Analysis-Russia's Ukrainian quagmire providing tough lessons for China
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[April 29, 2022]
By Greg Torode, Martin Quin Pollard and Yew Lun Tian
HONG KONG/BEIJING (Reuters) - From
countering a Western "information war" during a Taiwan conflict to using
"shock and awe" to swiftly subdue the island's forces, Chinese
strategists are soaking up lessons from Russia's Ukrainian quagmire,
diplomats, scholars and analysts say.
Chinese military experts are discussing the conflict in private chat
groups, offering their takes on Western involvement in Ukraine and
Russia's perceived failings, say two scholars and four Asian and Western
diplomats who are in touch with Chinese strategists.
Although their conclusions have yet to surface in official military
journals or state media, Russia's failure to quickly crush the Ukrainian
military is a key topic - as are fears about how well China's untested
forces would perform.
"Many Chinese experts are monitoring this war as if they are imagining
how this would unfold if it happened between China and the West," said
Beijing-based security scholar Zhao Tong of the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace.
Russia's approach in the early stages of the war did not subdue
Ukrainian forces, which emboldened the international community to
intervene with intelligence sharing, military equipment and the economic
isolation of Russia.
"China probably should think about conducting a much stronger and much
more comprehensive operation at the very beginning to shock and awe the
Taiwanese forces to secure a major advantage," Zhao said, referring to
observations from Chinese strategists.
They believe securing that advantage would "deter enemy forces from
being willing to intervene", he said.
Singapore-based scholar Collin Koh said such an approach would create
its own problems for China's People's Liberation Army.
"If you are going to 'shock and awe' Taiwan with overwhelming force in
the initial stages, there might be a lot of civilian casualties," said
Koh, of the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies. That would
make occupation difficult and harden international opposition.
"The Chinese can't have any illusions now that they will be welcomed as
liberators in Taiwan and given supplies and assistance," he said.
Taiwan also has greater missile capabilities than Ukraine, allowing for
pre-emptive strikes on a Chinese build-up or attacks on Chinese
facilities after an invasion.
Neither China's defence ministry nor China's Taiwan Affairs Office
immediately responded to requests for comment.
Russian forces invaded eastern Ukraine starting on Feb. 24, reducing
towns and cities to rubble amid stiff resistance, losing thousands of
troops as well as tanks, helicopters and aircraft. British officials
estimated this week that 15,000 Russian troops have died; other sources
suggest a higher number.
More than 5 million people have fled after what Russia describes as a
"special operation" to disarm Ukraine and protect it from fascists.
Ukraine and Western governments say this a false pretext for an
unprovoked war of aggression by President Vladimir Putin.
INFORMATION WAR
Chinese strategists also worry about how Russia is contending with
indirect Western military assistance, a factor China would also face in
a Taiwan scenario, say two scholars and four diplomats.
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Chinese and Taiwanese printed flags are seen in this illustration
taken, April 28, 2022. Picture taken April 28, 2022. REUTERS/Dado
Ruvic/Illustration
Chinese experts are privately
arguing about the need for Beijing to better compete in the
so-called information war, which has complicated Russia's position
on the battlefield, Zhao said.
Besides isolating Russia economically, Western diplomatic efforts -
and reporting on atrocities in the war zone - have made it easier to
provide aid for Ukraine and harder for Russia to find outside
support.
Zhao said that to Chinese strategists, one of the
most important parts of the current conflict was how Western nations
"are able to manipulate, from their perspective, international
opinion and decisively change the international response to the
war."
Some Chinese strategists believe that the control of information has
created a much worse impression of Russian performance than is
warranted.
"There are a lot of discussions about how China needs to pay great
attention to this information domain," Zhao said.
LOGISTICAL CHALLENGES
Some analysts note that the Ukrainian campaign was under way long
before Russian forces invaded in late February, with months of
build-up on the Russian side of the border. Those efforts were
easily tracked by private sector open-source intelligence firms and
repeatedly highlighted by U.S. and other governments.
"Taiwan would present a far greater logistical challenge than
Ukraine, and to ready an invasion force on that scale undetected
would be incredibly difficult," said Alexander Neill, who runs a
strategic consultancy in Singapore.
China's military leaders also have for decades looked to Moscow for
not just weapons but also structural and command doctrine.
Russian and Chinese forces have staged increasingly intensive joint
exercises in recent years, including large-scale combined arms
operations in Russia in September 2020.
Strategic assumptions from this collaboration, however, are being
tested. In 2012 the PLA adopted units similar to Russian Battalion
Tactical Groups (BTG) - supposedly swift, nimble and self-supporting
units. But Russian BTGs have become bogged down in Ukraine and
proven vulnerable to attack.
Russia has also struggled to coordinate the involvement of several
military districts in the Ukraine war. Chinese analysts worry a
Chinese invasion across the Taiwan Strait - widely seen as a far
greater military challenge - would face similar problems, as it
requires smooth co-operation across its recently formed Southern,
Eastern and Northern Theatre Commands.
Russia's forces in Ukraine have had command breakdowns and low
morale. Analysts say it's unclear how Chinese troops - untested
since they invaded northern Vietnam in 1979 - would perform in a
modern conflict.
"We've seen signs of alarming indiscipline from Russian troops,
which is a reminder that there is so much we don't know about
Chinese troops would perform under the pressures of war," Neill
said. "For all the political indoctrination, we just don't know how
resilient they would be."
(Reporting By Greg Torode in Hong Kong and Martin Quin Pollard in
Beijing; additional reporting by Yew Lun Tian. Editing by Gerry
Doyle)
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