At China’s annual
parliamentary meetings in March, Xi said he would build China’s military into a
“great wall of steel”, but stressed the need for a “peaceful development of
cross-strait relations”.
China already has the
world’s largest armed forces, with about 2 million active personnel. Its navy
is also the world’s biggest, with an estimated 355 active vessels compared with
the US’s 296. In 2021, Vice Adm Kay-Achim Schonbach, then the commander of
Germany’s navy, said China was expanding its navy by the equivalent of France’s
entire navy every four years.
An invasion of Taiwan
would probably rely on a naval encirclement of the island, so China’s maritime
capabilities will be of particular importance to those trying to glean how
capable the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) is of achieving its aim.
On 7 April the
Pentagon announced a $1.7bn deal with Boeing for 400 anti-ship Harpoon
missiles. The buyer is reportedly Taiwan, although this has not been officially
confirmed.
Part of China’s push
to modernise its armed forces has been a strategy of pursuing “military-civil
fusion”, with the aim of developing the PLA into a “world-class military”. The
government encourages private businesses to support the development of military
technology, in everything from AI to nuclear technology to drones.
This strategy is
evident in China’s shipbuilding industry. The China Shipbuilding Group
Corporation accounts for a fifth of global ship production and also produces
vessels for China’s navy. Such a high level of integration is “relatively
uncommon”, according to the Centre for Strategic and International Studies
(CSIS), a thinktank.
It also hampers the
ability of outside countries to understand or limit China’s military
development.
“With little
transparency and differentiation between military and civilian operations, it
is impossible to determine the extent to which foreign ship orders may be
helping to lower the costs” of the PLA’s naval modernisation, CSIS notes.
The PLA navy has also
used civilian ferries to conduct military exercises. This hampers the ability
of US and Taiwanese intelligence to detect abnormal activity.
Another trend of the
past decade has been China’s efforts to become self-sufficient in advanced
technology, particularly arms manufacturing. After concerted efforts over a
number of years to advance its technological capabilities, China now produces
more than 90% of its weaponry domestically, according to the Stockholm
International Peace Research Institute, a thinktank.
The ‘peace disease’
Although the Taiwan
Strait would be the first obstacle, it would not be the last. The PLA would not
be able to conquer Taiwan from the shoreline alone. More than 90% of Taiwan’s
population lives in cities and both China and Taiwan have been bracing
themselves for the possibility of a drawn-out urban conflict. In a report last
year, the Institute for the Study of War noted that the PLA “has been
increasing its study, training and preparation for future urban warfare”.
“We can expect those
efforts to redouble and start to incorporate lessons from Russian experiences
[in Ukraine],” says Elsa Kania, one of the report’s authors.
PLA soldiers march in
a parade marking the 70th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic
of China in 2019
PLA soldiers in a
parade marking the 70th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of
China in 2019. Photograph: China News Service/Visual China Group/Getty Images
The final part of the
puzzle for the PLA is its people. Although it boasts the world’s largest armed
forces, its soldiers have virtually no combat experience. The last time the PLA
fought a war was when China invaded Vietnam in 1979. In 2017 Xi said that what
he thought about “most” was whether the army would be able to mobilise when
needed.
Earlier this month,
the government revised its conscription laws to allow retired service people to
re-enlist. The new amendments include specific wartime provisions, including
measures to quickly boost troop numbers.
Blake Herzinger, a
former US navy intelligence officer who is now a fellow at the United States
Studies Centre, notes that “there aren’t many militaries in the world with a
lot of combat experience”, aside from Ukraine and Russia.
“The US has fought two
bloody insurgencies over 20 years. But the total casualties for the US in those
two wars would likely be a week’s casualties” in a conflict over Taiwan.
More important, says
Herzinger, are cultural problems in the PLA, such as corruption and a rigid
command structure.
In 2018, an editorial
in the People’s Liberation Army Daily, the PLA’s official newspaper, said the
armed forces were infected by a “peace disease”, namely corruption.
Chinese leaders are
well aware of these challenges, and have been focusing on improving the quality
of their troops and becoming more self-sufficient with weaponry. Nothing about
an assault on Taiwan would be simple. But, says Herzinger, “it’s rare, in
history, for a navy or military to build out and modernise so rapidly without a
real reason for doing so
No comments:
Post a Comment