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2018 | 4 | 1 | 137-159

Article title

China’s military potential – evolution, trends and challenges

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
The paper seeks to determine how China’s armed forces try to create a favorable strategic posture with more emphasis on the employment of military forces and means, and provide a solid security guarantee for the country’s peaceful development, in response to the new requirement of safeguarding national security and development interests. Potential, evolution, and trends of basic Services: Army; Air Force; Navy and the most crucial aspects of nuclear potential has been presented. Problems related to the cyber space domain, as the new era of information warfare are discussed by the view of building unique capabilities. PRC openly identifying information assets as a key to winning contemporary wars. Particularly, the People’s Liberation Army (PLA), aiming at building modern forces and winning an informationalized war, deepens its reform, dedicates itself to innovation, improves its quality and actively pushes forward the revolution in military affairs. Chinese strategy, operational art and doctrine reflect the desire and need for a holistic approach to national security, utilizing the entirety of national resources. Multidimensional coordination, a PLA principle of warfare, illustrates this holistic approach by stressing that military and nonmilitary entities should work in concert towards common objectives. Multidimensional coordination occurs at and between all levels of war, includes strategic resources and instruments of power and efforts to shape the environment. The paper underlines also shift from joint operations to integrated joint operations. Chinese military experts perceive it as the basic approach in order to meet the requirements of confrontation between war systems in modern warfare. Integrated joint operations are designed to bring the operational strengths of different Services and arms into full play, combine offensive operations with defensive ones, and give priority to the flexible application of strategies and tactics.

Year

Volume

4

Issue

1

Pages

137-159

Physical description

Dates

published
2018

Contributors

author
author

References

  • M. J. P. Castillo, Chinese operational art: understanding the present through the lens of the past, a Monograph by School of Advanced Military Studies United States Army Command and General Staff College Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
  • China’s National Defense in 2008, Information Office of the State Council of the People’s Republic of China, January 2009, Beijing.
  • China’s Military Strategy Voltaire Network, 26 May 2015. Beijing (China) http://www.voltairenet.org/article187730.html, [acess: 04.05.2017]
  • Develop a New Situation in National Defense and Army Modernization Guided by the 17th Party Congress Spirit, Jiefangjun Bao, 01 January 2008
  • J. S. Bajwa, Modernisation of the PLA: Gauging its Latent Future Potential (New Delhi: Lancer Publishers, 2002).
  • G. Kanwal, M. Chansoria, Red Dragon Rising: China’s White Paper Emphasises Offensive Defence, “Issue Brief”, No. 10, June 2009 (New Delhi: Centre for Land Warfare Studies).
  • M. S. Chase, E. Medeiros, China’s Evolving Nuclear Calculus: Modernization and Doctrinal Debate” in: J. Mulvenon, D. Finklestein, Emerging Trends in the Operational Art of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army, (Washington D.C.: Beaver Press, 2005).
  • S. Kondapalli, China’s Military Capabilities in 2000-2010, in: K. Santhanam,
  • S. Kondapalli, Asian Security and China: 2000-2010, (New Delhi: Shipra Publications, 2004,).

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-7651fe1c-0feb-48e8-b61e-f4ae6884f6af
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