DHARAMSHALA, January 15: In new military directives issued by the  Chinese government for the year 2013, the largest army in the world has  been told to prepare for war and bolster its ability to win a battle  based on rigorous training on an actual combat basis.  
The  directive was made public in a military newspaper, People's Liberation  Army Daily, which referred to a training blueprint issued by the PLA's  Department of the General Staff for the entire force. The directive  comes amid heightened tensions between China and Japan over territorial  disputes in the East China Sea.
"In 2013, the goal set for the  entire army and the People's Armed Police force is to bolster their  capabilities to fight and their ability to win a war … to be  well-prepared for a war by subjecting the army to hard and rigorous  training on an actual combat basis," the training blueprint reads.
According to the South China Morning Post,  the statement “stresses the urgency of real combat abilities in all  military training by repeating the phrase "fighting wars", or dazhang, as many as 10 times in the article … the phrase did not appear in last year's directive.”
China  last year had told its army to place more emphasis on joint military  trainings and co-ordination among different PLA services.
The directives have been issued just months after Xi Jinping took over as the PLA commander-in-chief from Hu Jintao.
At  the heart of the growing animosity between the countries are a chain of  small uninhabited islets called the Senkakus but also claimed by China  as the Diaoyus.
Last year, the same military newspaper had said  that Japan was playing with fire and called their move "the most blatant  challenge to China's sovereignty since the end of World War II."
"The  Chinese government and the Chinese people will absolutely make no  concession on territorial sovereignty," the newspaper said.
"Should the Japanese side insist on going its own way, it would have to bear all serious consequences that arise."
On  Tuesday, US and Japanese fighter jets began a five-day joint air  exercises days after China and Japan scrambled their military planes  near the disputed islands.
The exercise involves six US FA-18  fighters and around 90 American personnel, along with four Japanese F-4  jets and an unspecified number of people, according a Japanese official.
Last  year, mass anti-Japanese demonstrations had spread to more than 20  cities in China during which demonstrators smashed Japan-made cars,  vandalised Sushi restaurants and Japanese-owned businesses and trampled  on miniature mannequins of Japanese soldiers dressed in World War II  uniforms.
Source: Phayul.com



 









