China's Defense/Military Breaking News Thread

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sandyj

Junior Member
Anti-Radiation "Harpy" Drone Launch Vehicle

The first picture of a Harpy UAV launch vehicle carrying multiple box launchers in service with PLAAF is shown here. Acquired secretly from Israel, the service of this highly classified weapon was unknown to the West until 2004. Developed by IAI in the early 90s, Harpy is the first UAV which features a passive radar seeker and can be used as a long-range anti-radiation weapon to attack enemy radar stations. Its range is 500km, max speed 185km/hr, warhead 32kg.

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sandyj

Junior Member
Chinese Army Hit With PTSD Epidemic

Chinese Army Hit With PTSD Epidemic
June 18, 2008:

In the wake of the relief efforts for the recent earthquakes in China, army doctors find themselves faced with thousands of soldiers exhibiting strange symptoms. These include severe fatigue, shortness of breath, palpitations, headaches, excessive sweating, dizziness, disturbed sleep, fainting and flashbacks to traumatic situations encountered during the weeks of working in the earthquake zone (where nearly 100,000 people died). A few of the army doctors recognized the symptoms as PTSD (Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder). It's been three decades since Chinese soldiers experienced combat, and there are only stories left of its after-effects. Some of the oldest NCOs and officers vaguely remember, when they first entered military service, hearing about veterans of the 1979 battles on the Vietnamese border, suffering from combat fatigue.

PTSD is not unusual for relief workers at the site of particularly horrendous disasters. The recent earthquakes in central China were the kind of disaster that only occurs every generation or two. And this was the first one in which so many troops were mobilized, so quickly, to help out. Thus many of these soldiers saw the aftereffects when they were still fresh, and at their most horrific. Chinese doctors are consulting the growing body of medical knowledge and research on PTSD, particularly work done in the U.S. to treat the many soldiers exposed to the stress of working in wartime Iraq. Chinese military doctors estimate that up to 20 percent of the soldiers who performed relief duty in the earthquake zone, now have PTSD. Many civilian workers are similarly affected, and also need treatment.
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
sandyj, Thank you for your contributions to our forum! Please do not start a new thread for news articles such as this one above. Please post in the proper thread.
 

crobato

Colonel
VIP Professional
Saw this in the CMF but I can't find the original source article for the moment.


The rise of another Red army
By John Lee

Following the crackdown on Tibetan protesters in March, Chinese President Hu Jintao issued a call for "greater security guarantees" against protesters and other disruptive forces in the run up to the Summer Olympic Games to be held in August.

At the same time, the official news bulletin of the People's Armed Police (PAP) informed its troops that a "political mobilization order" had gone out demanding that internal security and domestic order was paramount leading up to and during the Games. According to the People's Armed Police News bulletin in April, "The drums of war are sounding; a decisive battle is at hand. For the sake of the Chinese nation's image and for the

honor of the PAP, let us never forget our duty."

The "duty" of the approximately 800,000 Chinese PAP troops, the majority designated for "domestic security" roles, recently caught the attention of China-watchers. Reports surfaced in prominent American and European press outlets that the blue track-suited Olympic flame "attendants" were drawn from the PAP - the same organization that led the crackdown of protesters in Tibet [1].

In January 2006, two senior PAP generals published an article in the influential magazine Qiushi (Seeking Truth) stating that the PAP should "become an extremely combat-effective force to deal with sudden incidents". Many China-watchers had previously focused most of their attention on the People's Liberation Army (PLA), arguing that the process of the PLA becoming a modern, professional army of the state rather than one dealing with domestic problems and serving the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) was evolving albeit slowly.

Analysts knew that many PAP troops, possibly around half, were composed of former PLA personnel drawn from fourteen divisions during the latter's downsizing from the 1990s onwards. But even if the PAP received the unwanted "dregs" of the PLA, as some experts quipped, little was known about this more secretive entity.

In the short to medium term, domestic instability rather than external threats constitute the greater threat to the regime. According to the latest official figures, there were 87,000 instances of unrest (defined as involving 15 or more people) in 2005. Under Article 22 of the National Defense Law, the PAP is charged with "maintaining public order". Evidence is slowly emerging that although funding, planning, and operational control over the PAP is complicated - reflecting the struggle for influence by different institutions within the Chinese system - the PAP is quickly becoming the primary domestic coercive instrument of CCP rank and file officials.

Since the Tiananmen protests in 1989, the PLA has been reluctant to become the main arm called upon to enforce domestic stability, preferring instead to remold itself into a professional, externally-orientated force. Meanwhile, any hopes that the PLA is evolving into a fiercely nationalistic and assertive but apolitical "state army" must be tempered by the evolution of the PAP as the "party's army".

PAP and the PLA
Even though the PLA and PAP are deemed to be legally separate entities, the PAP is often seen as under the control of the PLA. This is due to the formal and informal influence that the PLA exerts over the PAP.

First, hundreds of thousands of PAP personnel were drawn directly from dismantled divisions within the PLA. Today's PAP is modeled after the army in terms of ranks, structure and guiding concepts. Regulations that apply to the PLA similarly apply to the PAP. Both implement the Military Service Law of the country, and PAP troops enjoy the same benefits as PLA troops. Almost thirty PAP officers have been promoted to the rank of major general. The culture within the PAP is a distinctly "military".

Second, even though the PAP is responsible for internal security, its personnel are frequently asked to cooperate with the PLA in military operations and exercises [2]. The distinction between internal and external operations is sometimes unclear.

Third, personnel management in the PAP is centralized rather than localized. This means that as the leaders within China's messy but interlinked security network of military, paramilitary and militia forces, senior PLA officers play an enormous role in the appointment and even promotion of PAP personnel [3].

Becoming the 'party's army'
Officially, the PAP remains under the joint leadership of the Central Military Commission (CMC) and State Council. The 1997 National Defense Law explicitly states that the armed forces (which include the PLA, PAP, militia and reserves) are subordinate to the "state". Only in one clause - Article 19 - does it mention the party: "The armed forces of the People's Republic of China are subject to leadership by the Communist Party, and CCP organizations in the armed forces shall conduct activities in accordance with the CCP constitution."

This tension between loyalty to the state and loyalty to the party is nothing new for China watchers. It is a tension that analysts looking at the PLA have pointed to for decades. But even as China's leaders and its senior generals eagerly brand the PLA as becoming more professional and "apolitical", the evidence that the PAP primarily remains the party's organ is strong. The culture, internal structure, and training of the PAP might mirror the PLA but financial, structural, and operational realities are pushing the PAP closer towards the party.

Funding the PAP
Financially, the salaries and operational expenses of PAP personnel are paid by central and local government budgets rather than that of the military. Centrally, funding is coordinated through the Ministry of Finance and Ministry of Public Security.

Since the mid-1990s, the funding situation has become much more complex. According to Ministry of Finance figures, local authorities are gradually bearing more and more of the costs for expenditure by the PAP. In 1996, the local share was only around 2.5%, rising to 10% in 2003 [4]. In 2006, it was estimated to be around 15%.

In China today, central authorities only collect and dispense around one quarter of all fiscal spending. Local governments account for the other three quarters [5]. Due to the fact that local PAP officers tend to offer obedience and favors to local officials in return for receiving extra funds officially and unofficially, it is certain that the official Ministry of Finance figures are overly conservative.

Controlling the PAP from the bottom-up
Many analysts focus on the statements of China's central leaders (for example President Hu Jintao and Meng Jianzhu who heads the Ministry of Public Security) to gauge developments in the country's armed and security forces. However, as far as the PAP is concerned, the focus should be at the provincial and lower levels. The greater financial burden borne by local budgets is significant. It is symptomatic of a general shift toward decentralization of many of the state's functions which actually enhance and entrench the role of local CCP officials and their de facto control networks over state organs such as the PAP.

There are three levels to the PAP leadership structure: general headquarters (central), contingent (provincial levels), and detachment (county levels). In terms of overall operations and capacity building, the general headquarters is under the leadership of the Ministry of Public Security. There is a PAP command office in every province and territory. At the provincial level, a garrison command office is established that includes the leaders of local public security officials as well as leaders of local PAP units. These garrisons are obligated to follow the "directions" of the local PLA Garrison Command Headquarters. However, the implementation of these "directions" are left to the discretion of local PAP and local public security leaders.

If this "joint leadership" system sounds confusing, it is. Even though one purpose of reform was to create a more vertical command structure such that CMC control over local PAP units would be more effective, the chain of command is seemingly as unclear now as it was before Tiananmen. Although there is very little official material on how these reforms have worked in practice, piecemeal and anecdotal local sources indicate that CCP officials continue to exercise a great deal of influence when it

comes to the de facto command and control of PAP units - even in instances when martial law is used [6].

This first came to light very publicly when PAP forces, at the behest of local officials, opened fire at protesters in Shanwei, Guangdong province, in December 2005 [7]. Local officials initially ordered forces to fire tear gas into a crowd of protesters. These officials then unilaterally gave the order to fire live rounds as the protests continued. Witnesses reported at least twenty people dead and up to fifty people missing [8]. Although the official who gave the order to fire live rounds was later reprimanded by higher authorities due to intense public pressure, there was little change to procedure. Local officials still retained the right to issue these orders to local PAP units. Indeed, the delegation of authority to

local officials to selectively deploy force in the face of unrest was subsequently outlined in internal security strategy manuals in 2006.

Predictably, there have been constant complaints by Chinese citizens that local officials use PAP troops for extra-legal purposes such as tax and debt recovery, and land seizures. For example, the PAP was used to break up a large protest against illegal land grabs in Sanjiao, Guangdong province, in January 2006 [9]. In May 2007, more than 1,500 PAP troops were used to break up a 20,000-strong protest against corrupt officials in Hunan province.

This temptation to use the PAP as a coercive instrument to entrench one's rule within a de facto kingdom is immense. Local CCP leaders have a huge informational advantage over the central leadership who have little other formal sources of information other than what local authorities reveal. It is difficult for central authorities to prove that local officials have abused their power or over-reacted when ordering any coercive action.

In reality, China's provincial and local leaders have long had enormous discretion given the size and population of the country combined with the relative lack of institutions to guide public decision making and enforce top-down accountability. As an old Chinese proverb states: "Heaven is high and the emperor is far away."

Outside major urban centers where most instances of unrest occur, central authorities have no choice but to hand over authority to local officials to instruct PAP troops and other law enforcement authorities [10]. Only local officials are able to respond quickly in order to quell any unrest. According to one expert, "Some localities have degenerated into private fiefdoms run by local party officials [11]." What frequently occurs is a decentralized and even feudal-like system of enforcing social order.

Moreover, increasingly frequent calls by President Hu Jintao and other Politiburo Standing Committee leaders to work towards a "harmonious society" and target social disorder as the top priority serves to hand more power and leeway to local officials with regard to the use of PAP troops. Local officials simply justify their deployment of armed police as a decisive response, as nipping potentially dangerous instances of unrest in the bud. Removing the right for local officials to immediately deploy PAP troops at their discretion would risk the inflammation of any one of the tens of thousands of incidents of unrest into a major event.

Finally, despite some attempts at reversing the decentralization of many state functions over the past decade, China's central leaders have little choice but to continue to support local officials in order to prolong the survival of the CCP as rulers. Beijing relies on local party officials to represent its authority and preserve the CCP's interests.

Over time, these local officials build up powerful connections with influential members and organizations within their communities, and become well entrenched. The now emerging story of Zhang Zhiguo, the local party boss who ran Xifeng county in Liaoning province like his own kingdom for five years with impunity, is "very typical of China" according to one of its local lawyers Su Chunyu.

Key to Zhang's power was collusion with heads of the local Public Security Bureau and other law enforcement authorities. This is "typical of the way politics works", says Su. Zhang was finally sacked only because he sparked widespread outrage when it was revealed he sent local authorities 960 kilometers to arrest a journalist in Beijing who had written an article criticizing his rule.

Conclusion
There is a happy coincidence of interests on all sides that the PAP should become the unofficial coercive instrument for the Party. The PLA, with help from the Propaganda Department, has relentlessly tried to restore the image of China's military as the peoples' army since the 1989 Tiananmen protests. Being seen to be cracking down on its own people would be a backward step. The central leadership is eager to avoid giving the impression that they are dependent on the PLA to maintain national order and stability.

Better to use a distinct organization such as the PAP and avoid incurring too much political debt owing to the PLA at the same time. For provincial and local Party members, access to the PAP is needed to maintain social stability and entrench their own rule in their localities. Arguably, the PAP is frequently used to legitimately enforce social order. But when the source of disorder is dissatisfaction with these same officials, self-serving deployment of the armed police is inevitable. Effectively, preserving the power of local CCP officials - incompetent and corrupt or otherwise - is becoming a primary "duty" of the PAP.
 

Finn McCool

Captain
Registered Member
Beijing gets ground-to-air defense By STEPHEN WADE, AP Sports Writer
2 hours, 28 minutes ago



BEIJING - China has stationed a battery of ground-to-air missiles just 300 yards from a Beijing Olympic venue, the latest sign of tightening security with the games just 6 1/2 weeks away.

The fenced-off military compound has been set up just south of the Olympic Sports Center Stadium, a venue for soccer and modern pentathlon. It's also within a half mile of the Water Cube and the Bird's Nest National Stadium, the $450 million showpiece venue of the games.

At least two Hongqi 7 missile launchers were visible behind a 7-foot fence, with military hardware and vehicles hidden under camouflage netting. Dozen of soldiers guarded the compound on Tuesday with a notice posted on the fence: "Military Administrative District No Admittance."

The Beijing Olympics are intended to showcase the country's rising political and economic power. But the intense media scrutiny is also giving environmentalists and political activists with grievances a potential stage for protest, which could lead to a public-relations disaster for the image-conscious communist government.

The Athens Olympics four years ago were also under tight security with Patriot anti-aircraft missiles stationed around the city. Those games came just three years after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the United States.

China has beefed up security efforts since deadly rioting in Tibet broke out on March 14, followed by pro-Tibet protests on international legs of the torch relay.

On at least three occasions this year, authorities say they foiled plots by separatists from Xinjiang — the far western, Muslim-dominated region of China — that targeted the Olympics. The plots included alleged attempts to crash an airliner and kidnap athletes and journalists.

Little evidence has been provided, however, and many foreign security experts question the scale of the threat while rights groups say Beijing may be using terrorism as cover for crackdowns on legitimate peaceful dissent.

Last week Beijing said it had mobilized a 100,000-strong anti-terrorism force to guard against Olympic threats. Police commandos, specialist units and regular army troops made up the force. It also included the paramilitary Snow Wolf Commando Unit, which will handle terrorist alerts and public unrest during the Aug. 8-24 games.

China has toughened visa rules ahead of the games, targeting students and business officials who travel frequently to the country. This has been coupled with frequent sweeps of areas where foreigners live, with police checking documents and residence permits.

With less then two months before the start of the games, TV broadcasters remain embroiled in a fight with Chinese organizers over coverage away from the sports venues. They say they may be hindered from moving freely around the city and reporting the games, a promise Beijing made when it was awarded the games seven years ago.

Interesting decision to put a battery of HQ-7 right next to the main venues like that.
 

Pointblank

Senior Member
Interesting decision to put a battery of HQ-7 right next to the main venues like that.

Not surprising, the 2002 G-8 Kananaskis summit was guarded by a battery of ADATS missiles. Surely for a event this big and with such high profile, a high level of security is needed.
 

Finn McCool

Captain
Registered Member
Not surprising, the 2002 G-8 Kananaskis summit was guarded by a battery of ADATS missiles. Surely for a event this big and with such high profile, a high level of security is needed.

They had Patriots at the Athens Olympics. It just surprises me that they would station the missles right there, next to the main stadiums, where there will be thousands of foreign visitors. I would think that they would station them in some place less conspicuous, like on the outskirts of the city. Or maybe even just have a CAP of fighters overhead, flying subsonic as not to cause too much noise.
 
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