China is planning to build a train line that would, in theory, connect Beijing to the United States. According to a report in the Beijing Times,
citing an expert at the Chinese Academy of Engineering, Chinese
officials are considering a route that would start in the country's
northeast, thread through eastern Siberia and cross the Bering Strait
via a 125-mile long underwater tunnel into Alaska.
"Right now we're already in discussions. Russia has already been thinking about this for many years," says Wang Mengshu, the engineer cited in the article. The proposed"China-Russia-Canada-America"
line would be some 8,000 miles long, 1,800 miles longer than the
Trans-Siberian railroad. The tunnel that the Chinese would help bore
beneath the icy seas would be four times the length of what traverses
the English Channel.
That's reason
enough to be skeptical of the project, of which there are few details
beyond what was attributed to the one official cited by the state-run
Beijing Times. Meanwhile, a report in
the state-run China Daily insists the country does have the technology
and means to complete a construction project of this scale, including
another tunnel that would link the Chinese province of Fujian with
nearby Taiwan.
In the past half decade or so, China has embarked on an astonishing rail construction spree, laying down tens of thousands of miles tracks and launching myriad high-speed lines. It has signaled its intent to build a "New Silk Road" --
a heavy-duty freight network through Central Asia that would connect
with Europe via rail rather than the old caravans that once bridged West
and East. A map that appeared on Xinhua's news site outlines the route below, alongside a parallel vision for a "maritime Silk Road."
While some of
its neighbors watch China's rise warily, the main plank of Beijing's
soft power pitch has always been its stated desire to improve economic
ties and trade with virtually everyone. "China’s wisdom for building an
open world economy and open international relations is being drawn on
more and more each day," trumpets the Xinhua report that accompanies the
map above, according to the Diplomat.
To that end,
Beijing has assiduously resurrected the narrative of the ancient Silk
Road as well as given prime billing to the tales of China's famed Ming dynasty treasure fleets,
which sailed all across the Indian Ocean. Seen in such grand historic
perspective, a tunnel to Alaska doesn't seem too far-fetched.
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