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"Paper Dragons"

China is undergoing yet another military buildup and upgrade. There have been several of these over the last fifty years. All have failed. Why should the current one be any different?

The earlier efforts failed because of growing corruption and loss of military spirit. Most people can understand the role of corruption. Military spirit is another matter, but as successful generals and military historians have noted for centuries, the warlike attitudes of an army makes more difference than the quality of their weapons.

The People's Liberation Army (PLA), as China's armed forces are known, was forced to win or die from the 1920s to 1949, as it fought a civil war with the Nationalists while resisting a Japanese invasion. The PLA was basically an infantry army, which developed innovative tactics and leadership methods that defeated the Western trained Nationalists and fought the American army to a bloody standstill in the 1950-53 Korean War.

But after the Korean War, things began to fall apart. The senior members of the PLA had been campaigning for twenty to thirty years. They were tired. China was in ruins; it had to be rebuilt. To make matters worse, the communists then spent the next twenty years indulging in disastrous economic and political experiments. In the mid-1970s, the Chinese communists finally got down to business and introduced economic reforms that are still under way. But reforms in the military were not so easily implemented.

The PLA was always seen as the basic enforcer of communist rule in China. The Communist Party wanted one thing above all from the PLA - loyalty. Everything else is secondary. This included military capability and fiscal responsibility. The government was broke most of the time. There was not much money for the military. What cash was on hand went into things like nuclear weapons, ballistic missiles and warplanes. So the generals were allowed to fend for themselves.

Units had farmland and grew their own food. Other soldiers worked in factories to produce weapons and equipment. This didn't leave much time for training, and a lot of the spare time that was available went to political indoctrination. Above all, the troops must be kept loyal to the Chinese Communist party.

When China fought a short war with the combat experienced Vietnamese in 1979, Chinese losses were enormous and the performance of the troops obviously poor. The Chinese soldiers were brave. They rushed forward and died by the thousands. The soldiers were not trained and their leaders knew little of battlefield management. The military still needed reform, and going into the 1980s, it did not get it.

China went through an enormous economic boom in the 1980s. The communists held on to political power, but allowed great economic freedom. It was OK to get rich. The military took advantage of this. The military factories that had previously supplied military needs now began producing consumer goods and weapons for a booming export market.

It wasn't until the late 1990s that the government forced the military to pay more attention to their primary job. Officers were ordered to get rid of their business interests. There was a lot of grumbling, but by and large everyone complied. More money was allocated to new weapons, including the latest warplanes and missiles from Russia and building new things like aircraft carriers. But this did not mean that the PLA was going to become more effective.

There had been several attempts to introduce new weapons and new ideas in the previous four decades. All had failed because of corruption. Money disappeared and little was spent on actually training the troops to use the new stuff, or providing funds to maintain the high-tech stuff.

Going into the 21st century. China is still a paper dragon. They have an impressive arsenal of weapons, which are long on quantity and short on quality. The troops are still spending a lot of time doing nonmilitary tasks. Moreover, the economic boom in China has made a military career less attractive. But, things are changing this time. The lessons of the past have finally caught up with the military leadership.

The most obvious evidence of this is the change in pilot training. For decades, pilots got little air time. This reduced the wear and tear on the aircraft, making it cheaper to maintain a large number of warplanes. What this produced was a large number of ill-trained pilots flying second rate aircraft. Such a force was cut to pieces by a better-trained foe.

That happened time and again from 1941 on. So the Chinese are now trying the other approach. The PLA pilots are now officially required to fly 122.5 hours per year. But such is the enthusiasm for developing competent pilots that most squadrons scrounge up the money to fly their pilots more than the new minimum. Front line units (on the Taiwan straights) get even more and have been flying about 220 hours a year for several years. This is more than Taiwanese pilots fly, and explains why the Taiwanese are so eager to upgrade their air defenses.

The paper dragon is sharpening its claws, putting on some muscle and learning how to fight.


Copyright-James F. Dunnigan-2000  

"Dirty Little Secrets" is syndicated by:


"Dirty Little Secrets"
by James F. Dunnigan

Jim Dunnigan



James F Dunnigan works as an advisor and lecturer to the Army War College, State Department, National Defense University, Naval Post Graduate School, CIA, and MORS.
He is the author of over one hundred historical simulations and fifteen books, including the modern military classic "How to Make War," which has been current and in print for 16 years selling over half a million copies.
He serves as a military analyst for NBC and MSNBC, and he also appears frequently as a military affairs commentator for ABC, CBS and CNN as he did throughout the Persian Gulf War.
Mr. Dunnigan served in the U.S. Army from 1961 to 1964, and is a graduate of Columbia University.




Jim Dunnigan @ MSNBC



Write to James Dunnigan at: Dunnigan@Paradigm-TSA.com



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