Contenu du sommaire : The Modernisation of the People's Liberation Army and its Repercussions
Revue | China perspectives |
---|---|
Numéro | no 2011/4 |
Titre du numéro | The Modernisation of the People's Liberation Army and its Repercussions |
Texte intégral en ligne | Accessible sur l'internet |
Special feature: The Modernisation of the People's Liberation Army and its Repercussions
- Editorial - Scott Harold p. 2-5
- Modernising China's Military, 1997-2012 - Richard Bitzinger p. 7-15 The Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) has since the late 1990s been engaged in an ambitious, concerted, and methodical transformation. As a result, the PLA has noticeably improved its capabilities in several specific areas – particularly missile attack, precision-strike, power projection at sea and in the air, and joint operations. In particular, it has made significant advances in exploiting “informatisation” when it comes to developing advanced weaponry, accelerating the pace of military modernisation, and creating new levers of military power for the PLA. While Chinese military power may still pale in comparison to the US armed forces, the strength of the PLA relative to its likely local competitors in the Asia-Pacific region, such as Taiwan and Japan, has grown significantly, and will likely continue to grow over the next ten to 20 years. As a result, China is definitely gaining an edge over other regional militaries in the Asia-Pacific region.
- US Allies Respond - Bonnie Glaser, David Szerlip p. 17-29 Japan, Australia, and South Korea, the three closest Asia-Pacific allies of the United States, have all reacted differently to the modernisation of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, depending on the immediate security situation that each faces. In Japan, which has been most directly affected by PLA Navy operations and other military capabilities, the response has been the most direct: increased investment in maritime and surveillance capabilities while also enhancing cooperation with the US and other like-minded partners in the region. For Canberra, the Chinese threat is still distant, but even down under, the reach and actions of the PLA are raising concerns, leading to plans for augmentation of military forces and a welcoming of permanently deployed US troops. Finally, in South Korea, the DPRK remains the primary threat, though China's recent unflinching support for Pyongyang has led to discussions about whether or not that decades-old security calculus should be re-evaluated.
- The European Union and the Modernisation of the People's Liberation Army Navy - Mathieu Duchâtel, Alexandre Sheldon-Duplaix p. 31-41 This article argues that the European Union has more interests in the People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) modernisation and maritime security issues in East Asia than has traditionally been recognised. The PRC's naval modernisation intersects with the EU's foreign and security policy interests in five main areas: the international Law of the Sea; the risks for Europe of being dragged into an Asian maritime conflict and the safety of European trade with Asian partners; Europe's competitiveness in international markets for naval military systems; the potential for maritime security cooperation against non-traditional threats; and finally, the arms embargo issue and the question of naval technology transfers to China. Through an assessment of the current PLAN modernisation – and Europe's significant contribution to this effort – the article argues that European policy towards China doesn't adequately address these five policy areas.
- Taiwan's Paradoxical Perceptions of the Chinese Military - Arthur S. Ding, Paul A. Huang p. 43-51 Against the backdrop of China's thriving economic development since the 1980s, the rapid modernisation of the People's Liberation Army has always been Taiwan's top national security concern. This article argues that, despite the military threat posed by the Chinese military to Taiwan, China's changing policy toward the island, combined with the US determination to remain the leading power in the Asia-Pacific region, and the realisation of the complexity of Taiwan politics by the Chinese leadership, have led Taiwanese analysts to perceive the likelihood of conflict as decreasing. This constitutes a major perceptual contrast between long-term threat and short-term stability in cross- Strait relations.
Article
- The (Bio)political Novel - Yinde Zhang p. 53-61 The political concerns underlying Mo Yan's creative work come to the fore in his latest novel, Frogs (Wa), which gives the reader an unusual perspective on the complex relations between fiction and politics. This novel harshly criticises a state whose coercive population control policies are responsible for some murderous consequences. This denunciation is also aimed at the economic ultraliberalism that is complicit with the totalitarian inheritance in destruction of human dignity through the alienation and commercialisation of the body. The complex symbolic structure of this work brings out the need for life itself to be rehabilitated in accordance with basic human rights and membership in the human community, and to be strongly defended against political attack and moral decay. Far from being an essentialist communitarian ethics, however, the bioethics proposed by the author offers the possibility of social reconstruction of the bios.
- The (Bio)political Novel - Yinde Zhang p. 53-61
Current Affairs
China Analysis
- Chongqing: Model for a new economic and social policy? - Romain Lafarguette p. 62-64 Based on:– Wang Yuguang, “Chongqing: Testing ground for new policies,” Caijing guojia zhoukan, February 2011.– Hu Shuli, Lu Yangzheng, Deng Hai, “New economic policies in Chongqing,” Zhongguo gaige – China Reform, November 2010.– Chen Lili, “Analysis of social housing model in Chongqing,” Hezuo jingji yu keji, 2011, no. 12, June 2011.– Zhou Min, Xiang Pengcheng, “Innovation and functioning of social housing model in Chongqing,” Hezuo jingji yu keji, 2011, no. 13, June 2011.
- As crisis looms, how can SMEs be saved? - Charlotte Wu p. 64-66 Based on:– Yang Zhongxu, Mo Li, “Truth about SMEs' difficulties,” Caijing, no. 23, 26 September 2011.– Wang Li, Yu Hairong, “SMEs' long winter, multiple pressures could lead to aggravating the situation or towards large scale overhaul,” Xin Shiji, no. 463, 15 August 2011.– Qiu Xiaomin, “Gu Shengzu: It is imperative to alleviate SMEs' existential troubles,” Xinhua Wang, 1 September 2011.– Wan Donghua, “Several measures to relieve SMEs of their difficulties,” Zhongguo Guoqing Guoli – China National Conditions and Strength, no. 224, 7 September 2011.– Peng Chunlai, “Gu Shengzu, six remedies for SMEs' financing difficulties,” Zhengjuan Ribao, 20 September 2011.
- Chongqing: Model for a new economic and social policy? - Romain Lafarguette p. 62-64
Book Reviews
- Jean-Philippe Béja (ed.), The Impact of China's 1989 Tiananmen Massacre - Joshua Rosenzweig p. 68-69
- Guo Baogang, China's Quest for Political Legitimacy: The New Equity-Enhancing Politics - Émilie Tran p. 69-70
- Bernard Ganne et Yveline Lecler (eds.), Asian industrial clusters, global competitiveness and new policy initiatives - Silvia Lombardi p. 70-71
- Elena Barabantseva, Overseas Chinese, Ethnic Minorities and Nationalism. De-centering China - Vanessa Frangville p. 72-74
- Vincent Goossaert et David A. Palmer, The Religious Question in Modern China - André Laliberté p. 74-75
- Chen Lai, Tradition and Modernity: A Humanist View - Selena Dramlic p. 75-76