Jim Garamone at the DoD News offers the below
piece:
WASHINGTON,
Aug. 21, 2018 — China is not an
enemy, but it is certainly an adversary of the United States, and the Defense
Department’s 2018 report to Congress examines the trends in Chinese
military developments.
Congress mandates the
report, titled “Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s
Republic of China.” While the report highlights military developments, it
also addresses China’s whole-of-government approach to competition.
China’s economic development
is fueling extraordinary changes in relationships it maintains around the
world, according to the report. On the face of it, China’s “One Belt, One
Road” initiative sounds benign – it looks to build infrastructure for
developing countries and Chinese neighbors.
Chinese leaders have funded
serious projects as far away as Africa under the initiative. They have built
roads in Pakistan and made major inroads in Malaysia. China has a major stake
in Sri Lanka. Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Laos and Djibouti also are involved.
The Chinese government seeks
to overturn the established international order that has kept the peace in
the region since World War II and allowed Asian countries to develop.
But “One Belt, One Road”
money and projects come with strings. The “one road” leads to China, and
nations are susceptible to Chinese influence on many levels – political,
military, and especially, economic.
Economic Clout
In 2017, China used its
economic clout in South Korea as a bludgeon to get Seoul to not allow the
United States to deploy the Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense system in the country
as a counterweight to North Korea’s nuclear missile program. The Chinese
government informally lowered the boom on South Korea economically to
influence the THAAD decision.
South Korean cars and other
exports were embargoed. About a quarter of all goods South Korea exports goes
to China, so this had an immediate effect on the economy. In addition,
tourism suffered, as nearly half of all entries to South Korea are from
China, and South Korean retail stores in China were crippled.
The South Korean government
decided to allow the THAAD to deploy, but China’s economic muscle movement
had to be noted in other global capitals.
South China Sea
“In its regional territorial
and maritime disputes, China continued construction of outposts in the
Spratly Islands, but also continued outreach to South China Sea claimants to
further its goal of effectively controlling disputed areas,” the DoD reports
says in its executive summary. In other words, China is using military power
and diplomatic efforts in tandem to claim the South China Sea.
The People’s Liberation Army
has come a long way from the human-wave attacks of the Korean War, and
Chinese leaders want to build a military worthy of a global power. “Chinese
military strategy documents highlight the requirement for a People’s
Liberation Army able to secure Chinese national interests overseas, including
a growing emphasis on the importance of the maritime and information domains,
offensive air operations, long-distance mobility operations, and space and
cyber operations,” the report says.
Chinese military planners looked
at what the United States accomplished in Operation Desert Shield/Desert
Storm in 1990 and 1991 and charted their way forward. The PLA is
fundamentally restructuring to challenge and beat any military in the world.
The PLA – still the largest
force in the world – actually cut people to streamline command and control
and modernize forces. The Chinese seek to win at all levels of conflict, from
regional conflicts to wars with peer competitors. “Reforms seek to streamline
command and control structures and improve jointness at all levels,” the
report said. The PLA is using realistic training scenarios and exercising
troops and equipment regularly.
New Capabilities
China is investing billions
in new capabilities including artificial intelligence, hypersonic technology,
offensive cyber capabilities and more. China also has launched an aircraft
carrier and added many new ships to the PLA Navy. The Chinese Navy is more
active and making more port calls than in years past. Further, the PLA Marine
Corps is expanding from 10,000 personnel to 30,000.
The PLA Air Force has been
reassigned a nuclear mission, giving China a nuclear triad -- along with
missile and subs -- for the first time.
Cyber operations play a
significant role in the Chinese military. The PLA has a large corps of
trained and ready personnel. Cyber espionage is common, and there are those
who believe China was able to get plans of the F-35 Thunderbolt II joint
strike fighter, which they incorporated into its J-20 stealth fighter.
The U.S. National Security
Strategy and National Defense Strategy recognize that China and Russia
are strategic competitors of the United States. Still, the United States must
engage with China, and maintenance of cordial military-to-military relations
is in both nations’ best interests.
“While the Department of
Defense engages substantively with the People’s Liberation Army, DoD will
also continue to monitor and adapt to China’s evolving military strategy,
doctrine and force development, and encourage China to be more transparent
about its military modernization,” the report says.
The United States military
will adapt to counter and get ahead of moves by any competitor, DoD officials
said.
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