After
troop cuts, China military warns reforms will be hard
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[September 04, 2015]
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's military
reforms will be difficult and risky as they require a fundamental change
in thinking and could affect special interest groups, the armed forces
official paper said on Friday following the announcement of a 300,000
troop cut.
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President Xi Jinping unveiled the unexpected news of a reduction
in the size of the armed forces on Thursday, at a military parade
marking the end of World War Two.
The Defence Ministry said the cut, part of broader reforms to
up-grade and further professionalize the military, would be
basically completed by 2017.
The People's Liberation Army Daily said in a lengthy commentary the
success of deepening reform would decide the future of China's
ambitions to strengthen its forces.
"The difficulty is unprecedented," the newspaper said.
Old ways of thinking were "ingrained" and "it will be very hard to
sweep them away from people's heads", it said.
Reforms will also inevitably impinge upon certain interest groups,
it said, without saying who those people might be.
"There will certainly be different understandings of what reform
means, and this may even cause a certain degree of risk," the paper
said. It did not elaborate.
The military has already been shaken by several high-level
corruption scandals, as part of Xi's sweeping campaign against
deeply ingrained graft, as he seeks to make the military an
effective fighting force.
The troop cut represents a little more than a tenth of the
military's 2.3 million strong forces.
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It is the fourth time since the 1980s that China will be reducing
its military numbers, as it speeds up an ambitious modernization
program which has seen the development of stealth jets and
anti-satellite missiles.
The focus of the cut will be on phasing out outdated equipment,
simplifying administrative and non-combat roles and "adjusting and
improving military structure", the ministry has said.
Further military reforms will happened in a "step-by-step" manner
and are coming "at the appropriate time", it said.
(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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