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Some are saying the next big war will happen in the Pacific. Others are predicting it will be in Russia. Some say it may even be in China, but no one really knows for sure, only that the history of warfare is full of surprises. The scariest thing about this can-to-be-anywhere, when-it's-nowhere scenario is that many people believe it could start with a cyber attack or hack to turn any one country into an enemy overnight. It would then take weeks or months to adjust and get out into the open, and then all hell breaks loose as countries arm themselves with robotic weapons and drones on land and sea. So far, the Pentagon is spending more than $5 billion a year on cyber warfare. But how realistic is it? Who would actually launch such an attack? Who would be at ground zero of the conflict? What could even lead to this scenario? That's what I came up with in my writing. A new form of cyber warfare that proceeds without warning, involves the hacking into one country's computer networks for immoral purposes, and then turn it into an all-out war between armies in both space and in cyberspace. We don't know when this scenario will happen, but if you think about it long enough, you'll see that it may be possible in your lifetime. The following is the opening of my book: On a bright and sunny January morning in 2013, a large herd of military camels were grazing in a desert valley in western China. Most of them were dromedaries, sandy-colored with big nostrils and eyes that bulged out as if they were on stilts. The rest were bactrian camels, which had two humps and thick coats of fur around their necks. Their owners had nicknamed the camels “Mona” and “Monica” after their first names because the first letter was the same as their owners'. “Look!” exclaimed Han Xiuquan, the general in charge of the camels. “It's like they can see what's coming. Look how their nostrils are flaring up.” Mona and Monica ignored him and kept grazing in the cool morning air at the base of an old, well-traveled road that ran through China's Gobi Desert. It was well over a hundred miles from where they were to where the Mongolian People's Army was stationed in its fortress...had been stationed in its fortress since being ordered in 1272 A.D., when Genghis Khan had just conquered all of China. The armies had been there ever since. General Han looked at the camels, sensing they knew something he didn't. They were not usually skittish, but they were uneasy now. He wondered if they sensed that an army of vicious predators was about to descend on them. Had they heard the news that Chinese government officials had sent out to the entire world just eleven minutes earlier? The deadline given by the Chinese government for an immediate cease-fire with the Mongolians had expired without response. The news was entirely ignored by the Mongolian army, which apparently believed it could take China by itself despite its far superior military technology and firepower. Like other countries in Asia, Mongolia trusted its army more than any other military force... cfa1e77820

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