ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
ANI Logo
Menu
Asia

China tanks up its expeditionary forces

Hong Kong, June 15 (ANI): CCTV, China's state-owned television broadcaster, revealed something significant in a report aired on 2 June. It showed members of the PLA Navy Marine Corps (PLANMC) examining new ZTQ-15 light tanks after an exercise. The surprising revelation that Chinese marines are bulking up on heavier armored vehicles is a very important development.

ANI Jun 15, 2021 16:28 IST googleads

A Chinese Navy ship (Credit: Reuters)

Hong Kong, June 15 (ANI): CCTV, China's state-owned television broadcaster, revealed something significant in a report aired on 2 June. It showed members of the PLA Navy Marine Corps (PLANMC) examining new ZTQ-15 light tanks after an exercise. The surprising revelation that Chinese marines are bulking up on heavier armored vehicles is a very important development.
Indeed, this is the first time the PLANMC has owned genuine tanks - as opposed to armor like ZBD-05/ZTD-05 amphibious vehicles or ZTL-11 8x8 tank destroyers. As the PLA's premier amphibious and expeditionary force, the marine corps is obviously eyeing a new and broader range of missions.
Firstly, what is a ZTQ-15 (also known as Type 15) tank? It is the PLA ground force's newest tank, first fielded by the 123rd Combined Arms Brigade in the Southern Theater Command, and then in Tibet and most recently in an unidentified Xinjiang unit.
At 36 tonnes, this light tank is 9.2m long. Crewed by three soldiers, it is armed with a 105mm rifled main gun that utilizes an automatic loader. The weapon can even fire a laser-guided projectile with a 5km range. A 1,000hp diesel engine powers it to speeds of 70km/h and it has a 450km range. A modular protection package consisting of composite armor and explosive reactive tiles can be added too.
The PLA is believed to have started inducting the Norinco-built ZTQ-15 in late 2018. A variant for export is the VT5, first shown in 2016. The first VT5 export customer is Bangladesh, with deliveries of an estimated 44 tanks imminent.
Returning to June's CCTV footage, it showed ZTQ-15 tanks loaded aboard railcars ready for transport. The report did not indicate the location, nor which unit. Significantly, the CCTV piece stated that a PLANMC exercise had recently been conducted in a high-altitude area, indicating either Tibet or Xinjiang.
A critical snippet of information in the report revealed that a marine infantry battalion had been re-equipped with these tanks as a combined-arms battalion. This strongly suggests that the PLANMC is readying itself to better conduct multi-domain operations. Indeed, the thrust of the CCTV clip was how the PLANMC is modernizing to become a more-rounded combined-arms force rather than merely an amphibious one.
The PLANMC currently has six combat brigades: the 1st Marine Brigade (Zhanjiang, Guangdong); 2nd Marine Brigade (Zhanjiang, Guangdong); 3rd Marine Brigade (Jieyang, Guangdong); 4th Marine Brigade (Quanzhou, Fujian); 5th Marine Brigade (Qingdao, Shandong); and 6th Marine Brigade (Linyi, Shandong). If one of these brigades already has a battalion fielding Type 15 tanks, it is entirely possible the same will eventually occur in every marine brigade.
This restructuring of the PLANMC into a multi-domain force commenced in 2017. The corps has already received 8x8 armoured vehicles in recent years, which permit rapid road movement too far-flung destinations. Furthermore, such vehicles can be more easily transported by aircraft or ship. However, issuing heavier tanks is a further major capability boost for the marines.
Ironically, in what many would consider a doubling-up, PLA ground forces possess amphibious units too (four brigades in the Eastern Theater Command and two in the Southern Theater Command). They are equipped with ZBD-05 and ZTD-05 amphibious assault vehicles, just like the PLANMC.
Now that Chinese marines are fielding heavier tanks, a role previously reserved for ground forces, the lines between ground forces and PLANMC seem to have become more blurred. The bottom line is that it reflects a Chinese desire to project heavier forces in an expeditionary manner to overseas locations.
Ironically, this move to equip Chinese marines with tanks contrasts sharply with the US Marine Corps (USMC) that recently divested itself of its M1A1 Abrams tank fleet in order to meet future missions, chief of which is combating the PLA! We have here a contrast - the USMC seeking to become leaner and more mobile, whereas the PLANMC is bulking up.
General David Berger, the USMC commandant, earlier stated, "China, in terms of military capability, is the pacing threat. If we did nothing, we would be passed."
For the PLANMC, this wider mandate reflects a shift in doctrine from a preoccupation with defending China's "near seas" to a stronger focus on "far seas" protection. This was illustrated in late 2008 by China's decision to dispatch a naval counter-piracy task force to the Gulf of Aden. Since then, the PLAN has evacuated civilians from Libya (2011) and Yemen (2015) and helped search for a missing Malaysian airliner (2014).
A recent publication from the National Defense University (NDU) in Washington DC, entitled "The PLA Beyond Borders - Chinese Military Operations in Regional and Global Context", discussed the outward-looking focus of the PLA.
Its preamble said, "A complete accounting of Chinese overseas operations requires reference to an extensive set of motivating factors, which are not mutually exclusive, including China's desire for recognition as a global military power and accumulation of status symbols, such as aircraft carriers; protection of overseas interests, ranging from maritime territorial claims to overseas property and personnel; bureaucratic rivalries in a constrained budget environment, which have led both the army and air force to posture themselves as 'power projection' services with important overseas missions, competing with the navy for scarce resources; and profit motives, which remain a primary objective of China's arms sales."
Kristen Gunness, one author of the report, said overseas deployments are likely under five conditions: when domestic or international expectations pressure Beijing to act; when Chinese interests are directly threatened; when a PLA presence can help build China's influence and military ties with host governments; when the PLA can gain overseas deployment experience/training while contributing to international security missions; and when the PLA's expeditionary capabilities are mature enough to accomplish the mission and other options, such as free-riding on other countries' capabilities, are insufficient."
China's nearest definition to "expeditionary" is its term "strategic delivery". The PLA dictionary describes it as "comprehensive use of all types of military transportation and units to deliver military power to a combat or crisis situation for the purposes of achieving a strategic objective".
This definition primarily connects it to a crisis or conflict, rather than the USA's wider reference to the peacetime-wartime spectrum. Secondly, it suggests military power should be used only to achieve a strategic objective, reinforcing China's principle of non-interference. Thirdly, it encompasses both domestic and international activities.
Thus, the PLA's expeditionary mission set includes maritime, air and land operations that may be far beyond China's borders, or alternatively operations along its border to give itself the ability to push deep into a neighboring country. However, there is growing evidence that China's "expeditionary" definition will narrow to fall more in line with the US concept.
Whatever the case, an expanded PLANMC of about 30,000 marines is at the heart of a more robust expeditionary posture. Furthermore, there is public support amongst the Chinese populace for a more proactive military presence abroad to exert influence and achieve foreign policy goals.
Nonetheless, Gunness highlighted four challenges for China's developing expeditionary stance. One is personnel and training, with only a small percentage having overseas experience, and even fewer having worked with multinational forces in hostile environments. Another is command and control of forces overseas, with distance affecting communications and decision-making. Third is logistics and basing, with the PLA hampered by insufficient airlift/sealift capacity. That is changing with platforms like Y-20 aircraft and Type 075 landing helicopter dock ships, but China r needs to negotiate agreements for military access to ports with countries like Cambodia, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. A final challenge is balancing competing requirements, as far-flung theaters compete with Beijing's focus on Taiwan, and as money becomes tighter.
Of the five permanent United Nations Security Council members, China is the number one funder of peacekeeping operations. It has 2,500 troops deployed, and a force of 8,000 on standby. Its investment in UN peacekeeping allows it to sustain a presence in areas of strategic interest like Africa.
Gunness noted, "The PLA's current expeditionary force development is still heavily weighted toward the maritime domain. This situation is likely to continue given that maritime expeditionary capabilities already have been necessary to evacuate PRC citizens and likely will be needed in the future. In the near term, the PLA will probably deploy for additional maritime missions, including the protection of overseas ports such as Djibouti and dual-use facilities in Pakistan or other countries, depending on the agreements reached between China and host countries. In addition, the PLA may play an increased role in overseas sea lines of communication protection; for example, China has voiced an interest in a collective security effort to protect the trade routes transiting through the Persian Gulf."
She specifically addressed the PLANMC too: "The PLAN will continue to train the marine corps for overseas amphibious landing operations, a critical capability for the PLA to be able to conduct larger noncombatant evacuation operations. This capability will likely take several years of training cycles and integration of new equipment, such as the large-deck amphibious assault ship that the PLAN has recently commissioned. China's maritime expeditionary capabilities will be augmented as PLAAF strategic airlift and other long-range naval and air platforms improve."
As Gunness indicated, logistics and bases pose an obstinate problem for China, one the PLA alone cannot solve. Beijing is only too aware of higher-level political implications, for the sensitive question of overseas basing clashes starkly with China's international narrative of a "peaceful rise".
Indeed, the PLA National Defense University's 2015 Science of Military Strategy advocated awareness of political-military trade-offs when using force overseas. It said, "Firstly, weigh the pros and cons and cautiously decide 'go or no go'. Diplomacy is no small matter, and the overseas use of military force is far from trivial. Under a given international strategic situation, the determination to deploy forces to conduct peacekeeping, maritime escort, overseas evacuation or international rescue tasks should proceed from a strategic consideration of national political interests, economic interests, diplomatic interests and security interests."
Instead of the PLAN's previous "bring it with you" logistics model, it will increasingly rely on a network of civilian ports, many built or operated by Chinese companies, to perform resupply functions. Its inaugural base in Djibouti could be the first in a series of what Chinese military theorists call "strategic strongpoints" to support distant operations.
Isaac B. Kardon, another writer of the NDU report, explained, "Establishment of basing and associated logistics has lagged the apparent demand for military operations abroad."
He added: "The concept of a strategic strongpoint port is under active development across the PRC strategic community, and has been taken up at the highest echelons of military and civilian leadership as a viable model for supporting PLA operations abroad. The concept leverages the weight of China's diplomatic and economic clout to establish nodes that facilitate a more expeditionary PLA."
There are limitations, however. Kardon pointed out: "...The potential for this model to support higher-end combat missions is limited without major adjustments to the nature and scope of Chinese commercial involvement overseas. Such missions would require, at a minimum, purpose-built, hardened military facilities and standing agreements with host governments to allow the PLA access and use during a conflict. Forward deployment of personnel along with combat platforms such as ships and aircraft, and force protection capabilities such as surface-to-air missiles, would also greatly enhance the PLA's ability to project power into distant theaters. Such fundamental changes to PLA posture will not occur without the establishment of permanent military bases."
China's civilian leadership would presumably exercise this option only in a major conflict or contingency. Indeed, absent a major war, the marginal operational improvements that China would gain from a couple of additional bases would not justify the negative geopolitical consequences.
Perhaps then, whether opportunistic or manufactured, China will be only too aware of the benefits that a contingency overseas will bring in allowing it to create its next military base. Simultaneously, it will be interesting to see whether China has any intention of stationing ZTQ-15 tanks in Djibouti. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Asia

"US will never risk sending its navy to open up Strait of Hormuz”

Sibal argued that the US is unlikely to risk a naval operation to forcibly "reopen" the Strait of Hormuz as the deep-water channel necessary for large vessels lies within Iranian territorial waters. Iran does not need sophisticated long-range missiles to defend this corridor; short-range missiles, torpedoes, and mines can easily sink high-value naval assets.

Read More
Asia

China’s expanding system of censorship exposed in Dharamshala

China’s expanding system of censorship exposed in Dharamshala

The event titled "Understanding China's System of Political Repression: Voices of Resistance through Art and Journalism" brought together prominent voices critical of China's information control, as reported by Phayul.

Read More
Asia

Hardships grow as Pakistan tightens its grip in Balochistan 

Hardships grow as Pakistan tightens its grip in Balochistan 

Residents in Balochistan's Zehri and Surab regions are facing a severe humanitarian crisis due to a four-day curfew and military operations. The Baloch Yakjehti Committee reported acute food shortages, blocked healthcare access, and alleged house raids by security forces, urging international bodies to investigate these fundamental rights violations.

Read More
Asia

Tibetan Women’s Association organises protest against China

Tibetan Women’s Association organises protest against China

It's an event to remember the day when Tibetan women from all three provinces of Tibet, for the first time in the history of Tibet, stood together and raised their voice against the brutal Chinese military forces that were occupying Tibet in 1959.

Read More
Asia

India’s Consul General meets Ant Group to boost tech ties

India’s Consul General meets Ant Group to boost tech ties

India's Consul General in Shanghai, Pratik Mathur, met Ant Group leadership to discuss fintech and digital economy opportunities. This follows high-level engagements with Shanghai's Mayor, aligned with Prime Minister Narendra Modi's "Reform, Perform and Transform" mantra to strengthen bilateral and multilateral cooperation through the SCO and BRICS.

Read More
Middle East

Iran warns of attack on ports in West Asia

Iran warns of attack on ports in West Asia

IRIB Quoted the official as saying, "If any attack is carried out against Iran's economic ports, all docks, ports, and economic zones across West Asia will be destroyed."

Read More
Middle East

Iran lists three conditions to end war with US, Israel

Iran lists three conditions to end war with US, Israel

The Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) announced on Thursday, the beginning of 40th wave of Operation 'True Promise-4' against US bases in the region and targets in Tel Aviv, occupied territories and Haifa

Read More
Middle East

Kuwait residential building struck by "enemy drone" at dawn

Kuwait residential building struck by

A drone strike on a Kuwaiti residential building has caused casualties and "material damage," following revelations that a previous Iranian attack on US forces was more severe than disclosed. While "robust air defences" are in place, dozens of personnel suffered "brain trauma" and other "urgent" battle injuries.

Read More
Middle East

Iraq shuts down Oil port after attack on Marine Vessels

Iraq shuts down Oil port after attack on Marine Vessels

United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) issued an urgent "ATTACK" warning following a serious maritime incident in the northern Gulf involving multiple commercial vessels.

Read More
US

UNSC adopts resolution condemning Iran’s “egregious attacks”

UNSC adopts resolution condemning Iran’s “egregious attacks”

The UN Security Council has adopted a resolution condemning Iran's "egregious attacks" against regional neighbours, demanding an immediate halt to hostilities and interference with maritime trade. While 13 members voted in favour, Russia and China abstained, with Tehran dismissing the move as a "manifest injustice" and a "serious setback."

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.