Xi's new generals face tough military challenges post-congress
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[October 17, 2022]
By Greg Torode
HONG KONG (Reuters) - In his first two
terms as commander of the world's largest military, Chinese President Xi
Jinping has unleashed sweeping changes to its structure, posture and
potency.
Over those 10 years, China has rapidly expanded and advanced its naval
and rocket forces, purged thousands of officers over corruption,
reformed its command operations and built bases deep in the maritime
heart of Southeast Asia.
Now come the tricky next steps for his Central Military Commission:
implementing sweeping changes to its leadership, which commands China's
two million-strong People's Liberation Army, potentially tightening Xi's
grip over the military and its modernisation.
On Sunday, China's Communist Party kicked off its once-in-five-years
congress, where it is expected to name replacements for four retirees
among the six senior officers who serve under Xi on the commission.
Among those expected to step down are the body's vice chairmen, Generals
Xu Qiliang and Zhang Youxia, both 72. Zhang is widely viewed as a close
Xi ally.
Their replacements must integrate increasingly complex forces that would
be vital for a Taiwan invasion, say eight Asian and Western military
attaches and seven security analysts, fulfilling Xi's long-held demand
that the military can "fight and win wars".
Opening the meeting, Xi called for accelerating the building of a
world-class military, saying China had to "be prepared for danger in
times of peace".
Diplomatic challenges are also mounting, as China's military
modernisation confronts the traditional U.S. strategic dominance in East
Asia.
The military envoys and three of the analysts say the commission will
need to secure foreign base and port access for its expanding naval
fleet as well as tackle possible external pressure to deepen
international engagement over its arsenal of nuclear weapons. A slowing
economy could also complicate modernisation.
Amid all those challenges, most of the incoming generals are likely to
lack one element that marked at least some of their commission
predecessors: combat experience.
Zhang and commission member General Li Zuocheng, who is also expected to
retire, are some of the last serving officers to have fought in the
bloody border conflict with Vietnam that started with a troubled Chinese
invasion in 1979 but rumbled on until the late 1980s.
Potential replacements include recent commanders from the reformed
Eastern and Western theatre commands, responsible for Taiwan and the
Indian border respectively, eight envoys say. Promotions also could come
from the Southern Theatre command, home to vital naval bases.
Who is chosen could shed light on Xi's military priorities. Any
operational choices are almost certainly to be balanced by political
commissar promotions, given their on-going role to ensure the military
serves the Communist Party rather than the country.
Operating out of an imposing and well-protected command building in
western Beijing, the commission sits nominally under the party's Central
Committee but in practice works closely under the Politburo's Standing
Committee. Xi heads both bodies.
That overlap has led some analysts to caution against predictions of a
Taiwan invasion based on any new commission lineup. The Standing
Committee, not ambitious generals, would make such a momentous decision,
they say.
"There is no shortage of senior military officers who internally parrot
Xi's 'fight and win' mantra, but the conundrum for the PLA is the lack
of operational experience," said Alexander Neill, a private military
analyst.
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Visitors stand in front of a giant
screen displaying Chinese President Xi Jinping next to a flag of the
Communist Party of China, at the Military Museum of the Chinese
People's Revolution in Beijing, China October 8, 2022.
REUTERS/Florence Lo
James Char, a security scholar at Singapore's S. Rajaratnam School
of International Studies, said the PLA suffered from "shortcomings"
in combined arms and joint operations.
"Its capacity for sustained power projection also remains limited at
present," Char said.
China's Defence Ministry did not respond to requests for comment.
LOYALTY
The importance of absolute loyalty to Xi is crucial.
Four diplomats scrutinising developments expect to see the continued
rise of veteran commissar Admiral Miao Hua, head of the commission's
Political Work Department, to one of the Vice Chair positions.
Miao, who has early links to Xi when both were posted in coastal
Fujian province opposite Taiwan, will almost certainly be balanced
by a more operational commander, possibly Army general Liu Zhenli.
Two officers recently promoted to staff roles at the commission are
also being watched, recent Eastern and Western commanders He Weidong
and Xu Qiling. Xu Qiling also has experience in Taiwan operations.
The August drills around Taiwan after U.S. House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi's visit to Taipei showed the PLA still had only limited
abilities to fully integrate its forces within and across commands -
the so-called "jointness" that Xi is eager to promote.
Senior Pentagon officials recently reiterated assessments that they
did not think China would invade Taiwan in the next two years.
U.S. officials have privately said that they do not believe China
will be militarily ready to fully take Taiwan by even 2027.
NUCLEAR FOCUS
For some diplomats and scholars, the growing importance of the
commission is highlighted by China's nuclear forces, which Pentagon
assessments say are expanding at a faster-than-expected rate.
Over Xi's next five-year term, China is expected to have up to 700
deliverable nuclear warheads, and 1,000 by 2030, according the
Pentagon's latest annual report on China's military modernisation.
More of those weapons are expected to be kept in an advanced stage
of readiness in modernised silos. China now appears to operate a
"nuclear triad", capable of launching missiles from land, aircraft
and submarines, the report notes.
Christopher Twomey, a security scholar at the U.S. Naval
Postgraduate School in California, said it was important to resume
international exchanges to better understand Beijing's evolving
nuclear doctrine, despite the growing role of habitually suspicious
commissars on the commission.
"The new CMC will have an important voice on whether to engage the
U.S. on ensuring stability in the strategic nuclear arena," Twomey
said. "One suspects that leaders from the political side of the
force would be most suspicious, whereas more international-minded
officers might have some awareness of the dangers of spirals and
inadvertent escalations."
(Reporting by Greg Torode: Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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