AiA in Atlanta wrote:China has never attempted much in overseas expansion
Since 1990 they've been expanding their navy and since 2000 they've started getting rather aggressive about the use of Naval assets in a force projection role. Since 1990 the PLAN has expanded their blue water capability with:
1. Bought the
Admiral Kuznetsov-class aircraft carrier Varyag in 1998, finally completing refitting in 2011, christened it the Liaoning and is currently undergoing seatrails. Sure, the PLAN doesn't have anywhere near enough aircraft of the right type to give the Liaoning an airgroup, but that's only a matter of time.
Further, now that the PRC knows how to refit a
Admiral Kuznetsov-class aircraft carrier they know how to build them, with the PLAN currently considering adding as many as 3 new
Liaoning-class ships over the next two decades. Carriers only serve two purposes, using them as mobile air bases to drop bombs on other countries and acting as trip-wires for a nuclear war, so if China isn't looking towards expansion, why are they building one of the requirements for navy expansion?
2. They've built three Type 071 amphibious transport docks and around 74 landing ships in six new classes since 1990. If they aren't interested in overseas expansion then why would they need such a large amphibious landing capability?
3. They build five new classes of guided missile destroyer since 1990, adding fifteen ships to their blue-water navy.
See, you're correct that China has historically never really done much in the way of overseas expansion, but what you're forgetting is that was entirely due to China historically never having much of a naval capability. They're now correcting that deficiency.
And now you know why it is the US keeps such a massively powerful navy.
Deterrence is the art of producing in the mind of the enemy the FEAR to attack. - Dr. Strangelove