Besides upgrading its hardware from warships to warplanes, China
is also trying to improve the caliber of its recruits, as the
military is a career path traditionally favored by the less
educated.
In an advertisement on social media platform WeChat, the
People's Liberation Army Navy said it was seeking graduate
students with master's degrees in science and engineering who
are younger than 26 to pilot aircraft from ships.
Last year, it allowed undergraduates aged 24 or below to apply
for the first time. Before that, the limit was high school
graduates age 20 and younger.
"The need for high-quality military talent becomes more
imperative day by day," the People's Liberation Army Navy said
in the advertisement, published on Wednesday. "The mission and
tasks of the navy continue to expand. The speed of the strategic
shift of the navy is being accelerated."
Candidates must be male with a clean "political history" and no
legal or disciplinary history, according to the advertisement.
Training will include three to four years of aviation theory and
practical flight training. Those who become pilots will have
free medical care for themselves and their immediate family, as
well as government-provided housing.
China is in the final stages of preparing its third aircraft
carrier - the Fujian - for sea trials, a key step before the
warship goes into operational service.
China is aiming to modernize its military by 2035.
As China speeds up training of military aircraft pilots, it has
also tried to recruit serving and former British military
pilots, prompting Britain to block of such moves.
It has also drawn Washington's attention. The Biden
administration in June added 43 entities to an export control
list, including an aviation company in South Africa that hired
former British military pilots to help train Chinese pilots.
(Reporting by Albee Zhang and Ryan Woo; editing by Miral Fahmy
and Gerry Doyle)
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