Stride--2009--- China's Largest Ever
Long-Range Military Exercise
By B. Raman
Four Divisions of
the People's Liberation Army (PLA) of China
with a total strength of about 50,000
troops and drawn from the Shenyang, Lanzhou,
Jinan and Guangzhou military regions have
embarked on a military exercise code-named
Stride--- 2009 since August 11,2009. The
exercise is due to last for two months. The
exercise has been projected by the "Global
Times" (August 12,2009) as China's largest
ever, long-range military exercise.
2. Under this
exercise, a Division of the Shenyang
Military Region in the North-East will move
to the Lanzhou Military Region in the
North-West and a Division from the Lanzhou
Region will move to the Shenyang Region.
Similarly, two Divisions from the Jinan
and the Guangzhou military Regions will
exchange places. It is not clear from
available details carried by the Government
and Party controlled Chinese media whether
the four Divisions will remain in their new
place of deployment after the exercise or
they will move back to their original place
of deployment.
3. The objective
of the exercise has been described as to
test the ability of the Divisions to move
rapidly from an area where they were raised
and trained to an area to which they were
not used. The objective is also to train the
troops to fight anywhere, anytime and under
any conditions. The exercise will also test
the ability of the troops to deal with
natural disasters in any part of the
country. Another important aim is to test
the new road, rail and air infrastructure
raised by China in recent years and examine
their capacity to support such large-scale
movements without causing much inconvenience
to the civilian population
4. The Lanzhou
Military Region, one of the seven military
regions of China, has under its
jurisdiction Xinjiang, Qinghai, Gansu,
Ningxia, and Shaanxi and the Ali area of
northwest Tibet. The Shenyang Military
region covers the Liaoning, Jilin, and
Heilongiang provinces. It plays an important
role in the security of Beijing as well as
of the areas bordering on the Russian Far
East and North Korea. The Jinan Military
region covers the Shandong and Henan
provinces. It is responsible for security in
one of the most heavily populated and
industrialised areas of China. The Guangzhou
Military region covers the Guangdong,
Guangxi, Hunan, Hebei and Hainan provinces.
Inter alia, it is responsible for the
security of Hong Kong and its Divisions are
specially trained for possible military
operations against Taiwan.
5. The three
Regions not participating in the exercise
are the Beijing, the Nanjing and the Chengdu
Military Regions. The Beijing Military
Region covers Beijing city, Tianjin city,
the Hebei province, the Shanxi province, and
the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. It is
mainly responsible for defending China from
Mongolia and Russia, and also provides
security to Beijing. The Nanjing Military
Region covers the Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Anhui,
Fujian, and Jiangxi provinces. It is the
principal Military Region responsible for
operations against Taiwan in the event of a
military conflct. Most of the missile units
facing Taiwan are believed to be under its
control. The Chengdu Military Region covers
the Chongqing, Sichuan, Yunnan, Guizhou
provinces and the Xizang/Tibet Autonomous
Region. It is responsible for security in
Tibet and for protecting the border regions
with India, Nepal and Myanmar.
6. Thus while the
Military Regions responsible for security in
Tibet and Beijing and for military
operations in Taiwan have not been disturbed
during the exercise, the Military Region
responsible for security in the
recently-disturbed Xinjiang province gas
been. One would have thought that the
Chinese would be interested in testing the
capacity of the newly-laid railway line to
Lhasa and the road infrastructure in Tibet
to support large-scale and rapid military
movements. While the non-participation of
the Nanjing Military Region has been seen by
Chinese commentators as a
confidence-building measure at a time when
Beijing's relations with Taiwan are
improving, no explanation has been
forthcoming for the non-participation of the
Chengdu Military Region. One is tempted to
speculate whether this has been motivated by
a desire not to cause undue alarm in India.
7. Citing the
Government-controlled Xinhua news agency,
the "Global Times" reported as follows:
“This is the first cross-region long-range
training maneuver involving troops from four
military area commands,” an anonymous
(unidentified) officer at the PLA
Headquarters of General Staff was quoted by
Xinhua as saying. “The exercise is to test
the overall combat capability and long-range
mobility of our army in information-based
situations,” he said. According to the
plan, 80 per cent of the 50,000 troops and
60,000 weapons, equipment and vehicles will
be transported to the target area by railway
and motorized maneuvers. Civil passenger and
cargo aircraft will be deployed for the
first time to transport troops and weapons.
The drill marks a huge breakthrough in the
history of Chinese military training, in
which the armies are crossing geographical
boundaries to fight in unfamiliar areas, a
military specialist in Beijing surnamed Chen
told the Global Times. “The capability for
greater coordination, joint operations and
long-range force projection will be tested,”
Chen said."
8. The paper
added: "Nanjing Military Area Command, one
of the seven military commands in China and
covering areas close to Taiwan, was not
included in the drill. Military experts
interpreted the absence of Nanjing Military
Command as “the mainland showing goodwill to
Taiwan,” Taiwan-based newspaper China Times
reported. “This is a friendly gesture from
the mainland toward Taiwan and shows
cross-Straits relations have further eased
up,” Li Daguang, a military expert from the
National Defense University told the Global
Times. Unlike previous military drills, this
exercise has not prompted wild speculations
by military watchers."
9. It further
said: "Since early May, when the PLA
Headquarters of the General Staff publicized
the information on the planned military
drill, foreign media carried factual reports
on the military drill, a change from their
previous critical or speculative tone. “As
the Chinese army is more and more open to
the outside world, the mysteries of the army
will be unveiled. And there will be fewer
and fewer false reports to speculate on the
threatening effect of Chinese military
drills,” Li said. In addition, the drill
aims to test the army’s capacity to cope
with large-scale natural disasters. It is
not merely for military purposes, he added."
10. China will
be observing in a big way the 60th
anniversary of the People's Republic of
China in October. One would have thought
that in the weeks preceding this event they
would not disturb four Divisions from their
present areas of deployment so that they are
available for any emergency if political,
ethnic or religious dissidents try to create
disturbances. It is a fact that the Chinese
have been concerned over the possibility of
such disturbances in Tibet and Xinjiang.
Since April, they have strengthened
preventive measures in those areas. These
have been further strengthened in Xinjiang
after the Urumqi disturbances in the first
week of July. The fact that the Chinese are
going ahead with this exercise involving
four Divisions reflects their present
confidence in their ability to deal with any
disturbances that might break out even
without the use of these Divisions.
11. The
possibility that the long-term significance
of this exercise may not be confined to only
Chinese territory and may extend beyond its
borders is evident from an editorial on the
exercise carried by the "Global Times" on
August 12 under the title "Build An Army
That Suits Modern Requirement". The text of
the editorial is annexed.
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New
Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute
For Topical Studies, Chennai. He is also
associated with the Chennai Centre For China
Studies. E-mail: seventyone-2@gmail.com)
ANNEXURE
Text of the
editorial carried by the "Global Times" on
August 12,2009
Build an army
that suits modern requirements
“In war it’s
speed that counts,” the traditional Chinese
military wisdom goes. The real deterrent
capability of a military force isn’t based
on its scale, but rather the combat force it
can deliver to a strategic location at the
key moment.
Now, the
“Stride-2009” military drill, the first
massive cross-military areas drill in the
history of the People’s Liberation Army,
will test the Chinese military’s
long-distance deployment capability.
A large-scale
exercise will be conducted by some 50,000
PLA soldiers, air force members and army
aviators. The exercise will include more
than 60,000 heavy military vehicles and
equipment.
Throughout
history, the Chinese army followed a
conservative strategy of territorial
defense. Long-distance deployment and
strategic maneuvers capability are the
weakest link in its overall strength.
Overseas military deployment has also been
consciously shunned by China in the past,
since it was seen as representing
colonialization. China was once proud of
having no soldiers deployed on foreign soil.
But this
conception has started to change, as the
expansion of Chinese interests overseas has
required that long-distance military
deployment capability be strengthened.
China’s national interests have increasingly
grown beyond its geographic boundary.
While Chinese commodities and business are
going global, the country is also relying
more on foreign supplies of energy to fuel
its fast economic growth. Securing strategic
sea routes through which vital resources are
transported is an important mission of the
modern Chinese military.
Meanwhile, as a
rising power expected to take more
responsibility, Chinese military force needs
to be commensurate with China’s growing role
in the international community. It must be
prepared to participate in missions such as
global anti-terrorism efforts, anti-pirate
strikes, and disaster-relief tasks.
Ever-complicated
domestic emergencies have also demanded fast
responses by the military. The rescue
efforts after the Wenchuan earthquake and
the snowstorm disaster in southern China
last year both show the critical importance
of the ability to conduct long-distance
strategic maneuvers. Swift military
deployment is also vital to safeguarding
security along China’s borders.
Lacking such
capability, the combat strength of the
Chinese military and its ambition have been
significantly crippled. It is reported that
the Chinese military is not able to launch
an overseas dispatch of a division force
through sea or air and provide logistic
support.
By putting long-distance deployment
capability as one of the top concerns of
recent drills, the Chinese army is shaking
off the long-time psychological restraint on
acquiring it. This ability is critical for a
truly modern military and necessary for a
strong power. It is also a contribution
China should make to world peace.