US Combatant Commands With Chinese Flare: The PLA’s New Joint Command Structure
A China specialist and a military strategist discuss The PLA’s emerging command structure.
By Ben Lowsen and Wilson VornDick
November 06, 2017
China’s nascent joint military command construct is a marked departure from its previous form and appears to have many of the trappings of the U.S. geographic combatant command (CCMD or formerly COCOM) structure. But are they true doppelgängers? The Diplomat published a description of latest Chinese reforms last year. Even as the reforms complete their second year, however, we are only beginning to see how they operate in practice. Can we call them an American-inspired combatant command with Chinese characteristics? Or is this inappropriate mirror imaging? In the conversation below, two military writers, strategist Wilson VornDick and China specialist Ben Lowsen, discuss these questions.
Wilson: The Trump Administration released its latest revision of the Unified Command Plan, one of many iterations since the command structure was introduced by the Truman Administration in 1947. As the new plan includes the upgrade of U.S. Cyber Command (USCYBERCOM) to the status of a functional, 4-star combatant command (COCOM), it is worth considering in what ways the Chinese Command structure, reformed in 2016, mirrors the American COCOM structure. Indeed, both seek to ensure military and political power is more centralized and responsive. However, while America’s global plan has been in effect for over seven decades, overseen by its geographic combatant commands, it is unclear how and to what extent China’s formal military command and control structure will manifest itself outside the confines of the Middle Kingdom. This is especially important as China expands its military reach across the globe with military interests in the South China Sea, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, the Maldives, and Djibouti. Are both nations command structures mirror images or is China’s new structure an American-inspired combatant command with Chinese characteristics?
Ben: As for your comparison of command structures, I think it is an instructive one. China pays very close attention to developments in U.S. security, to the point that at times it can feel like they are copying our homework. The development of the PLAAF J-10, the PLA Army switching to a brigade-based structure, and PLAN development of carrier groups – all these things have direct U.S. counterparts. We often speak of Beijing’s asymmetric challenge and PLA watchers commonly warn us to avoid mirror imaging assumptions about ourselves onto the PLA – and to be sure these are important points to consider – but in the case of China’s force development (called military building or jianjun/建军in Chinese), we should not close our eyes to the fact of Chinese borrowing.
Regarding China’s growing global reach, its involvement in developing countries may have won it resources and made friends of certain local leaders, but it remains to be seen whether its manner of interaction is sustainable. I suspect there are a number of reputational bills coming due, for example in Ghana, although it is ultimately up to the people of each country how much they will put up with.
Wilson: These are salient observations. From a command and control perspective, it appears China has now aligned its forces to provide more integrated operational and functional support with a focus on logistics, specialized support forces, and strategic deterrence and response forces that line up closely with three of America’s own functional combatant commands: U.S. Transportation Command (USTRANSCOM), USCYBERCOM, and U.S. Strategic Command (USSTRATCOM) respectively.
Ben: The reformed PLA command structure bears a striking resemblance to the U.S. post-Goldwater-Nichols force. Of course, some allowances were needed to account for the PLA being constituted under the authority of the Central Military Commission (CMC, itself a committee of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party) instead of under the Ministry of National Defense. But within the limits of a ‘Party’ Army, the PLA has made significant progress in establishing what may one day be a truly joint force. Here are three to consider:
First, the formerly “independent kingdoms” of manning, training, and equipping functions have been brought squarely under the control of China’s national command authority, the CMC, with the new Joint Staff Department at the head of an enlarged pack of what are essentially smaller bureaus.
Second, the PLA has established new service and functional headquarters beneath the CMC departments: designated the PLA Army for its ground forces, transformed the Second Artillery into the PLA Rocket Force, stood-up a cyber and space command with the PLA Strategic Support Force (PLASSF), and formed a Joint Logistics Support Force, the junior partner among the functional services. I think we need more information about PLSSF, though. It is a new and apparently quite extensive organization and I’m not sure a direct comparison with USCYBERCOM covers enough ground.
Third, the CMC has reformed its regional service commands from the seven former Military Regions and three Fleets into five joint Theater Commands (TCs) that control their respective PLAA, PLAAF, and PLAN regional service commands. This structure closely mirrors the American COCOM system, including the inherent friction over control between the newly formed TC’s and the services.
There is, however, one notable difference between the American and Chinese command construct. The three Chinese fleets have themselves become the Navy theater service command component, whereas the U.S. Navy’s numbered fleets, which are subordinate to a Joint Force Maritime Component Commander, are divided up among the various geographical COCOMs, such as the 5th Fleet under USCENTCOM.
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