicemen, the U.S. military agreed in 1996 to reduce the impact of their presence. A few minor military facilities were consolidated while training and operational procedures were changed to reduce noise. The most significant concession was a promise to close the Marine Corps airbase at Futenma by 2003.

The same problem exists today in the unlikely event that war erupts with North Korea, China, or Russia. Dozens of American aircraft and thousands of American lives may be lost to surprise missile, bomber, or commando attacks, while officers are distracted with family concerns. While American servicemen are brave, many would abandon their post after an attack to ensure the welfare of their family. An attack on Japan may cause panic, and Admirals would face problems of sailors refusing to abandon their family to set sail. The Navy would be anxious to move its ships out of port to slip past lurking enemy submarines to the safety of bases in the central Pacific. From a military standpoint, it is far better to base ships, aircraft, and families far from the Asian mainland.

Close U.S. Naval Air Station Atsugi, Japan

11七/11

fence post-New Statesman – Obama’s empire-Wire Mesh

As for the argument that bases serve the national economic interest of the US, the weapons, personnel and fossil fuels involved cost billions of dollars, most coming from US taxpayers. While bases have clearly been concentrated in countries with key strategic resources, particularly along the routes of oil and gas pipelines in central Asia, the Middle East and, increasingly, Africa, from which one-quarter of US oil imports are expected by 2015, the profits have gone first of all to the corporations that build and service them, such as Halliburton. The myth that bases are an altruistic form of "foreign aid" for locals is exploded by the substantial costs involved for host economies and polities. The immediate negative effects include levels of pollution, noise, crime and lost productive land that cannot be offset by soldiers' local spending or employment of local people. Other putative gains tend to benefit only local elites and further militarise the host nations: elaborate bilateral negotiations swap weapons, cash and trade privileges for overflight and land-use rights. Less explicitly, rice imports,拦河坝, immigration rights to the US or overlooking human rights abuses have been the currency of exchange.

As battles become bases, so bases become battles; the sites in east Asia acquired during the Spanish-American war in 1898 and during the Second World War - such as Guam,Gabion box with pvc coated, Thailand and the Philippines - became the primary bases from which the US waged war on Vietnam. The number of raids over north and south Vietnam required tons of bombs unloaded at the naval station in Guam. The morale of ground troops based in Vietnam, as fragile as it was to become through the latter part of the 1960s, depended on R&R (rest and recreation) at bases outside the country, which allowed them to leave the war zone and yet be shipped back quickly and inexpensively for further fighting. The war also depended on the heroin the CIA was able to ship in to the troops on the battlefield in Vietnam from its secret bases in Laos. By 1967, the number of US bases had returned to 1947 levels.

Published 30 July 2009

The environmental, political, and economic impact of these bases is enormous. The social problems that accompany bases, including soldiers' violence against women and car crashes, have to be handled by local communities without compensation from the US. Some communities pay the highest price: their farmland taken for bases, their children neurologically damaged by military jet fuel in their water supplies, their neighbours imprisoned, tortured and disappeared by the autocratic regimes that survive on US military and political support given as a form of tacit rent for the bases. The US military has repeatedly interfered in the domestic affairs of nations in which it has or desires military access, operating to influence votes and undermine or change local laws that stand in the way.

Obama’s empire

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Critics of US foreign policy have dissected and dismantled the arguments made for maintaining a global system of military basing. They have shown that the bases have often failed in their own terms: despite the Pentagon's claims that they provide security to the regions they occupy, most of the world's people feel anything but reassured by their presence. Instead of providing more safety for the US or its allies, they have ­often provoked attacks, and have made the communities around bases key targets of other nations' missiles. On the island of Belau in the Pacific, the site of sharp resistance to US attempts to instal a submarine base and jungle training centre, people describe their experience of military basing in the Second World War: "When soldiers come, war comes." On Guam, a joke among locals is that few people except for nuclear strategists in the Kremlin know where their island is.

Many are also concerned by other countries' overseas bases - primarily European, Russian and Chinese - and by the activities of their own militaries, but the far greater number of US bases and their weaponry has understandably been the focus. The sense that US bases represent a major injustice to the host community and nation is very strong in countries where US bases have the longest standing and are most ubiquitous. In Okinawa, polls show that 70 to 80 per cent of the island's people want the bases, or at least the marines, to leave. In 1995, the abduction and rape of a 12-year-old Okinawan girl by two US marines and one US sailor led to demands for the removal of all US bases in Japan. One family in Okinawa has built a large peace museum right up against the edge of the Futenma Airbase, with a stairway to the roof that allows busloads of schoolchildren and other visitors to view the sprawling base after looking at art depicting the horrors of war.

Unfortunately, many of the Obama administration's diplomatic efforts are being directed towards maintaining and garnering new access for the US military across the globe. US military officials, through their Korean proxies, have completed the eviction of resistant rice farmers from their land around Camp Humphreys, South Korea, for its expansion (including a new 18-hole golf course); they are busily making back-room deals with officials in the Northern Mariana Islands to gain the use of the Pacific islands there for bombing and training purposes; and they are scrambling to express support for a regime in Kyrgyzstan that has been implicated in the murder of its political opponents but whose Manas Airbase, used to stage US military actions in Afghanistan since 2001,Stone Cage, Obama and the Pentagon consider crucial for the expanded war there.

The attempt to gain permanent basing in Iraq foundered in 2008 on the objections of forces in both Iraq and the US. Obama, in his Cairo speech in June, may have insisted that "we pursue no bases" in either Iraq or Afghanistan, but there has been no sign of any significant dismantling of bases there, or of scaling back the US military presence in the rest of the world. The US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, recently visited Japan to ensure that it follows through on promises to provide the US with a new airfield on Okinawa and billions of dollars to build new housing and other facilities for 8,000 marines relocating to Guam. She ignored the invitation of island activists to come and see the damage left by previous decades of US base activities. The myriad land-grabs and hundreds of billions of dollars spent to quarter troops around the world persist far beyond Iraq and Afghanistan, and too far from the headlines.

Technological changes in warfare have had important effects on the configuration of US bases. Long-range missiles and the development of ships that can make much longer runs without resupply have altered the need for a line of bases to move forces forward into combat zones, as
has the aerial refuelling of military jets. An arms airlift from the US to the British in the Middle East in 1941-42, for example, required a long hopscotch of bases, from Florida to Cuba, Puerto Rico, Barbados, Trinidad, British Guiana, north-east Brazil, Fernando de Noronha, Takoradi (now in Ghana), Lagos, Kano (now in Nigeria) and Khartoum, before finally making delivery in Egypt. In the early 1970s, US aircraft could make the same delivery with one stop in the Azores, and today can do so non-stop.

The global expansion of US bases - and with it the rise of the US as a world superpower - is a legacy of the Second World War. In 1938, the US had 14 military bases outside its continental borders. Seven years later, it had 30,000 installations in roughly 100 countries. While this number was projected to shrink to 2,waratah fence post-Military Munitions Unexploded Ordnance Federal Facilities Restoration and Reuse,000 by 1948 (following pressure from other nations to return bases in their own territory or colonies, and pressure at home to demobilise the 12 million-man military), the US continued to pursue access rights to land and air space around the world. It established security alliances with multiple states within Europe (Nato), the Middle East and south Asia (Cento) and south-east Asia (Seato), as well as bilateral agreements with Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand. Status of Forces Agreements (Sofas) were crafted in each country to specify what the military could do, and usually gave US soldiers broad immunity from prosecution for crimes committed and environmental damage caused. These agreements and subsequent base operations have mostly been shrouded in secrecy, helped by the National Security Act of 1947. New US bases were built in remarkable numbers in West Germany, Italy, Britain and Japan, with the defeated Axis powers hosting the most significant numbers (at one point, Japan was peppered with 3,800 US installations).

In Korea, the great majority of the population feels that a reduction in US presence would increase national security; in recent years, several violent deaths at the hands of US soldiers triggered vast candlelight vigils and protests across the country. And the original inhabitants of Diego Garcia, evicted from their homes between 1967 and 1973 by the British on behalf of the US for a naval base, have organised a concerted campaign for the right to return, bringing legal suit against the British government,Gabion Mattress-CBC News - Canada - Harper announces northern deep-sea port, training site-Wire Mesh, a story told in David Vine's recent book Island of Shame. There is also resistance to the US expansion plans into new areas. In 2007, a number of African nations baulked at US attempts to secure access to sites for military bases. In eastern Europe, despite well-funded campaigns to convince Poles and Czechs of the value of US bases and much sentiment in favour of accepting them in pursuit of closer ties with Nato and the EU, and promised economic benefits, vigorous pro­tests have included hunger strikes and led the Czech government, in March, to reverse its plan to allow a US military radar base to be built in the country.

In December 2008, shortly before being sworn in as the 44th president of the United States, Barack Obama pledged his belief that, "to ensure prosperity here at home and peace abroad", it was vital to maintain "the strongest military on the planet". Unveiling his national security team, including George Bush's defence secretary, Robert Gates, he said: "We also agree the strength of our military has to be combined with the wisdom and force of diplomacy, and that we are going to be committed to rebuilding and restrengthening alliances around the world to advance American interests and American security."

Asked why the US has a vast network of military bases around the world, Pentagon officials give both utilitarian and humanitarian arguments. Utilitarian arguments include the claim that bases provide security for the US by deterring attack from hostile countries and preventing or remedying unrest or military challenges; that bases serve the national economic interests of the US, ensuring access to markets and commodities needed to maintain US standards of living; and that bases are symbolic markers of US power and credibility - and so the more the better. Humanitarian arguments present bases as altruistic gifts to other nations, helping to liberate or democratise them, or offering aid relief. None of these humanitarian arguments deals with the problem that many of the bases were taken during wartime and "given" to the US by another of the war's victors.

Since 2000, with the election of George W Bush and the ascendancy to power of a group of men who believed in a more aggressive and unilateral use of military power (some of whom stood to profit handsomely from the increased military budget that would require), US imperial ambition has grown. Following the declaration of a war on terror and of the right to pre-emptive war, the number of countries into which the US inserted and based troops radically expanded. The Pentagon put into action a plan for a network of "deployment" or "forward operating" bases to increase the reach of current and future forces. The Pentagon-aligned, neoconservative think tank the Project for the New American Century stressed that "while the unresolved conflict with Iraq provides the immediate justification, the need for a substantial American force presence in the Gulf transcends the issue of the regime of ­Saddam Hussein".

Catherine Lutz is a professor at the Watson Institute for International Studies at Brown University and editor of "The Bases of Empire: the Global Struggle against US Military Posts" (Pluto Press, £17.99)

The global reach of the US military today is unprecedented and unparalleled. Officially, more than 190,000 troops and 115,000 civilian employees are massed in approximately 900 military facilities in 46 countries and territories (the unofficial figure is far greater). The US military owns or rents 795,000 acres of land, with 26,000 buildings and structures, valued at $146bn (£89bn). The bases bristle with an inventory of weapons whose worth is measured in the trillions and whose killing power could wipe out all life on earth several times over.

Terms such as facility, outpost or station are used for smaller bases to suggest a less permanent presence. The US department of defence currently distinguishes between three types of military facility. "Main operating bases" are those with permanent personnel, strong infrastructure, and often family housing, such as Kadena Airbase in Japan and Ramstein Airbase in Germany. "Forward operating sites" are "expandable warm facilit[ies] maintained with a limited US military support presence and possibly prepositioned equipment", such as Incirlik Airbase in Turkey and Soto Cano Airbase in Honduras. Finally, "co-operative security locations" are sites with few or no permanent US personnel, maintained by contractors or the host nation for occasional use by the US military, and often referred to as "lily pads". These are cropping up around the world, especially throughout Africa, a recent example being in Dakar, Senegal.

Catherine Lutz

Social movements have proliferated around the world in response to the empire of US bases,石笼网, ever since its inception. The attempt to take the Philippines from Spain in 1898 led to a drawn-out guerrilla war for independence that required 126,000 US occupation troops to stifle. Between 1947 and 1990, the US military was asked to leave France, Yugoslavia, Iran, Ethiopia, Libya, Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, Algeria, Vietnam, Indonesia, Peru, Mexico and Venezuela. Popular and political objection to the bases in Spain, the Philippines, Greece and Turkey in the 1980s gave those governments the grounds to negotiate ­significantly more compensation from the US. Portugal threatened to evict the US from important bases in the Azores unless it ceased its support for independence for its African colonies.

Since 1990, the US has been sent packing, most significantly, from the Philippines, Panama, Saudi Arabia, Vieques and Uzbekistan. Of its own accord, for varying reasons, it decided to leave countries from Ghana to Fiji. Persuading the US to clean up after itself - including, in Panama, more than 100,000 rounds of unexploded ordnance - is a further struggle. As in the case of the US navy's removal from Vieques in 2003, arguments about the environmental and health damage of the military's activities remain the centrepiece of resistance to bases.

Return to: Home | World Affairs | Asia

The new bases are designed to operate not defensively against particular threats but as offensive, expeditionary platforms from which military capabilities can be projected quickly, anywhere. The Global Defence Posture Review of 2004 announced these changes, focusing not just on reorienting the footprint of US bases away from cold war locations, but on remaking legal arrangements that support expanded ­military activities with other allied countries and prepositioning equipment in those countries. As a recent army strategic document notes, "Military personnel can be transported to, and fall in on, prepositioned equipment significantly more quickly than the equivalent unit could be transported to the theatre, and prepositioning equipment overseas is generally less politically difficult than stationing US military personnel."

On the other hand, the pouring of money into military R&D (the Pentagon has spent more than $85bn in 2009), and the corporate profits to be made in the development and deployment of the resulting technologies, have been significant factors in the ever larger numbers of technical facilities on foreign soil. These include such things as missile early-warning radar, signals intelligence, satellite control and space-tracking telescopes. The will to gain military control of space, as well as gather intelligence, has led to the establishment of numerous new military bases in violation of arms-control agreements such as the 1967 Outer Space Treaty. In Colombia and Peru, and in secret and mobile locations elsewhere in Latin America, radar stations are primarily used for anti-trafficking operations.

The official figures exclude the huge build-up of troops and structures in Iraq and Afghanistan over the past decade, as well as secret or unacknowledged facilities in Israel, Kuwait, the Philippines and many other places. In just three years of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, $2bn was spent on military construction. A single facility in Iraq, Balad Airbase, houses 30,000 troops and 10,000 contractors, and extends across 16 square miles, with an additional 12 square mile "security perimeter". From the battle zones of Afghanistan and Iraq to quiet corners of Curaçao, Korea and Britain, the US military domain consists of sprawling army bases, small listening posts, missile and artillery testing ranges and berthed aircraft carriers (moved to "trouble spots" around the world, each carrier is considered by the US navy as "four and a half acres of sovereign US territory"). While the bases are, literally speaking, barracks and weapons depots, staging areas for war-making and ship repairs, complete with golf courses and basketball courts, they are also political claims, spoils of war, arms sale showrooms and toxic industrial sites. In addition to the cultural imperialism and episodes of rape, murder, looting and land seizure that have always accompanied foreign armies, local communities are now subjected to the ear-splitting noise of jets on exercise, to the risk of helicopters and warplanes crashing into residential areas, and to exposure to the toxic materials that the military uses in its daily operations.

The US has responded to action against bases with a renewed emphasis on "force protection", in some cases enforcing curfews on soldiers, and cutting back on events that bring local people on to base property. The department of defence has also engaged in the time-honoured practice of renaming: clusters of soldiers, buildings and equipment have become "defence staging posts" or "forward operating locations" rather than military bases. Regulating documents become "visiting forces agreements", not "status of forces agreements", or remain entirely secret. While major reorganisation of bases is under way for a host of reasons, including a desire to create a more mobile force with greater access to the Middle East, eastern Europe and central Asia, the motives also include an attempt to prevent political momentum of the sort that ended US use of the Vieques and Philippine bases.

Moreover, these bases are the anchor - and merely the most visible aspect - of the US military's presence overseas. Every year, US forces train 100,000 soldiers in 180 countries, the presumption being that beefed-up local militaries will help to pursue US interests in local conflicts and save the US money, casualties and bad publicity when human rights abuses occur (the blowback effect of such activities has been made clear by the strength of the Taliban since 9/11). The US military presence also involves jungle, urban, desert, maritime and polar training exercises across wide swathes of landscape, which have become the pretext for substantial and permanent positioning of troops. In recent years, the US has run around 20 exercises annually on Philippine soil, which have resulted in a near-continuous presence of US soldiers in a country whose people ejected US bases in 1992 and whose constitution forbids foreign troops to be based on its territory. Finally, US personnel work every day to shape local legal codes to facilitate US access: they have lobbied, for example, to change the Philippine and Japanese constitutions to allow, respectively, foreign troop basing and a more-than-defensive military.

1七/11

hesco bastion-Gabions Gabion Baskets, Gabion Fence, Gabion Wall, Gabion Basket Supplier-Wire Mesh

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Topic Index Accessories
Galv - Packaging & Pricing
PVC - Packaging & Pricing
 

Wire Mesh,Gabion Mattress--Wire Mesh, Gabion,拦河坝, Gabiony,石笼网-Flood Line-Wire Mesh, Hesco Barriers, Rock Boxes, Fence Post,hesco bastion,hesco bastion-Information-Wire Mesh, Star Picket,Stone Cage, Fence, Field Fence,Welded Gabion Box, Grassland Fence

Price and Company - (0086)3118- 7733-505

Tel: +86 3118 7733 505
Fax: +86 3118  7733 508
Mail: info@theqiaoshi.com

25六/11

waratah fence post–Wire Mesh

,Welded Gabion Box

Qiaoshi (china) wire mesh factory offers Window Screening in different materials,fence post, widely used in hotels and buildings to prevent insects and bugs from entering.

Specification List of Window Screen Netting
Variety
Specification
Technical Notes
Mesh/Inch
Wire Gauge
Roll Size
Gal.Iron Wire Netting
10mesh x 10mesh
BWG31
BWG32
BWG33
BWG34
3"x100"
4"x100"
1x25M
1.2x30M
1.5x25M
Process: Electric galvanized after weaving
Color: White or blue white
 
14mesh x 14mesh
16mesh x 16mesh
18mesh x 18mesh
18mesh x 14mesh
22mesh x 22mesh
24mesh x 24mesh
Enamelled Iron Wire Netting
Same as above
Green or dark green
Aluminum Coated Iron Wire Netting
Same as above
Silver
Aluminum Wire Netting
Same as above
Material: Al-mg alloy or pure aluminum
Painted aluminum wire netting or epoxy resin paint
Fiberglass Wire Netting
12 x 12
BWG31
BWG32
3"x100"
4"x100"
1x25M
1.2x25M
Available in different colors
14 x 14
16 x 16
16 x 14
PVC Wire Netting
12x 12
As above
Twisted weaving:12,14,16mesh;
Plain weaving:18,拦河坝- people had to fill sandbags-Wire Mesh,22,waratah fence post,24mesh;
Colors available:white,blue,green,etc.
 
14 x 14
16 x 16
18 x 18
18 x 14
20 x 20
Stainless Steel Wire Netting
14 x 14 SWG38
16 x 16 SWG37
18 x 18 SWG36
18 x 14 SWG35
20 x 20 SWG34
3"x100"
4"x100"
1x25M
1.2x25M
Materials: Stainless steel 304,Gabion Mattress,316,hesco bastion-Filtration-Wire Mesh,316L
PVC Coated Wire Netting
12x 12
BWG31
BWG32
As above
Different colors available. Used in petroluem,hesco bastion-5-Wire Mesh, pipes wrapping.
14 x 14
16 x 16
18 x 18

Window Screen

Window Screen Window Screen Window Screen

Information

General specifications:14mesh x 14 mesh, 16mesh x 14mesh, 16mesh x 16mesh, 18mesh x 16mesh, 18mesh x 18mesh, 18mesh x 14mesh General wire diameter: BWG31 or BWG 32.
Assortment available:
Enameled Wire Netting
Gal. Iron Wire Netting

Specification

25六/11

fence post–Wire Mesh

Characteristics:,hesco bastion--Wire Mesh,Stone Cage

It has the good property of corrosion-resisting and oxidation-resisting.

Low carbon steel wire, stainless steel wireWelded Wire Mesh Variety:Hot dipped galvanized after welding Welding with hot dipped galvanized iron wire Electro galvanized after welding Welding with electro galvanized iron wire PVC coated welded wire mesh.

Welded Wire Mesh

Welded Wire Mesh Welded Wire Mesh Welded Wire Mesh

Information

Meteria:

Specification

Usage:


It is widely used on the industry,Gabion Mattress, agriculture,石笼网-1.46-Wire Mesh,石笼网, building, transportation, mine,t post- sifting in grains-Wire Mesh, field, lawn,fence post, cultivation, Profession's guard, decorate, machie protection etc.

Mesh
Wire Diam
Inch
mm
BWG
mm
1/4" × 1/4"
6.4mm × 6.4mm
22# - 24#
0.7mm - 0.6mm
3/8" × 3/8"
10.6mm × 10.6mm
19# - 22#
1.0mm - 0.7mm
1/2" × 1/2"
12.7mm × 12.7mm
16# - 23#
1.6mm - 0.6mm
5/8" × 5/8"
16mm × 16mm
18# - 21#
1.2mm - 0.8mm
3/4" × 3/4"
19.1mm × 19.1mm
16# - 21#
1.6mm - 0.8mm
1" × 1/2"
25.4mm × 12.7mm
16# - 20#
1.6mm - 0.9mm
1" × 1"
25.4mm × 25.4mm
14# - 21#
2.0mm - 0.8mm
11/2" × 11/2"
38mm × 38mm
14# - 19#
2.0mm - 1.0mm
1" × 2"
25.4mm × 50.8mm
14# - 16#
2.0mm - 1.6mm
2" × 2"
50.8mm × 50.8mm
12# - 16#
2.6mm - 1.6mm
Note: Special specifications can be customized.
25六/11

fence post–Wire Mesh

Steel ,fence post--Wire Mesh,Gabion MattressFence Post

Steel Fence Post Steel Fence Post Steel Fence Post

Information

A steel fence post,razor wire, also called (depending on design or country) a T Post, a Y Post, Star Picket, is a type of fence post or picket. They are made of steel and are sometimes manufactured using durable rail steel. They can be used to support various types of wire or wire mesh. The end view of the post creates an obvious T, Y or other shape. The posts are driven into the ground with a manual or pneumatic post pounder. All along the post, along the spine, there are studs or nubs that prevent the barbed wire or mesh from sliding up or down the post. They are generally designated as 1.01, 1.25 or 1.33,waratah fence post-6&rdquo-Wire Mesh,fence post, referring to its weight in pounds per lineal foot. While T Post are more common in the United States,gabion box, Y Post are more common in Australia and New Zealand where they are sometimes called "Waratahs", after the company which registered a patent for them in 1926.
In areas (such as the British Isles) where treated timber is relatively inexpensive,Stone Cage- -Wire Mesh, wooden fence post are used and steel ones are unusual for agricultural purposes. In the British Isles steel posts are however often used for fencing into solid rock. In this case a hole is drilled into the rock, and the post is fixed using cement or epoxy.
 
 

 Fence Post

Specification

Studded T post

 Painted T Post with Spade
Light Duty
0.95LBS/FT
4'
5'
5.5'
6'
6.5'
7'
 
 
 
Regular Duty
1.15LBS/FT
4'
5'
5.5'
6'
6.5'
7'
8'
9'
10'
1.25LBS/FT
4'
5'
5.5'
6'
6.5'
7'
8'
9'
10'
Heavy Duty
1.33LBS/FT
4'
5'
5.5'
6'
6.5'
7'
8'
9'
10'
1.50LBS/FT
4'
5'
5.5'
6'
6.5'
7'
8'
9'
10'

 

Star Picket

Measurement
Star Picket /Y Post(Australia & New Zealand) Length
0.45M
0.60M
0.90M
1.35M
1.50M
1.65M
1.80M
2.10M
2.40M
2.70M
3.00M
SPEC
PCS/MT
PCS/MT
PCS/MT
PCS/MT
PCS/MT
PCS/MT
PCS/MT
PCS/MT
PCS/MT
PCS/MT
PCS/MT
2.04kg/M
1089
816
544
363
326
297
272
233
204
181
163
1.90kg/M
1169
877
584
389
350
319
292
250
219
195
175
1.86kg/M
1194
896
597
398
358
325
298
256
224
199
179
1.58kg/M
1406
1054
703
468
422
383
351
301
263
234
211

U Post

U Fence Post
Light Duty
3'
4'
5'
6'
 
 
Heavy Duty
5'
6'
7'
8'
9'
10'

25六/11

Welded Gabion Box–Wire Mesh

,gabion-12-1/2x12-1/2-Wire Mesh,fence post

 
Stainless Steel Wire Variety According to Applications:
Stainless Steel Weaving Wire
Stainless Steel Brush Wire
Stainless Steel Stitching Wire
Stainless Steel Spring Wire
Stainless Steel Nails Wire
 
Stainless Steel Hard Wire
Use: Steel rope /Steel brush /Spring
 
Stapler
Sizes: from 5.0mm to 0.05mm
 
Use: Knitted wire mesh /Weaving wire mesh /Filtration mesh /Gas pipe /High pressure pipe
Diameter: from 0.60mm to 0.07mm

Specification

 

Chemical composition of stainless steel wire
AISI Grade
Chemical Composition(%)
��
C
Si
Mn
P
S
Ni
Cr
Mo
 304
>≤0.08
>≤1.00
>≤2.00
>≤0.045
>≤0.030
>8.00~10.50
>18.00~20.00
-
 304H
>0.08
≤1.00
≤2.00
≤0.045
≤0.030
8.00~10.50
18.00~20.00
-
 304L
>≤0.030
>≤1.00
>≤2.00
>≤0.045
>≤0.030
>9.00~13.50
>18.00~20.00
-
 316
≤0.045
≤1.00
≤2.00
≤0.045
≤0.030
10.00~14.00
10.00~18.00
2.00~3.00
 316L
>≤0.030
>≤1.00
>≤2.00
>≤0.045
>≤0.030
>12.00~15.00
>16.00~18.00
>2.00~3.00
 430
≤0.12
≤0.75
≤1.00
≤0.040
≤0.030
≤0.60
16.00~18.00
-
 430A
>≤0.06
>≤0.50
>≤0.50
>≤0.030
>≤0.50
≤0.25
>14.00~17.00
-

Materials for Stainless Steel Fine Wire: 304,304L,gabion box, 316, 316L
Wire Diameter: 5mm to 0.025mm
Applications: Stainless steel wire is used in wire-drawing,Welded Gabion Box--Wire Mesh, weaving of wire mesh, soft pipe, beam of cabinet, steel wire rope,Gabion Mattress,hesco bastion--Wire Mesh, filter material and equipment, spring,Welded Gabion Box, etc.

Stainless Steel Wire

Stainless Steel Wire Stainless Steel Wire Stainless Steel Wire

Information

 

  
Sizes of Stainless Steel Wire
Wire Diameter(mm)
Tolerance(mm)
Max. Deviation Tolerance (mm��
0.020-0.049
+0.002 -0.001
0.001
0.050-0.074
±0.002
0.002
0.075-0.089
±0.002
0.002
0.090-0.109
+0.003 -0.002
0.002
0.110-0.169
±0.003
0.003
0.170-0.184
±0.004
0.004
0.185-0.199
±0.004
0.004
0.200-0.299
±0.005
0.005
0.300-0.310
±0.006
0.006
0.320-0.499
±0.006
0.006
25六/11

fence post–Wire Mesh

 
Application:
Reinforcement
Filtration
Acts as a barrier and helps retain soil particles and allows free movement of water hence avoiding clogging
Separation
Acts as a separator between two layers of soil in road construction and rail works. Our fabric is having strength,hesco bastion,gabion box-700mm-Wire Mesh, high puncture resistance and appropriate elongation features required for road and rail works.
Erosion Control
Avoids erosion of soil on slopes,fence post--Wire Mesh, hills where there heavy rainfall, floods and keeping the area rich in soil

Specification

 

 

 
Item
SPEC.
20-15
30-22
40-28
50-35
60-42
80-56
100-70
1
Longitude rupture strength,t post, KN/m≥
20
30
40
50
60
80
110
2
Latitude rupture strength KN/m≥
15
22
28
35
42
56
90
3
Longitude and Latitude rupture elongation rate %≤
28
4
Trapezia tear strength ��partrait����KN≥
0.55
0.65
0.7
0.8
0.9
1.1
1.8
5
Bursting strength��KN≥
1.6
2.4
3.2
4.0
4.8
6.0
9.5
6
Upright infiltrating ratio, cm/s
10-1—10-4
8
series
120
160
200
240
280
340
800

 Geotextile are generally preferred for applications where high strength properties are needed,gabion box-18mesh x 18mesh-Wire Mesh,fence post, but where filtration requirements are less critical and planar flow is not a consideration. Under heavy traffic and construction loads, geotextile reduce localized shear failure in weak subsoil conditions,gabion, improving construction over soft subsoil and providing access to remote areas through separation.

Geotextile

Geotextile Geotextile Geotextile

Information

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