PLA Strategy in a Taiwan Contingency

Geographer

Junior Member
delft, thanks for the corrections regarding MacArthur and Eisenhower.

Do you know who Locke and Descartes were? Descartes thought that if you could work something out logically in your mind, then that something must be true in the world. On the other hand, Locke said that for something to be true, it must be verifiable via observation.

Guess whose philosophy modern science is based on?

Are you familiar with the Scientific Method? Do you know what the difference between a hypothesis and a theory is? Both are sound logical constructs, but a theory is supported by evidence, while a hypothesis is not. Hypotheses, although logically sound, are routinely contradicted by evidence.
Invoking the scientific method is a strange move on a military enthusiast's message board in which speculation and theory are rampant. SDF isn't a chemistry lab. We're not trying for Nobel Prizes or industrial patents but rather a greater understanding of the Chinese military and to a lesser extent the Chinese political system.

Social science does not operate in laboratory conditions in which a single variable can be changed and the experiment run again endlessly. In some areas we use statistics from large data sets that even then are tough to draw inferences from. In other areas, we use case studies (aka history), human psychology, and organizational psychology. Organizational psychology is just an extension of individual psychology. No two humans are perfectly alike, but in similar conditions human groups tend to behave the same way.

For example, to use your fire department analogy, do you think fire fighters who get a brand new fire truck would want to go out and start fires? No? Then why do you think militaries with shiny toys would want to go out and start wars? Did you mean the fire fighters would want to show off their skills, like at a competition or something? Well guess what, the military has those too, it's called war games. The PLA recently had one with the Russians.
Note how solarz restates my arguments in a way that was not said. In the firefighting analogy, I did not say the firefighters would start fires. My exact words were, "They're going to get stir crazy and find excuses to go out and show their skills." The "foot soldier" level firefighters are going to try to respond to everything that could possibly use some firefighters. At more senior levels, the firefighter commanders are going to have to start justifying the expense of their new fire engine. Otherwise in a few years, new city council members may start to ask why they are paying for the upkeep of such an expensive fire engine when there hasn't been a fire in years. Knowing this, the senior firefighter commanders will seek to execute as many missions as possible, possibly doubling up on other departments such as EMS, in order to preserve their own budget. This leads to turf wars and wasted money, well-known problems in any large organization.

The firefighter example is a way to show how bureaucracies have two reasons to aggressively expand their operations: the young guys want to prove their mettle and have fun, and the commanders need to justify their large budget to the civilian leadership.

I see three arguments against my argument that the PLA will increasingly advocate pro-force policies within the Chinese government, and that the CCP should be aware of the self-serving nature of the military's future advice. There is a nuance here that keeps getting ignored. Solarz and others seem to see the military in dualistic terms: either the military is peace-loving and totally obedient to civilian control, or they are war-mongering fascists. They see my argument as painting the PLA in the latter terms when I am doing no such thing.

I have to keep stating my argument because it keeps getting distorted. I'm not picking on the military, all bureaucracies have agendas that do not necessarily align with the national interest. Frankly I am surprised it engenders such a reaction because it seems intuitive to me. The counter-arguments I see are:

One, that military leaders (the implication being all military leaders, not just China's) are mature enough to give stark, cold analysis and advice that aligns with the civilian leadership. Two, that whatever the experiences of Western governments, China is different because of its history as a victim of imperialism. Three, that even if the military leadership is gung-ho and similar to Western countries, war games are sufficient excitement to keep them from going stir-crazy. I'll examine each counter-argument in turn.

Regarding the first counter-argument that the top generals are mature enough to give stark, cold analysis and advice that aligns with the civilian leadership. This is what we want to believe about military leaderships around the world. But what we want to be true and what is likely to be true are separate things. How many ministers and secretaries--who are not political appointees but rose up through the ranks--actively call for budget cuts to their agencies? How many call their organizations bloated and in need of reform? How many call their agency's job overrated? Virtually NONE! It's not because career civil servants are dishonest or unintelligent, it is because 1) the kind of people who make it to the top do it by not rocking the boat, and 2) their whole mindset is that what they and their agency does it important. Think of generals are career civil servants.

Here's another example that will resonate with conservatives: teachers' unions. Teachers unions claim to know what's best for students so they deserve tenure, limited hours, barriers to entry of the teaching profession, and other perks. Do the teachers unions ever call for less pay? A smaller budget? Fewer schools? A longer school year? More accountability? Of course not. Neither do police unions, or firefighter unions or the American Legion (an American veterans' NGO).

The point is that the top generals are shaped by their experiences getting to the top, and have their own agendas to further their careers. It won't be huge differences of opinion with the civilian leadership, just a more militaristic outlook on international affairs, a belief that the military option would be beneficial. In the back of the generals' minds are the possibility of a promotion and budget security. The exception to all this is when the military gets involved in money-making like in Egypt and Pakistan, where they actively avoid war in order to keep the corrupt times rollin' and the money flowin'. A war would hurt Egyptian and Pakistani top officers' military careers by exposing their incompetence and unpreparedness.

The second counter-argument, that even if my case-studies from Western bureaucracies are valid, China's history as a victim of imperialism render them incapable of war for anything but self-defense. This is another belief rooted in idealism. Wouldn't be nice if the bullied turned into pacifists? But that's usually not the case. First of all, every war is presented in terms of self-defense. Even the 2003 Iraq War was sold as a self-defense measure against an unpredictable dictator with NBC weapons we could not take a chance on after 9/11. If Taiwan declared independence and China attacked them, both the PRC and ROC would see their actions as self-defense.

One thing that stands out in recent Chinese history is their complete inability to wage an imperial war even if they wanted to. They were too weak and divided. They were constantly fending off Western or Japanese imperial troops. After the CCP won the civil war, they engaged in a policy of autarky, trying to be economically self-sufficient. Trade dropped off a cliff. They could move a lot of troops around the country but with no navy or air force worth a damn they could not project power. Only within in the last five years has China had the means to project power beyond its immediate borders. Therefore recent history is a poor guide to China's military intentions.

Second, the PLA has benefited from rapid modernization of tactics and weapons and a large, sustained budget increase for the last twenty years. Many weapons are indigenous and innovative. Officers and research engineers both want to see the fruits of their labor in action, to push them into new challenges, to show them off. This leads me to the third counter-argument...

The third counter-argument, that even if the military leadership is gung-ho and similar to Western countries, war games are sufficient excitement to keep them from going stir-crazy. War games, even with other countries, is no substitute for the real thing. Does anyone here believe war games in which no one gets hurt, and therefore no threat of getting hurt, are equivalent to a shooting war? Of course not! Exercises are carefully planned to test certain capabilities. There is an old saying that "no battle plan ever survives first contact with the enemy."

The question then becomes, if war games aren't as useful as the real thing in showing off weapon systems, are the useful enough ? War games are an important part of military readiness and do provide a release valve for pent up energy. But I think that ultimately everyone from the foot soldier to the weapon's chief engineer to the generals want to test their mettle in real combat. You don't get medals or national fame for doing well in an exercise. War is a whole other beast in which people who do well in safe war games may not succeed.

War games also do not help the generals justify their budget. Suppose President Hu has been a big backer of the PLA and gives them big budget increases. In a few years a new administration will take over, probably led by President Xi. Maybe Xi is not as militaristic as Hu. So President Xi asks the Central Military Commission to review its budget and justify the ~$100 billion spent on them. Can the generals point to all the great exercises they've engaged in? No, because that has not helped China. When it comes to budget battles, it's a "what have you done for me lately" attitude. Note again I'm not saying this is how it should be but how it often is.

After the Cold War ended, the U.S. cut the military budget significantly. It was called the Peace Dividend. Protest as they did, the U.S. defense establishment could hardly justify the enormous defense budget in the absence of a major enemy. But after September 11th the U.S. invaded Afghanistan and Iraq and engaged in other smaller actions around the globe in the War on Terror. For the last 10 years, the U.S. military has benefited from rapid growth in its budget despite two recessions. Nearly anything the military wanted, it got. Wars are a great way to increase and protect the military budget, hence the reluctance to wind down those wars.
 
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Red Moon

Junior Member
Well, Geographer is talking a lot about "organizational psychology" but telling us NOTHING about the most important organization in China, and indeed, in the PLA: the Communist Party. There are communist party organizations ("cells") inside every organization in the PLA, at every level. Discussion of politics and policy is the core of the military's organizational culture. I think this is quite different from experience in the West.

Maybe, Geographer wants to be "politically correct", and wants to ignore his schoolboy lessons about "communist brainwashing". I salute that:D! But in fact, I think it is true that CPC's policies, and especially its attitude towards war, and towards foreign affairs, are discussed daily, and inside the PLA, loyalty to China means loyalty to the CPC's policies.

But let's say we ignore this difference in organizational culture. If being a member of any armed forces organization, supposedly means secretly "itching" for war, then I have to propose that membership in the Communist Party must mean something also, for the same reasons of "organizational psychology". The entire leadership of the PLA is also in the upper levels of the Communist Party, and I think to anyone in China, membership in the CPC is more important that membership in the PLA. CPC membership would actually give you some distinction within the PLA.

I think Geographer has a point regarding "organizational psychology", and this is why a corporation, a government or any complex organization can fall prey to "departmentalism", a sort of narrow minded defense of the particular interests of one department over the others. But this is one reason why you might implement a collegial system of administration. In effect the CPC's organization achieves the same thing, but it does so not only at the top, but at every level of the PLA.
 

Red Moon

Junior Member
Third, you are claiming that the US went to war because the military pushed it to do so. There are just so many problems with that claim.

Yes. I just have to add, that I have never encountered this as an explanation for any war in history. Perhaps a journalist or a politician may argue this way, but a serious historian analyzing events will not, or at least I have never seen it.
 

Spartan95

Junior Member
2- Getting the PLA to reform is a completely different matter from controlling the PLA's military command. Getting any large organization to reform is an extremely difficult process. The vast majority of international experts agree that the PLA is under the firm control of the CCP.

When international (mostly western) experts say things that are negative about the PLA, it is trashed. Yet here, it is taken as reliable? And this is when I have quoted a source that is written based on PLA and CCP publications?

If PRC is so well run, why are the local provincial authorities not always following the central directive from Beijing? And if the civilians are doing it, why are the powerful military not doing likewise?

3- Where has it been shown that HK or Macau has been swamped by Mainlanders?
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Have you been to HK and Macau before they returned to PRC and after? I have.

Do you know that there are demonstrations in HK about pregnant females from PRC entering HK to give birth, thus registering their child as a HK citizen? This thus allows them to stay in HK to take care of their child. This has caused such a huge social problem that the hospitals are over-flowing with maternity cases and patients are sleeping in corridors and even outside toilets. Recently, the HK administration even have to pass legislation prohibiting visibly pregnant females from PRC from entering HK. All this is an attempt to prevent further influx of PRC citizens into HK. If HK is not swamped, do they need such legislation?

Even if all PLA generals are sociopathic war mongers who think war is a big video game and an excuse to pin medals on their chests, and who wanna pick a fight to show how badass they are, they would have to be idiots as well to want to pick a fight against one of the strongest military powers in the world, which might easily pull the worlds undisputed top military power into the fight as well.

If the PLA just wanted a war for the hell of it, there are plenty of much more suitable candidates to beat up first.

Quite a few senior PLA officers have written hawkish books about how to defeat the US military in a war. 1 of the better known ones is "Unrestricted Warfare: China's Master Plan to Destroy America", written by 2 PLA colonels and available on Amazon:

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I wonder what PRC's media reaction will be if US military colonels publish a book called "Unrestricted Warfare: America's Master Plan to Destroy China"? Would Xinhua call it war mongering?
 

bball2k

Just Hatched
Registered Member
According to the amazon reviews, the name and cover of the book is misleading. The translator supposedly added alot of things in the book to make it sell.
 

Geographer

Junior Member
Yes. I just have to add, that I have never encountered this as an explanation for any war in history. Perhaps a journalist or a politician may argue this way, but a serious historian analyzing events will not, or at least I have never seen it.
You don't think Imperial Japan's militarism was a major cause for Japan's wars with China and the United States?
 
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supercat

Major
Japan was actually under military rule. The military took over the government. Similar situation in Argentina before the Falklands Island war, which is a prime example why war should not be used to distract people from economic crisis. Chinese will never allow military rule, because of the painful history of warlords.
 

solarz

Brigadier
When international (mostly western) experts say things that are negative about the PLA, it is trashed. Yet here, it is taken as reliable? And this is when I have quoted a source that is written based on PLA and CCP publications?

If PRC is so well run, why are the local provincial authorities not always following the central directive from Beijing? And if the civilians are doing it, why are the powerful military not doing likewise?

This is why critical thinking is so important. You ignored my point that making reforms to an organization is completely different from having control over that organization. You also ignore the fact that civilian institutions are run completely differently from a military organization.

The loyalty of the PLA to the CCP is ingrained in the very foundation of the PLA command structure, as numerous posters have pointed out. The effectiveness of CCP's control over the PLA is demonstrated by history: in over 80 years, through highs and lows, the armed forces branch of the CCP has *never* turned against the party.


Have you been to HK and Macau before they returned to PRC and after? I have.

Do you know that there are demonstrations in HK about pregnant females from PRC entering HK to give birth, thus registering their child as a HK citizen? This thus allows them to stay in HK to take care of their child. This has caused such a huge social problem that the hospitals are over-flowing with maternity cases and patients are sleeping in corridors and even outside toilets. Recently, the HK administration even have to pass legislation prohibiting visibly pregnant females from PRC from entering HK. All this is an attempt to prevent further influx of PRC citizens into HK. If HK is not swamped, do they need such legislation?

Arizona, and several other states, have passed legislation allowing law enforcement officers to discriminate against illegal immigrants. Does this mean USA is swamped by illegal immigrants? I think you will find differing view points on that issue. Same thing with HK.


I wonder what PRC's media reaction will be if US military colonels publish a book called "Unrestricted Warfare: America's Master Plan to Destroy China"? Would Xinhua call it war mongering?

Errr... American authors publish *much* worse.
 

xywdx

Junior Member
The novel is simply called Unrestricted Warfare in Chinese, it was initially translated and distributed by the CIA(needless to say this is a terrible source of information), then the author simply picked it up and added a lot of misleading material for financial and political reasons.

I think some people are forgetting the role of "political officers", these serve as important checks so that the military does not go out of control as some people are suggesting.
 
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