China’s military thinking is outmoded and should learn from others, especially  the US when it comes to modernizing its vast armed forces, a leading armed  forces newspaper said yesterday.
A commentary in the People’s Liberation  Army Daily said modernizing China’s military was central to reforms which have  seen heavy investment in high-tech weapons like advanced fighter  jets.
China has slimmed down its military, the world’s largest by number,  over the past few years, trying to build a more effective force to face  US-supplied Taiwan and Japan, as well as the US itself, but this needs  creativity and more open thinking, the newspaper said, which could be a  problem.
TRADITIONAL CULTURE
“Because  conservative thinking has a rather large influence in traditional Chinese  culture, the task of renewing its culture and rethinking the military will be  extremely difficult,” it said.
China had to “audaciously learn from the  experience of the information cultures of foreign militaries,” it  said.
“History and reality have shown again and again that a country  which does not have a world view is a backward one. A military which lacks  global vision is one without hope,” it said.
The US was a good example to  follow in two regards, the article added.
The US military buys technology  already available on the open market when it can, such as global positioning  systems used in the Gulf War, a cheaper and more practical method than trying to  develop such equipment itself, the commentary said.
In addition, the US  pays a lot of attention to training, “enlisting large numbers of able-bodied men  and boldly using them,” it said.
LESSONS  LEARNED
The Chinese military looked on with horror during the  first Gulf War in 1990 and 1991, when US guided missiles and precision bombs  easily took out Iraqi equipment such as tanks, much of it similar to what China  was using at the time.
Since then the People’s Liberation Army has come  on in leaps and bounds, though analysts say poor training and coordination among  different branches of the military remain serious challenges.
During last  year’s national day parade, China showed off its DongFeng 21C missile, which  could force US aircraft carriers to keep a greater distance if it is  successfully developed into an anti-ship ballistic missile.
That would  make it harder for the US to come to Taiwan’s aid in the event of a conflict.
Source: Taipei Times - 2010/08/16



 









