Early this year, Chinese Defense Minister Cao Gangchuan called on the Peoples Liberation Army (PLA) to harness cutting-edge military technologies, to enhance strategic and basic research, and to make breakthroughs in key technologies in a bid to leap forward in the armaments development drive.
Comrade Cao also was announcing to the world that Chinas economy had advanced sufficiently in technological sophistication to ensure that it could focus on 21st-century weaponry. We are now on notice, as Russian military officials have warned, that Chinas ultimate objective is to achieve global military-economic dominance by 2050. This must be reflected in the current U.S. Quadrennial Defense Review.
Chinas gross domestic product is expected to double between 2000 and 2010. The defense budget continues to increase annually by double-digit margins. In his new book, The Emerging Chinese Advanced Technology Superstate, Ernest Preeg has forecast that China will become an advanced technology superstate: A fundamental restructuring of Chinese defense industry in 1997 to 1999 shifted control of defense enterprises from the military to the civilian government, and integrated their operations with commercial advanced technology enterprises ... The result has been a more rapid rate of military system modernization, particularly for the navy and defense electronic systems.
This is the linchpin of Chinas prospects for emerging as Americas peer competitor in high-tech warfare.
In the late 1990s, China revamped its military research and development program. The PLA is currently pursuing by both the Sino-Russian multibillion-dollar arms pact and by incorporating other critical foreign technologies systems of its own.
Besides modernizing its conventional armed forces, todays China focuses on three military priorities:
Aerospace.
Nuclear weapons.
New-concept weapons, such as laser, electromagnetic, plasma, climatic, genetic and biotechnological.
The central principle driving the modernization of national defense is reliance on science and technology to strengthen the armed forces.
The ultimate objective of this particular revolution in military affairs, say the Chinese, is to build a capacity to win the future information war which can only be won by achieving space dominance. The core of ongoing Chinese military reforms thus consists of developing those specific symmetrical and asymmetrical systems designed to neutralize todays U.S. technological superiority in the space-information continuum.
China already is striving to offset the military advantages of Americas existing aerospace systems, seeking especially to challenge the air dominance that the United States must continue to maintain over the Taiwan Strait if it wants to deter and, if need be, counter any major Chinese attack against Taiwan.
Chinese military thinkers have offered their notions of how to deal with Taiwans independence elements. Beijing is said to have earmarked an annual military budget of 500 billion yuan ($61.9 billion) to accelerate production of the required armaments. PLA leaders, who have pledged that they can capture Taiwan within seven days, appear bent on conducting an anti-carrier campaign against the United States if it comes to that. As Chinese President Hu Jintao has boasted, this war will not obstruct the holding of the 2008 Olympic games.
China foresees a time when it can push back American air power, first, farther away from its own coasts, and then even farther out from critical areas like the South China Sea. Russian officials concur with this assessment. They warn that a Chinese Monroe doctrine is quietly at work: All of Asia belongs to the Chinese and not only Asia.
Since 2001, we have been challenged by the need to transform our forces to deal with a cunning, soulless, but essentially low-tech predator the terrorist. Yet those other realms of warfare that occupied us prior to 9/11 information, naval and above all, aerospace still constitute the nucleus of the new revolution in military affairs. If we neglect the timely development of weaponry in these arenas, then China could catch America like a deer in the proverbial headlights, precisely where we caught them after the 1991 victory in Desert Storm.
History has taught all generations that maintaining technological superiority, not to mention a nation itself, requires a policy, persistence and (sadly) a price. But at least two recent U.S. technological initiatives, Air-Land Battle and Star Wars, have already helped smash the bloody concrete of the Berlin Wall.
The Quadrennial Defense Review is due next year. It must address the evolving Chinese military, economic and lest we forget totalitarian juggernaut.
Mary C. FitzGerald is a research fellow at the Hudson Institute, which is preparing a report on advanced technology and Chinese military power.