BEIJING, April 16 (Xinhua) -- The
Information Office of the State Council, China's cabinet, on Tuesday
published a white paper on China's armed forces.
Following is the full text:
The Diversified Employment of China's Armed Forces
Information Office of the State Council
The People's Republic of China
April 2013, Beijing
Contents
Preface
I. New Situation, New Challenges and New Missions
II. Building and Development of China's Armed Forces
III. Defending National Sovereignty, Security and Territorial Integrity
IV. Supporting National Economic and Social Development
V. Safeguarding World Peace and Regional Stability
Concluding Remarks
Appendices
Preface
In today's world, peace and development are facing new
opportunities and challenges. It is a historic mission entrusted by the
era to people of all nations to firmly grasp the opportunities, jointly
meet the challenges, cooperatively maintain security and collectively
achieve development.
It is China's unshakable national commitment and strategic choice
to take the road of peaceful development. China unswervingly pursues an
independent foreign policy of peace and a national defense policy that
is defensive in nature. China opposes any form of hegemonism or power
politics, and does not interfere in the internal affairs of other
countries. China will never seek hegemony or behave in a hegemonic
manner, nor will it engage in military expansion. China advocates a new
security concept featuring mutual trust, mutual benefit, equality and
coordination, and pursues comprehensive security, common security and
cooperative security.
It is a strategic task of China's modernization drive as well as a
strong guarantee for China's peaceful development to build a strong
national defense and powerful armed forces which are commensurate with
China's international standing and meet the needs of its security and
development interests. China's armed forces act to meet the new
requirements of China's national development and security strategies,
follow the theoretical guidance of the Scientific Outlook on
Development, speed up the transformation of the generating mode of
combat effectiveness, build a system of modern military forces with
Chinese characteristics, enhance military strategic guidance and
diversify the ways of employing armed forces as the times require.
China's armed forces provide a security guarantee and strategic support
for national development, and make due contributions to the maintenance
of world peace and regional stability.
I. New Situation, New Challenges and New Missions
Since the beginning of the new century, profound and complex
changes have taken place in the world, but peace and development remain
the underlying trends of our times. The global trends toward economic
globalization and multi-polarity are intensifying, cultural diversity is
increasing, and an information society is fast emerging. The balance of
international forces is shifting in favor of maintaining world peace,
and on the whole the international situation remains peaceful and
stable. Meanwhile, however, the world is still far from being tranquil.
There are signs of increasing hegemonism, power politics and
neo-interventionism. Local turmoils occur frequently. Hot-spot issues
keep cropping up. Traditional and non-traditional security challenges
interweave and interact. Competition is intensifying in the
international military field. International security issues are growing
noticeably more abrupt, interrelated and comprehensive. The Asia-Pacific
region has become an increasingly significant stage for world economic
development and strategic interaction between major powers. The US is
adjusting its Asia-Pacific security strategy, and the regional landscape
is undergoing profound changes.
China has seized and made the most of this important period of
strategic opportunities for its development, and its modernization
achievements have captured world attention. China's overall national
strength has grown dramatically and the Chinese people's lives have been
remarkably improved. China enjoys general social stability and
cross-Straits relations are sustaining a momentum of peaceful
development. China's international competitiveness and influence are
steadily increasing. However, China still faces multiple and complicated
security threats and challenges. The issues of subsistence and
development security and the traditional and non-traditional threats to
security are interwoven. Therefore, China has an arduous task to
safeguard its national unification, territorial integrity and
development interests. Some country has strengthened its Asia-Pacific
military alliances, expanded its military presence in the region, and
frequently makes the situation there tenser. On the issues concerning
China's territorial sovereignty and maritime rights and interests, some
neighboring countries are taking actions that complicate or exacerbate
the situation, and Japan is making trouble over the issue of the Diaoyu
Islands. The threats posed by "three forces," namely, terrorism,
separatism and extremism, are on the rise. The "Taiwan independence"
separatist forces and their activities are still the biggest threat to
the peaceful development of cross-Straits relations. Serious natural
disasters, security accidents and public health incidents keep
occurring. Factors affecting social harmony and stability are growing in
number, and the security risks to China's overseas interests are on the
increase. Changes in the form of war from mechanization to
informationization are accelerating. Major powers are vigorously
developing new and more sophisticated military technologies so as to
ensure that they can maintain strategic superiorities in international
competition in such areas as outer space and cyber space.
Facing a complex and volatile security situation, the People's
Liberation Army (PLA) resolutely carries out its historical missions for
the new stage in the new century. China's armed forces broaden their
visions of national security strategy and military strategy, aim at
winning local wars under the conditions of informationization, make
active planning for the use of armed forces in peacetime, deal
effectively with various security threats and accomplish diversified
military tasks.
The diversified employment of China's armed forces adheres to fundamental policies and principles as follows:
Safeguarding national sovereignty, security and territorial
integrity, and supporting the country's peaceful development. This is
the goal of China's efforts in strengthening its national defense and
the sacred mission of its armed forces, as stipulated in the
Constitution of the People's Republic of China and other relevant laws.
China's armed forces unswervingly implement the military strategy of
active defense, guard against and resist aggression, contain separatist
forces, safeguard border, coastal and territorial air security, and
protect national maritime rights and interests and national security
interests in outer space and cyber space. "We will not attack unless we
are attacked; but we will surely counterattack if attacked." Following
this principle, China will resolutely take all necessary measures to
safeguard its national sovereignty and territorial integrity.
Aiming to win local wars under the conditions of informationization
and expanding and intensifying military preparedness. China's armed
forces firmly base their military preparedness on winning local wars
under the conditions of informationization, make overall and coordinated
plans to promote military preparedness in all strategic directions,
intensify the joint employment of different services and arms, and
enhance warfighting capabilities based on information systems. They
constantly bring forward new ideas for the strategies and tactics of
people's war, advance integrated civilian-military development, and
enhance the quality of national defense mobilization and reserve force
building. They raise in an all-round way the level of routine combat
readiness, intensify scenario-oriented exercises and drills, conduct
well-organized border, coastal and territorial air patrols and duties
for combat readiness, and handle appropriately various crises and major
emergencies.
Formulating the concept of comprehensive security and effectively
conducting military operations other than war (MOOTW). China's armed
forces adapt themselves to the new changes of security threats, and
emphasize the employment of armed forces in peacetime. They actively
participate in and assist China's economic and social development, and
resolutely accomplish urgent, difficult, hazardous, and arduous tasks
involving emergency rescue and disaster relief. As stipulated by law,
they perform their duties of maintaining national security and
stability, steadfastly subduing subversive and sabotage attempts by
hostile forces, cracking down on violent and terrorist activities, and
accomplishing security-provision and guarding tasks. In addition, they
strengthen overseas operational capabilities such as emergency response
and rescue, merchant vessel protection at sea and evacuation of Chinese
nationals, and provide reliable security support for China's interests
overseas.
Deepening security cooperation and fulfilling international
obligations. China's armed forces are the initiator and facilitator of,
and participant in international security cooperation. They uphold the
Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence, conduct all-round military
exchanges with other countries, and develop cooperative military
relations that are non-aligned, non-confrontational and not directed
against any third party. They promote the establishment of just and
effective collective security mechanisms and military
confidence-building mechanisms. Bearing in mind the concept of openness,
pragmatism and cooperation, China's armed forces increase their
interactions and cooperation with other armed forces, and intensify
cooperation on confidence-building measures (CBMs) in border areas.
China's armed forces work to promote dialogue and cooperation on
maritime security; participate in UN peacekeeping missions,
international counter-terrorism cooperation, international merchant
shipping protection and disaster relief operations; conduct joint
exercises and training with foreign counterparts; conscientiously assume
their due international responsibilities; and play an active role in
maintaining world peace, security and stability.
Acting in accordance with laws, policies and disciplines. China's
armed forces observe the country's Constitution and other relevant laws,
comply with the purposes and principles of the UN Charter, and maintain
their commitment to employing troops and taking actions according to
law. They strictly abide by laws, regulations and policies, as well as
discipline regarding civil-military relations. According to law, they
accomplish such tasks as emergency rescue, disaster relief, stability
maintenance, contingency response and security provision. On the basis
of the UN Charter and other universally recognized norms of
international relations, they consistently operate within the legal
framework formed by bilateral or multi-lateral treaties and agreements,
so as to ensure the legitimacy of their operations involving foreign
countries or militaries. The diversified employment of China's armed
forces is legally guaranteed by formulating and revising relevant laws,
regulations and policies, and the armed forces are administered strictly
by rules and regulations.
II. Building and Development of China's Armed Forces
China's armed forces are composed of the People's Liberation Army
(PLA), the People's Armed Police Force (PAPF) and the militia. They play
a significant role in China's overall strategies of security and
development, and shoulder the glorious mission and sacred duty of
safeguarding national sovereignty, security and development interests.
Over the years, the PLA has been proactively and steadily pushing
forward its reforms in line with the requirements of performing its
missions and tasks, and building an informationized military. The PLA
has intensified the strategic administration of the Central Military
Commission (CMC). It established the PLA Department of Strategic
Planning, reorganized the GSH (Headquarters of the General Staff)
Communications Department as the GSH Informationization Department, and
the GSH Training and Arms Department as the GSH Training Department. The
PLA is engaged in the building of new types of combat forces. It
optimizes the size and structure of the various services and arms,
reforms the organization of the troops so as to make operational forces
lean, joint, multi-functional and efficient. The PLA works to improve
the training mechanism for military personnel of a new type, adjust
policies and rules regarding military human resources and logistics, and
strengthen the development of new- and high-technology weaponry and
equipment to build a modern military force structure with Chinese
characteristics.
The PLA Army (PLAA) is composed of mobile operational units, border
and coastal defense units, guard and garrison units, and is primarily
responsible for military operations on land. In line with the strategic
requirements of mobile operations and multi-dimensional offense and
defense, the PLAA has been reoriented from theater defense to
trans-theater mobility. It is accelerating the development of army
aviation troops, light mechanized units and special operations forces,
and enhancing building of digitalized units, gradually making its units
small, modular and multi-functional in organization so as to enhance
their capabilities for air-ground integrated operations, long-distance
maneuvers, rapid assaults and special operations. The PLAA mobile
operational units include 18 combined corps, plus additional independent
combined operational divisions (brigades), and have a total strength of
850,000. The combined corps, composed of divisions and brigades, are
respectively under the seven military area commands (MACs): Shenyang
(16th, 39th and 40th Combined Corps), Beijing (27th, 38th and 65th
Combined Corps), Lanzhou (21st and 47th Combined Corps), Jinan (20th,
26th and 54th Combined Corps), Nanjing (1st, 12th and 31st Combined
Corps), Guangzhou (41st and 42nd Combined Corps) and Chengdu (13th and
14th Combined Corps).
The PLA Navy (PLAN) is China's mainstay for operations at sea, and
is responsible for safeguarding its maritime security and maintaining
its sovereignty over its territorial seas along with its maritime rights
and interests. The PLAN is composed of the submarine, surface vessel,
naval aviation, marine corps and coastal defense arms. In line with the
requirements of its offshore defense strategy, the PLAN endeavors to
accelerate the modernization of its forces for comprehensive offshore
operations, develop advanced submarines, destroyers and frigates, and
improve integrated electronic and information systems. Furthermore, it
develops blue-water capabilities of conducting mobile operations,
carrying out international cooperation, and countering non-traditional
security threats, and enhances its capabilities of strategic deterrence
and counterattack. Currently, the PLAN has a total strength of 235,000
officers and men, and commands three fleets, namely, the Beihai Fleet,
the Donghai Fleet and the Nanhai Fleet. Each fleet has fleet aviation
headquarters, support bases, flotillas and maritime garrison commands,
as well as aviation divisions and marine brigades. In September 2012,
China's first aircraft carrier Liaoning was commissioned into the PLAN.
China's development of an aircraft carrier has a profound impact on
building a strong PLAN and safeguarding maritime security.
The PLA Air Force (PLAAF) is China's mainstay for air operations,
responsible for its territorial air security and maintaining a stable
air defense posture nationwide. It is primarily composed of aviation,
ground air defense, radar, airborne and electronic countermeasures (ECM)
arms. In line with the strategic requirements of conducting both
offensive and defensive operations, the PLAAF is strengthening the
development of a combat force structure that focuses on reconnaissance
and early warning, air strike, air and missile defense, and strategic
projection. It is developing such advanced weaponry and equipment as
new-generation fighters and new-type ground-to-air missiles and radar
systems, improving its early warning, command and communications
networks, and raising its strategic early warning, strategic deterrence
and long-distance air strike capabilities. The PLAAF now has a total
strength of 398,000 officers and men, and an air command in each of the
seven Military Area Commands (MACs) of Shenyang, Beijing, Lanzhou,
Jinan, Nanjing, Guangzhou and Chengdu. In addition, it commands one
airborne corps. Under each air command are bases, aviation divisions
(brigades), ground-to-air missile divisions (brigades), radar brigades
and other units.
The PLA Second Artillery Force (PLASAF) is a core force for China's
strategic deterrence. It is mainly composed of nuclear and conventional
missile forces and operational support units, primarily responsible for
deterring other countries from using nuclear weapons against China, and
carrying out nuclear counterattacks and precision strikes with
conventional missiles. Following the principle of building a lean and
effective force, the PLASAF is striving to push forward its
informationization transform, relying on scientific and technological
progress to boost independent innovations in weaponry and equipment,
modernizing current equipment selectively by applying mature technology,
enhancing the safety, reliability and effectiveness of its missiles,
improving its force structure of having both nuclear and conventional
missiles, strengthening its rapid reaction, effective penetration,
precision strike, damage infliction, protection and survivability
capabilities. The PLASAF capabilities of strategic deterrence, nuclear
counterattack and conventional precision strike are being steadily
elevated. The PLASAF has under its command missile bases, training
bases, specialized support units, academies and research institutions.
It has a series of "Dong Feng" ballistic missiles and "Chang Jian"
cruise missiles.
In peacetime, the PAPF's main tasks include performing guard
duties, dealing with emergencies, combating terrorism and participating
in and supporting national economic development. In wartime, it is
tasked with assisting the PLA in defensive operations. Based on the
national information infrastructure, the PAPF has built a three-level
comprehensive information network from PAPF general headquarters down to
squadrons. It develops task-oriented weaponry and equipment and
conducts scenario-based training so as to improve its guard-duty,
emergency-response and counter-terrorism capabilities. The PAPF is
composed of the internal security force and other specialized forces.
The internal security force is composed of contingents at the level of
province (autonomous region or municipality directly under the central
government) and mobile divisions. Specialized PAPF forces include those
guarding gold mines, forests, hydroelectric projects and transportation
facilities. The border public security, firefighting and security guard
forces are also components of the PAPF.
The militia is an armed organization composed of the people not
released from their regular work. As an assistant and backup force of
the PLA, the militia is tasked with participating in the socialist
modernization drive, performing combat readiness support and defensive
operations, helping maintain social order and participating in emergency
rescue and disaster relief operations. The militia focuses on
optimizing its size and structure, improving its weaponry and equipment,
and pushing forward reforms in training so as to enhance its
capabilities of supporting diversified military operations, of which the
core is to win local wars in informationized conditions. The militia
falls into two categories: primary and general. The primary militia has
emergency response detachments; supporting detachments such as joint air
defense, intelligence, reconnaissance, communications support,
engineering rush-repair, transportation and equipment repair; and
reserve units for combat, logistics and equipment support.
III. Defending National Sovereignty, Security and Territorial Integrity
The fundamental tasks of China's armed forces are consolidating
national defense, resisting foreign aggression and defending the
motherland. Responding to China's core security needs, the diversified
employment of the armed forces aims to maintain peace, contain crises
and win wars; safeguard border, coastal and territorial air security;
strengthen combat-readiness and warfighting-oriented exercises and
drills; readily respond to and resolutely deter any provocative action
which undermines China's sovereignty, security and territorial
integrity; and firmly safeguard China's core national interests.
Safeguarding Border and Coastal Security
With a borderline of more than 22,000 km and a coastline of more
than 18,000 km, China is one of the countries with the most neighbors
and the longest land borders. Among all China's islands, more than 6,500
are larger than 500 square meters each. China's island coastline is
over 14,000 km long. China's armed forces defend and exercise
jurisdiction over China's land borders and sea areas, and the task of
safeguarding border and coastal security is arduous and complicated.
The border and coastal defense forces of the PLAA are stationed in
border and coastal areas, and on islands. They are responsible for
defense and administrative tasks such as safeguarding the national
borders, coastlines and islands, resisting and guarding against foreign
invasions, encroachments and provocations, and assisting in cracking
down on terrorist sabotage and cross-border crimes. The border and
coastal defense forces focus on combat-readiness duties, strengthen the
defense and surveillance of major directions and sensitive areas,
watercourses and sea areas in border and coastal regions, maintain a
rigorous guard against any invasion, encroachment or cross-border
sabotage, prevent in a timely fashion any violation of border and
coastal policies, laws and regulations and changes to the current
borderlines, carry out civil-military joint control and management, and
emergency response missions promptly, and effectively safeguard the
security and stability of the borders and coastal areas.
China has signed border cooperation agreements with seven
neighboring countries, and established mechanisms with 12 countries for
border defense talks and meetings. The border and coastal defense forces
of the PLA promote friendly cooperation in joint patrols, guard duties
and joint control-management drills with their counterparts of Russia,
Kazakhstan, Mongolia and Vietnam, respectively. They also organize
annual mutual inspections to supervise and verify the implementation of
confidence-building measures in border areas with Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Russia and Tajikistan.
The PLAN strengthens maritime control and management,
systematically establishes patrol mechanisms, effectively enhances
situational awareness in surrounding sea areas, tightly guards against
various types of harassment, infiltration and sabotage activities, and
copes promptly with maritime and air incidents and emergencies. It
advances maritime security cooperation, and maintains maritime peace and
stability, as well as free and safe navigation. Within the framework of
the Military Maritime Consultative Agreement (MMCA), the Chinese and US
navies regularly exchange maritime information to avoid accidents at
sea. According to the Agreement on Joint Patrols by the Navies of China
and Vietnam in the Beibu Gulf, the two navies have organized joint
patrols twice a year since 2006.
The border public security force is an armed law-enforcement body
deployed by the state in border and coastal areas, and at ports. It
assumes important responsibilities of safeguarding national sovereignty,
and maintaining security and stability in border, coastal and sea
areas, as well as entry and exit order at ports. It carries out
diversified tasks of maintaining stability, combating crimes, conducting
emergency rescues and providing security in border areas. The border
public security force establishes border control zones along the
borderlines, establishes maritime defense zones in the coastal areas,
establishes border surveillance areas 20 to 50 meters in depth along
land border and coastline areas adjacent to Hong Kong and Macao, sets up
border inspection stations at open ports, and deploys a marine police
force in coastal areas. In recent years, regular strict inspections,
management and control in border areas and at ports have been carried
out to guard against and subdue separatist, sabotage, violent and
terrorist activities by the "three forces" or hostile individuals. The
border public security force takes strict and coordinated measures
against cross-border fishing activities, strengthens law enforcement by
maritime security patrols, and clamps down on maritime offenses and
crimes. Since 2011, it has handled 47,445 cases, seized 12,357 kg of
drugs, confiscated 125,115 illegal guns, and tracked down 5,607 illegal
border-crossers.
The militia takes an active part in combat readiness duties, joint
military-police-civilian defense efforts, post duties, and border
protection and control tasks in the border and coastal areas. Militia
members patrol along the borders and coastlines all year round.
Safeguarding Territorial Air Security
The PLAAF is the mainstay of national territorial air defense, and
in accordance with the instructions of the CMC, the PLAA, PLAN and PAPF
all undertake some territorial air defense responsibilities. In
peacetime, the chain of command of China' s air defense runs from the
PLAAF headquarters through the air commands of the military area
commands to air defense units. The PLAAF exercises unified command over
all air defense components in accordance with the CMC's intent. China's
air defense system is composed of six sub-systems of reconnaissance and
surveillance, command and control, aerial defense, ground air defense,
integrated support and civil air defense. China has established an air
defense force system that integrates reconnaissance and early warning,
resistance, counterattack and protection. For air situation awareness
means, air detection radars and early warning aircraft are the mainstay,
supplemented by technical and ECM reconnaissance. For resistance means,
fighters, fighter-bombers, ground-to-air missiles and antiaircraft
artillery troops are the mainstay, supplemented by the strengths from
the PLAA air defense force, militia and reserves, as well as civil air
defense. For integrated protection means, various protection works and
strengths are the mainstay, supplemented by specialized technical
protection forces.
The PLAAF organizes the following routine air defense tasks:
reconnaissance and early warning units are tasked with monitoring air
situations in China's territorial air space and surrounding areas and
keeping abreast of air security threats. Command organs at all levels
are tasked with assuming routine combat readiness duties with the
capital as the core, and border and coastal areas as the key, and
commanding air defense operations at all times. Routine air defense
troops on combat duty are tasked with carrying out air vigilance and
patrols at sea, conducting counter-reconnaissance in border areas and
verifying abnormal and unidentified air situations within the territory.
The air control system is tasked with monitoring, controlling and
maintaining air traffic order so as to ensure flight safety.
Maintaining Constant Combat Readiness
Combat readiness refers to the preparations and alert activities of
the armed forces for undertaking operational tasks and MOOTW, and it is
the general, comprehensive and regular work of the armed forces. It is
an important guarantee for coping with various security threats and
accomplishing diversified military tasks to enhance the capabilities of
combat readiness and maintain constant combat readiness. The PLA has a
regular system of combat readiness. It improves infrastructure for
combat readiness, carries out scenario-oriented drills, and earnestly
organizes alert duties, border, coastal and air defense patrols and
guard duties. It keeps itself prepared for undertaking operational tasks
and MOOTW at all times. Based on different tasks, the troops assume
different levels of readiness (Level III, Level II and Level I, from the
lowest degree of alertness to the highest).
The routine combat readiness work of the PLAA serves to maintain
normal order in border areas and protect national development
achievements. Relying on the operational command organs and command
information system, it strengthens the integration of combat readiness
duty elements, explores joint duty probability within a theater, and
optimizes the combat readiness duty system in operational troops at and
above the regiment level. It ensures the implementation of combat
readiness work through institutionalized systems and mechanisms. It
creates a combat readiness system with inter-connected strategic
directions, combined arms and systematized operational support. Thus,
the PLAA keeps sound combat readiness with agile maneuvers and effective
response. The routine combat readiness work of the PLAN serves to
safeguard national territorial sovereignty and maritime rights and
interests. It carries out diversified patrols and provides whole-area
surveillance in a cost-effective way. The PLAN organizes and performs
regular combat readiness patrols, and maintains a military presence in
relevant sea areas. All fleets maintain the necessary number of ships
patrolling in areas under their respective command, beef up naval
aviation reconnaissance patrols, and organize mobile forces to conduct
patrols and surveillance in relevant sea areas, as required. The PLAAF
focuses its daily combat readiness on territorial air defense. It
follows the principles of applicability in both peacetime and wartime,
all-dimension response and full territorial reach, and maintains a
vigilant and efficient combat readiness. It organizes air alert patrols
on a regular basis to verify abnormal and unidentified air situations
promptly. The PLAAF command alert system takes PLAAF command posts as
the core, field command posts as the basis, and aviation and ground air
defense forces on combat duty as the pillar.
The PLASAF keeps an appropriate level of readiness in peacetime. It
pursues the principles of combining peacetime needs with wartime needs,
maintaining vigilance all the time and being ready to fight. It has
formed a complete system for combat readiness and set up an integrated,
functional, agile and efficient operational duty system to ensure rapid
and effective responses to war threats and emergencies. If China comes
under a nuclear threat, the nuclear missile force will act upon the
orders of the CMC, go into a higher level of readiness, and get ready
for a nuclear counterattack to deter the enemy from using nuclear
weapons against China. If China comes under a nuclear attack, the
nuclear missile force of the PLASAF will use nuclear missiles to launch a
resolute counterattack either independently or together with the
nuclear forces of other services. The conventional missile force is able
to shift instantly from peacetime to wartime readiness, and conduct
conventional medium- and long-range precision strikes.
Carrying out Scenario-based Exercises and Drills
The PLA takes scenario-based exercises and drills as the basic
means to accelerate the transition in military training and raise combat
capabilities. It widely practices in training such operational concepts
in conditions of informationization as information dominance,
confrontation between different systems, precision strike, fusion,
integration and jointness. It organizes training based on real combat
needs, formations and procedures. It pays special attention to
confrontational command training, live independent force-on-force
training and training in complex battlefield environments. Thus, the
warfighting capabilities based on information systems have been
thoroughly improved.
Carrying out trans-MAC training. To develop rapid-response and
joint-operation capabilities in unfamiliar environments and complex
conditions, the divisions and brigades of the same specialty with
similar tasks and tailored operational environments are organized to
carry out a series of trans-MAC live verification-oriented exercises and
drills in the combined tactical training bases. In 2009, the Shenyang,
Lanzhou, Jinan and Guangzhou MACs each sent one division to join
long-distance maneuvers and confrontational drills. Since 2010, a series
of campaign-level exercises and drills code-named "Mission Action" for
trans-MAC maneuvers have been carried out. Specifically, in 2010 the
Beijing, Lanzhou and Chengdu MACs each sent one division (brigade) led
by corps headquarters, together with some PLAAF units, to participate in
the exercise. In 2011, relevant troops from the Chengdu and Jinan MACs
were organized and carried out the exercise in plateau areas. In 2012,
the Chengdu, Jinan and Lanzhou MACs and relevant PLAAF troops were
organized and carried out the exercise in southwestern China.
Highlighting force-on-force training. The various services and arms
are intensifying confrontational and verification-oriented exercises
and drills. Based on different scenarios, they organize live
force-on-force exercises, online confrontational exercises and
computer-simulation confrontational exercises. The PLAAF creates complex
battlefield environments based on its training bases, organizes
confrontational exercises on "Red-Blue" war systems under
informationized conditions, either between MAC air forces or between a
combined "Blue Team" and MAC air force ("Red Team"). The Second
Artillery Forces carry out confrontational training of reconnaissance
vs. counter-reconnaissance, jamming vs. counter-jamming, and precision
strikes vs. protection and counterattack, in complex battlefield
environments. They are strengthening safety protection and operational
skills training under nuclear, biological and chemical (NBC) threats.
Units of different missile types are organized to conduct live-firing
launching tasks annually.
Intensifying blue water training. The PLAN is improving the
training mode of task force formation in blue water. It organizes the
training of different formations of combined task forces composed of new
types of destroyers, frigates, ocean-going replenishment ships and
shipborne helicopters. It is increasing its research and training on
tasks in complex battlefield environments, highlighting the training of
remote early warning, comprehensive control, open sea interception,
long-range raid, anti-submarine warfare and vessel protection at distant
sea. The PLAN organizes relevant coastal forces to carry out live
force-on-force training for air defense, anti-submarine, anti-mine,
anti-terrorism, anti-piracy, coastal defense, and island and reef
sabotage raids. Since 2007, the PLAN has conducted training in the
distant sea waters of the Western Pacific involving over 90 ships in
nearly 20 batches. During the training, the PLAN took effective measures
to respond to foreign close-in reconnaissance and illegal interference
activities by military ships and aircraft. From April to September 2012,
the training vessel Zhenghe completed global-voyage training, paying
port calls to 14 countries and regions.