外交家杂志:中国的极度微弱(和貌似危险)的军事力量

来源:百度文库 编辑:超级军网 时间:2024/04/25 07:55:33


China’s Deceptively Weak (and Dangerous) Military
-In many ways, the PLA is weaker than it looks – and more dangerous.


http://thediplomat.com/2014/01/chinas-deceptively-weak-and-dangerous-military/

In April 2003, the Chinese Navy decided to put a large group of its best submarine talent on the same boat as part of an experiment to synergize its naval elite. The result? Within hours of leaving port, the Type 035 Ming III class submarine sank with all hands lost. Never having fully recovered from this maritime disaster, the People’s Republic of China (PRC) is still the only permanent member of the United Nations Security Council never to have conducted an operational patrol with a nuclear missile submarine.

China is also the only member of the UN’s “Big Five” never to have built and operated an aircraft carrier. While it launched a refurbished Ukrainian built carrier amidst much fanfare in September 2012 – then-President Hu Jintao and all the top brass showed up – soon afterward the big ship had to return to the docks for extensive overhauls because of suspected engine failure; not the most auspicious of starts for China’s fledgling “blue water” navy, and not the least example of a modernizing military that has yet to master last century’s technology.

Indeed, today the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) still conducts long-distance maneuver training at speeds measured by how fast the next available cargo train can transport its tanks and guns forward. And if mobilizing and moving armies around on railway tracks sounds a bit antiquated in an era of global airlift, it should – that was how it was done in the First World War.

Not to be outdone by the conventional army, China’s powerful strategic rocket troops, the Second Artillery Force, still uses cavalry units to patrol its sprawling missile bases deep within China’s vast interior. Why? Because it doesn’t have any helicopters. Equally scarce in China are modern fixed-wing military aircraft. So the Air Force continues to use a 1950s Soviet designed airframe, the Tupolev Tu-16, as a bomber (its original intended mission), a battlefield reconnaissance aircraft, an electronic warfare aircraft, a target spotting aircraft, and an aerial refueling tanker. Likewise, the PLA uses the Soviet designed Antonov An-12 military cargo aircraft for ELINT (electronic intelligence) missions, ASW (anti-submarine warfare) missions, geological survey missions, and airborne early warning missions. It also has an An-12 variant specially modified for transporting livestock, allowing sheep and goats access to remote seasonal pastures.

But if China’s lack of decent hardware is somewhat surprising given all the hype surrounding Beijing’s massive military modernization program, the state of “software” (military training and readiness) is truly astounding. At one military exercise in the summer of 2012, a strategic PLA unit, stressed out by the hard work of handling warheads in an underground bunker complex, actually had to take time out of a 15-day wartime simulation for movie nights and karaoke parties. In fact, by day nine of the exercise, a “cultural performance troupe” (common PLA euphemism for song-and-dance girls) had to be brought into the otherwise sealed facility to entertain the homesick soldiers.

Apparently becoming suspicious that men might not have the emotional fortitude to hack it in high-pressure situations, an experimental all-female unit was then brought in for the 2013 iteration of the war games, held in May, for an abbreviated 72-hour trial run. Unfortunately for the PLA, the results were even worse. By the end of the second day of the exercise, the hardened tunnel facility’s psychological counseling office was overrun with patients, many reportedly too upset to eat and one even suffering with severe nausea because of the unpleasant conditions.

While recent years have witnessed a tremendous Chinese propaganda effort aimed at convincing the world that the PRC is a serious military player that is owed respect, outsiders often forget that China does not even have a professional military. The PLA, unlike the armed forces of the United States, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and other regional heavyweights, is by definition not a professional fighting force. Rather, it is a “party army,” the armed wing of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Indeed, all career officers in the PLA are members of the CCP and all units at the company level and above have political officers assigned to enforce party control. Likewise, all important decisions in the PLA are made by Communist Party committees that are dominated by political officers, not by operators. This system ensures that the interests of the party’s civilian and military leaders are merged, and for this reason new Chinese soldiers entering into the PLA swear their allegiance to the CCP, not to the PRC constitution or the people of China.

This may be one reason why China’s marines (or “naval infantry” in PLA parlance) and other  amphibious warfare units train by landing on big white sandy beaches that look nothing like the west coast of Taiwan (or for that matter anyplace else they could conceivably be sent in the East China Sea or South China Sea). It could also be why PLA Air Force pilots still typically get less than ten hours of flight time a month (well below regional standards), and only in 2012 began to have the ability to submit their own flight plans (previously, overbearing staff officers assigned pilots their flight plans and would not even allow them to taxi and take-off on the runways by themselves).

Intense and realistic training is dangerous business, and the American maxim that the more you bleed during training the less you bleed during combat doesn’t translate well in a Leninist military system. Just the opposite. China’s military is intentionally organized to bureaucratically enforce risk-averse behavior, because an army that spends too much time training is an army that is not engaging in enough political indoctrination. Beijing’s worst nightmare is that the PLA could one day forget that its number one mission is protecting the Communist Party’s civilian leaders against all its enemies – especially when the CCP’s “enemies” are domestic student or religious groups campaigning for democratic rights, as happened in 1989 and 1999, respectively.

For that reason, the PLA has to engage in constant “political work” at the expense of training for combat. This means that 30 to 40 percent of an officer’s career (or roughly 15 hours per 40-hour work week) is wasted studying CCP propaganda, singing patriotic songs, and conducting small group discussions on Marxist-Leninist theory. And when PLA officers do train, it is almost always a cautious affair that rarely involves risky (i.e., realistic) training scenarios.

Abraham Lincoln once observed that if he had six hours to chop down a tree he would spend the first four hours sharpening his axe. Clearly the PLA is not sharpening its proverbial axe. Nor can it. Rather, it has opted to invest in a bigger axe, albeit one that is still dull. Ironically, this undermines Beijing’s own aspirations for building a truly powerful 21st century military.

Yet none of this should be comforting to China’s potential military adversaries. It is precisely China’s military weakness that makes it so dangerous. Take the PLA’s lack of combat experience, for example. A few minor border scraps aside, the PLA hasn’t seen real combat since the Korean War. This appears to be a major factor leading it to act so brazenly in the East and South China Seas. Indeed, China’s navy now appears to be itching for a fight anywhere it can find one. Experienced combat veterans almost never act this way. Indeed, history shows that military commanders that have gone to war are significantly less hawkish than their inexperienced counterparts. Lacking the somber wisdom that comes from combat experience, today’s PLA is all hawk and no dove.

The Chinese military is dangerous in another way as well. Recognizing that it will never be able to compete with the U.S. and its allies using traditional methods of war fighting, the PLA has turned to unconventional “asymmetric” first-strike weapons and capabilities to make up for its lack of conventional firepower, professionalism and experience. These weapons include more than 1,600 offensive ballistic and cruise missiles, whose very nature is so strategically destabilizing that the U.S. and Russia decided to outlaw them with the INF Treaty some 25 years ago.

In concert with its strategic missile forces, China has also developed a broad array of space weapons designed to destroy satellites used to verify arms control treaties, provide military communications, and warn of enemy attacks. China has also built the world’s largest army of cyber warriors, and the planet’s second largest fleet of drones, to exploit areas where the U.S. and its allies are under-defended. All of these capabilities make it more likely that China could one day be tempted to start a war, and none come with any built in escalation control.

Yet while there is ample and growing evidence to suggest China could, through malice or mistake, start a devastating war in the Pacific, it is highly improbable that the PLA’s strategy could actually win a war. Take a Taiwan invasion scenario, which is the PLA’s top operational planning priority. While much hand-wringing has been done in recent years about the shifting military balance in the Taiwan Strait, so far no one has been able to explain how any invading PLA force would be able to cross over 100 nautical miles of exceedingly rough water and successfully land on the world’s most inhospitable beaches, let alone capture the capital and pacify the rest of the rugged island.

The PLA simply does not have enough transport ships to make the crossing, and those it does have are remarkably vulnerable to Taiwanese anti-ship cruise missiles, guided rockets, smart cluster munitions, mobile artillery and advanced sea mines – not to mention its elite corps of American-trained fighter and helicopter pilots. Even if some lucky PLA units could survive the trip (not at all a safe assumption), they would be rapidly overwhelmed by a small but professional Taiwan military that has been thinking about and preparing for this fight for decades.

Going forward it will be important for the U.S. and its allies to recognize that China’s military is in many ways much weaker than it looks. However, it is also growing more capable of inflicting destruction on its enemies through the use of first-strike weapons. To mitigate the destabilizing effects of the PLA’s strategy, the U.S. and its allies should try harder to maintain their current (if eroding) leads in military hardware. But more importantly, they must continue investing in the training that makes them true professionals. While manpower numbers are likely to come down in the years ahead due to defense budget cuts, regional democracies will have less to fear from China’s weak but dangerous military if their axes stay sharp.

Ian Easton is a research fellow at the Project 2049 Institute in Arlington, VA. He was also a recent visiting fellow at the Japan Institute of International Affairs in Tokyo. Previously, he was a China analyst at the Center for Naval Analyses.

China’s Deceptively Weak (and Dangerous) Military
-In many ways, the PLA is weaker than it looks – and more dangerous.


http://thediplomat.com/2014/01/chinas-deceptively-weak-and-dangerous-military/

In April 2003, the Chinese Navy decided to put a large group of its best submarine talent on the same boat as part of an experiment to synergize its naval elite. The result? Within hours of leaving port, the Type 035 Ming III class submarine sank with all hands lost. Never having fully recovered from this maritime disaster, the People’s Republic of China (PRC) is still the only permanent member of the United Nations Security Council never to have conducted an operational patrol with a nuclear missile submarine.

China is also the only member of the UN’s “Big Five” never to have built and operated an aircraft carrier. While it launched a refurbished Ukrainian built carrier amidst much fanfare in September 2012 – then-President Hu Jintao and all the top brass showed up – soon afterward the big ship had to return to the docks for extensive overhauls because of suspected engine failure; not the most auspicious of starts for China’s fledgling “blue water” navy, and not the least example of a modernizing military that has yet to master last century’s technology.

Indeed, today the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) still conducts long-distance maneuver training at speeds measured by how fast the next available cargo train can transport its tanks and guns forward. And if mobilizing and moving armies around on railway tracks sounds a bit antiquated in an era of global airlift, it should – that was how it was done in the First World War.

Not to be outdone by the conventional army, China’s powerful strategic rocket troops, the Second Artillery Force, still uses cavalry units to patrol its sprawling missile bases deep within China’s vast interior. Why? Because it doesn’t have any helicopters. Equally scarce in China are modern fixed-wing military aircraft. So the Air Force continues to use a 1950s Soviet designed airframe, the Tupolev Tu-16, as a bomber (its original intended mission), a battlefield reconnaissance aircraft, an electronic warfare aircraft, a target spotting aircraft, and an aerial refueling tanker. Likewise, the PLA uses the Soviet designed Antonov An-12 military cargo aircraft for ELINT (electronic intelligence) missions, ASW (anti-submarine warfare) missions, geological survey missions, and airborne early warning missions. It also has an An-12 variant specially modified for transporting livestock, allowing sheep and goats access to remote seasonal pastures.

But if China’s lack of decent hardware is somewhat surprising given all the hype surrounding Beijing’s massive military modernization program, the state of “software” (military training and readiness) is truly astounding. At one military exercise in the summer of 2012, a strategic PLA unit, stressed out by the hard work of handling warheads in an underground bunker complex, actually had to take time out of a 15-day wartime simulation for movie nights and karaoke parties. In fact, by day nine of the exercise, a “cultural performance troupe” (common PLA euphemism for song-and-dance girls) had to be brought into the otherwise sealed facility to entertain the homesick soldiers.

Apparently becoming suspicious that men might not have the emotional fortitude to hack it in high-pressure situations, an experimental all-female unit was then brought in for the 2013 iteration of the war games, held in May, for an abbreviated 72-hour trial run. Unfortunately for the PLA, the results were even worse. By the end of the second day of the exercise, the hardened tunnel facility’s psychological counseling office was overrun with patients, many reportedly too upset to eat and one even suffering with severe nausea because of the unpleasant conditions.

While recent years have witnessed a tremendous Chinese propaganda effort aimed at convincing the world that the PRC is a serious military player that is owed respect, outsiders often forget that China does not even have a professional military. The PLA, unlike the armed forces of the United States, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and other regional heavyweights, is by definition not a professional fighting force. Rather, it is a “party army,” the armed wing of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Indeed, all career officers in the PLA are members of the CCP and all units at the company level and above have political officers assigned to enforce party control. Likewise, all important decisions in the PLA are made by Communist Party committees that are dominated by political officers, not by operators. This system ensures that the interests of the party’s civilian and military leaders are merged, and for this reason new Chinese soldiers entering into the PLA swear their allegiance to the CCP, not to the PRC constitution or the people of China.

This may be one reason why China’s marines (or “naval infantry” in PLA parlance) and other  amphibious warfare units train by landing on big white sandy beaches that look nothing like the west coast of Taiwan (or for that matter anyplace else they could conceivably be sent in the East China Sea or South China Sea). It could also be why PLA Air Force pilots still typically get less than ten hours of flight time a month (well below regional standards), and only in 2012 began to have the ability to submit their own flight plans (previously, overbearing staff officers assigned pilots their flight plans and would not even allow them to taxi and take-off on the runways by themselves).

Intense and realistic training is dangerous business, and the American maxim that the more you bleed during training the less you bleed during combat doesn’t translate well in a Leninist military system. Just the opposite. China’s military is intentionally organized to bureaucratically enforce risk-averse behavior, because an army that spends too much time training is an army that is not engaging in enough political indoctrination. Beijing’s worst nightmare is that the PLA could one day forget that its number one mission is protecting the Communist Party’s civilian leaders against all its enemies – especially when the CCP’s “enemies” are domestic student or religious groups campaigning for democratic rights, as happened in 1989 and 1999, respectively.

For that reason, the PLA has to engage in constant “political work” at the expense of training for combat. This means that 30 to 40 percent of an officer’s career (or roughly 15 hours per 40-hour work week) is wasted studying CCP propaganda, singing patriotic songs, and conducting small group discussions on Marxist-Leninist theory. And when PLA officers do train, it is almost always a cautious affair that rarely involves risky (i.e., realistic) training scenarios.

Abraham Lincoln once observed that if he had six hours to chop down a tree he would spend the first four hours sharpening his axe. Clearly the PLA is not sharpening its proverbial axe. Nor can it. Rather, it has opted to invest in a bigger axe, albeit one that is still dull. Ironically, this undermines Beijing’s own aspirations for building a truly powerful 21st century military.

Yet none of this should be comforting to China’s potential military adversaries. It is precisely China’s military weakness that makes it so dangerous. Take the PLA’s lack of combat experience, for example. A few minor border scraps aside, the PLA hasn’t seen real combat since the Korean War. This appears to be a major factor leading it to act so brazenly in the East and South China Seas. Indeed, China’s navy now appears to be itching for a fight anywhere it can find one. Experienced combat veterans almost never act this way. Indeed, history shows that military commanders that have gone to war are significantly less hawkish than their inexperienced counterparts. Lacking the somber wisdom that comes from combat experience, today’s PLA is all hawk and no dove.

The Chinese military is dangerous in another way as well. Recognizing that it will never be able to compete with the U.S. and its allies using traditional methods of war fighting, the PLA has turned to unconventional “asymmetric” first-strike weapons and capabilities to make up for its lack of conventional firepower, professionalism and experience. These weapons include more than 1,600 offensive ballistic and cruise missiles, whose very nature is so strategically destabilizing that the U.S. and Russia decided to outlaw them with the INF Treaty some 25 years ago.

In concert with its strategic missile forces, China has also developed a broad array of space weapons designed to destroy satellites used to verify arms control treaties, provide military communications, and warn of enemy attacks. China has also built the world’s largest army of cyber warriors, and the planet’s second largest fleet of drones, to exploit areas where the U.S. and its allies are under-defended. All of these capabilities make it more likely that China could one day be tempted to start a war, and none come with any built in escalation control.

Yet while there is ample and growing evidence to suggest China could, through malice or mistake, start a devastating war in the Pacific, it is highly improbable that the PLA’s strategy could actually win a war. Take a Taiwan invasion scenario, which is the PLA’s top operational planning priority. While much hand-wringing has been done in recent years about the shifting military balance in the Taiwan Strait, so far no one has been able to explain how any invading PLA force would be able to cross over 100 nautical miles of exceedingly rough water and successfully land on the world’s most inhospitable beaches, let alone capture the capital and pacify the rest of the rugged island.

The PLA simply does not have enough transport ships to make the crossing, and those it does have are remarkably vulnerable to Taiwanese anti-ship cruise missiles, guided rockets, smart cluster munitions, mobile artillery and advanced sea mines – not to mention its elite corps of American-trained fighter and helicopter pilots. Even if some lucky PLA units could survive the trip (not at all a safe assumption), they would be rapidly overwhelmed by a small but professional Taiwan military that has been thinking about and preparing for this fight for decades.

Going forward it will be important for the U.S. and its allies to recognize that China’s military is in many ways much weaker than it looks. However, it is also growing more capable of inflicting destruction on its enemies through the use of first-strike weapons. To mitigate the destabilizing effects of the PLA’s strategy, the U.S. and its allies should try harder to maintain their current (if eroding) leads in military hardware. But more importantly, they must continue investing in the training that makes them true professionals. While manpower numbers are likely to come down in the years ahead due to defense budget cuts, regional democracies will have less to fear from China’s weak but dangerous military if their axes stay sharp.

Ian Easton is a research fellow at the Project 2049 Institute in Arlington, VA. He was also a recent visiting fellow at the Japan Institute of International Affairs in Tokyo. Previously, he was a China analyst at the Center for Naval Analyses.
谢谢楼主看的起咱的英文水平
这方言教我如何懂得
古狗无节操翻译版:

2003年4月,中国海军决定把一大群最佳潜艇的人才在同一条船上做实验,协同其海军精英的一部分。结果呢?在离开港口时,在035型明III级潜艇沉没失去了所有的手。从来没有从这个海上灾难完全恢复,中国人民共和国(中国)仍是联合国安理会从来就没有进行与核导弹潜艇的作战巡逻唯一的常任理事国。

中国也是联合国的“五大”从来就没有兴建和营运航空母舰的唯一成员。虽然2012年9月推出了翻新乌克兰建造的载体之中大张旗鼓地 - 当时的国家主席胡锦涛和所有的高层出现了 - 不久之后的大船了,因为怀疑发动机故障返回到码头进行广泛的检修;不最吉祥的开始为中国刚刚起步的“蓝水”海军,而不是一个军事现代化,目前尚未掌握上个世纪的技术至少例子。

的确,今天的解放军( PLA)还是进行长途机动训练的速度有多快的下一个可用货物列车可以运送坦克和大炮前进测量速度。如果动员和四处移动的军队在铁路轨道听起来有点过时,全球空运的时代,它应该 - 那是它如何在第一次世界大战已完成。

不以传统的军队,中国强大的战略火箭兵也不甘示弱,第二炮兵部队,仍然使用的骑兵部队,以深中国广大的内陆范围内的巡逻蔓延的导弹基地。为什么呢?因为它不具有任何直升机。在中国同样稀缺的现代固定翼军用飞机。因此,空军将继续使用20世纪50年代苏联设计的机身,在图波列夫Tu - 16 ,作为轰炸机(其原预期的任务) ,一个战场侦察飞机,电子战飞机,目标察觉飞机和空中加油机。同样的,解放军使用苏联安东诺夫设计的安-12军用运输机的ELINT (电子情报)任务, ASW (反潜战)的任务,地质调查任务,空中预警任务。它也有一个安-12的变体经过特殊改进的用于运输牲畜,使绵羊和山羊访问远程季节性牧场。

但是,如果中国缺乏像样的硬件是有些奇怪,因为所有围绕北京的大规模军事现代化计划的炒作, “软件” (军事训练和战备)的状态是很惊人。在一次军事演习在2012年的夏天,一个战略解放军某部,强调了通过处理弹头在地下掩体复杂的辛勤工作,实际上必须抽出时间为期15天的战争模拟电影之夜和卡拉OK派对的。事实上,通过行使九天, “文化表演团” (解放军常见的委婉歌曲和舞蹈的女孩)必须纳入否则密封设施,娱乐想家的士兵。

显然变得多疑,男人可能没有感情刚毅破解它在高压的情况下,一个实验全女性机组随后带来了2013年的迭代战争游戏在5月举行的一个简短的72小时试运行。不幸的是,解放军,结果更糟。通过演习的第二天结束时,硬化隧道设施的心理咨询办公室充斥着病人,据说很多过于伤心,因为令人不快的条件吃,一个甚至患上严重的恶心。

虽然近几年目睹了中国的巨大努力宣传旨在说服世界,中国是欠尊重严重的军事玩家,外人常常忘记,中国甚至没有一个职业军人。解放军,不像美国,日本,韩国,台湾等地区重量级的军队,是通过定义不是专业的战斗力量。相反,它是一个“党的军队, ”中国共产党(中共)的武装派别。事实上,所有的职业军官在解放军是在公司层面共产党成员和各单位及以上有责执行党控制的政治官员。同样,在解放军的所有重要决定都是由是由政治官员主导,而不是由运营商共产党党委提出。该系统保证了党的文职和军事领导人的利益被合并,基于这个原因,进入解放军新中国军人宣誓效忠中共,而不是中国宪法和中国人民。

这可能是一个原因,为什么中国的海军陆战队员(或“海军陆战队”解放军说法)和其他两栖战部队列车通过登陆上,看起来一点也不像台湾的西海岸(或与此有关其他任何地方,他们可以想见,大的白色沙滩在东中国海或中国南海)被发送。这也可能是为什么解放军空军飞行员仍通常一个月拿(远低于区域标准)不到十小时的飞行时间,只有在2012年开始有提交自己的飞行计划的能力(以前,霸道参谋人员分配飞行员的飞行计划,甚至不会让他们滑行和起飞的跑道本身) 。

激烈和真实的训练是危险的业务,你越在你流血战斗训练过程中少流血,美国格言不以列宁主义的军事体系很好的转化。正好相反。中国军队是故意组织官僚执行规避风险的行为,因为这花费太多时间训练的军队是不从事足够的政治灌输的军队。北京的最可怕的噩梦是,解放军可能有一天忘记,它的首要使命是保护共产党的文职领导人针对其所有的敌人 ​​- 尤其是当中共的“敌人”是国内学生或各宗教集团为争取民主权利,如发生在1989年和1999年,分别。

出于这个原因,解放军拥有在作战训练为代价搞常数“政治工作” 。这意味着,一个军官的职业(或每40小时工作周约15小时)的30 %到40%被浪费在研究中共的宣传,唱爱国歌曲,并进行马克思列宁主义的理论小组讨论。而当解放军指战员做火车,它几乎总是一个谨慎的事情是很少涉及的风险(即现实的)训练场景。

亚伯拉罕·林肯曾经说过,如果他有六个小时砍倒一棵树,他会花头四个小时里磨砺了他的斧头。显然,解放军是不是磨刀斧有口皆碑。也不能。相反,它已选择投资于一个更大的斧头,虽然一个是依然平淡。讽刺的是,这破坏了北京自己的愿望建设一个真正强大的21世纪军事。

然而,这一切都不应该是安慰中国的潜在军事对手。正是中国的军事弱点,使得它如此危险。就拿解放军缺乏实战经验,例如。一些小的边界废料之外,解放军还没有自朝鲜战争以来见过真正的战斗。这似乎是导致其行事如此肆无忌惮地在东海和中国南海的一个主要因素。事实上,中国海军现在看来是摩拳擦掌的任何地方就可以找到。实战经验丰富的老兵几乎从来没有这样的行为。事实上,历史表明,去了战争的军事指挥官显著那么强硬比没有经验的同行。缺乏忧郁的智慧,来源于实战经验,今天的解放军是所有的鹰和鸽子没有。

中国军队是危险的另一种方式为好。认识到这将永远无法用传统的战争战斗方式与美国及其盟友的竞争,解放军已经转向非传统的“非对称”第一次打击武器和能力来弥补其不足传统的火力,专业和经验。这些武器包括1600多名进攻弹道导弹和巡航导弹,其本质是使战略的不稳定,美国和俄罗斯决定在约25年前取缔他们中导条约。

在演唱会与它的战略导弹部队,中国还研制太空武器,旨在破坏用来验证军控条约,为军事通信,并警告敌人的攻击卫星浩如烟海。中国还建造了世界上最大的网络战士的军队,和地球上第二大无人机机队,以利用那里的美国及其盟国正在不设防区。所有这些功能使之更可能是中国可能有一天会倾向于发动战争,并没有附带任何内置的升级控制。

然而,尽管有充足的和越来越多的证据表明,中国可以通过恶意或错误,开始在太平洋一场毁灭性的战争,这是极不可能的,解放军的战略实际上可以打赢一场战争。就拿一个台湾入侵的情况下,这是解放军的最高运营规划优先考虑。虽然许多搓手近年已完成了大约台海的转移军事平衡,至今没有人能够解释如何任何入侵解放军部队将能够跨越100海里的极其粗糙的水,并成功土地是世界上最荒凉的海滩,更别说占领首都和安抚崎岖的岛屿的其余部分。

解放军根本没有足够的运输船只,使道口,和那些它确实有显着的是脆弱的台湾反舰巡航导弹,制导火箭弹,智能集束弹药,自行火炮和先进的水雷 - 更不用提它的精英军团美国训练的战斗机和直升机飞行员。即使一些幸运的部队能够生存之旅(根本不是一个安全的假设) ,他们会迅速由一个小而专业的台湾军方一直在思考和准备这场斗争了几十年不堪重负。

展望未来为美国及其盟国承认中国的军事在很多方面大大弱于它看起来这将是非常重要的。然而,它也变得越来越有能力通过利用第一次打击武器的敌人造成毁灭的。为了缓解解放军的战略的不稳定影响,美国及其盟友应该更加努力,以维持目前的(如果侵蚀)领导的军事硬件。但更重要的是,他们必须继续投资,使他们真正的专业人士的培训。虽然人力资源数量很可能在未来由于国防预算削减了几年有所下降,区域民主国家们没有多少担心来自中国的软弱,但危险的军事,如果它们的轴保持锋利。

伊恩·伊斯顿是一个研究员的2049项目研究所在阿灵顿,弗吉尼亚州。他也是最近访问学者国际事务研究所日本东京。此前,他是一个中国分析师海军分析中心。
这算是标题党吗?
好吧,看完前几段,累的慌
楼主你是哪方人士,翻译一下呗
浮生半醒 发表于 2014-2-2 20:38
楼主你是哪方人士,翻译一下呗
古狗翻译版贴不了,可能有敏感词?
每个字母和数字都认识。
看得我头昏眼花,直接回到学生时代
    好歹给个段落大意,最次给个中心思想。


既然是“极度微弱”的军事力量,又怎么会“危险”? 当然,这个划分标准是在MD手里,说你啥就是啥,即使你拿一根牙签,MD硬说你是威胁,你也没辙


第一段是嘲笑中国潜艇,当年出事死人的事
第二段是嘲笑中国是五大国却没有操作航母的经验,其中辽宁号也不怎么样balabala

第三段嘲笑中国还是依赖铁路
第四段嘲笑中国二炮有力量,但还是不行,因为没直升机和空军还在用前苏联设计的老轰六


第一段是嘲笑中国潜艇,当年出事死人的事
第二段是嘲笑中国是五大国却没有操作航母的经验,其中辽宁号也不怎么样balabala

第三段嘲笑中国还是依赖铁路
第四段嘲笑中国二炮有力量,但还是不行,因为没直升机和空军还在用前苏联设计的老轰六
中国似弱(更危险)的军力
- 在许多方面,解放军外表微弱 - 和更加危险

前半部在奚落中国的军力如何不行,后半部説这才危险,因为解放军在找架打,四处惹事。



解放军很矬,所以更有必要勒紧裤腰带发展军备,大概意思
LZ你能把鸟语翻译一下吗
这算精分吧
第三段嘲笑中国还是依赖铁路
第四段嘲笑中国二炮有力量,但还是不行,因为没直升机和空军还在用前苏联设计的老轰六
无小咸 发表于 2014-2-2 20:58
解放军很矬,所以更有必要勒紧裤腰带发展军备,大概意思
大意就是中国军队体制问题极其严重,不搞训练只搞政治运动,不是为国而战而是为镇~~压~`群~~众而战。
解放军那么矬,怎么能威胁“自由民主世界"?
我漫漫看吧。
“外交家”杂志咋看都是日本政府在米国的游说喉舌,可以查下投资背景
che 发表于 2014-2-2 21:05
大意就是中国军队体制问题极其严重,不搞训练只搞政治运动,不是为国而战而是为镇~~压~`群~~众而战。
看最后一段,是他们号召要勒紧裤腰带
MD军方到底是有钱还是没钱啊,前几天MD国防部老三说TG技术差距就5年,这会儿又说TG脆弱······
yong_yo0924 发表于 2014-2-2 21:07
解放军那么矬,怎么能威胁“自由民主世界"?
西方宣传套路:中国已经穷得连菜刀,哦不,牙签都买不起了,但他还有一口牙齿,随时会咬人……
既然我们的军队极度微弱,日本发展军力难道不是想威胁全世界吗?
西方宣传套路:中国已经穷得连菜刀,哦不,牙签都买不起了,但他还有一口牙齿,随时会咬人……
我x!西方也忒狠!
所以说:信西媒,得永生(在地狱)!
面壁者晨曦 发表于 2014-2-2 21:19
既然我们的军队极度微弱,日本发展军力难道不是想威胁全世界吗?
西媒:强大的军队维护正义,弱小的军队欺负善良。
写得太棒了,我看了一遍又一遍,终于发现这么长一篇文章只是26个字母的排列组合。

战忽局春节还在加班?
我看了半天除了J、Q、K、A认识,绞尽脑汁理解了这是教怎么玩扑克!为什么没有大小王呢???
che 发表于 2014-2-2 21:24
西媒:强大的军队维护正义,弱小的军队欺负善良。
原来是酱紫,那以后要是有西霉质疑TG发展军力,我们就说是为了维护世界和平,弱小了是欺负人的,强大了就自然是维护和平的。
    真正的中华之友。
面壁者晨曦 发表于 2014-2-2 21:33
原来是酱紫,那以后要是有西霉质疑TG发展军力,我们就说是为了维护世界和平,弱小了是欺负人的, ...
到时候西媒改写一下:弱小的明珠军队维护正义,强大的毒菜军队欺负善良
虽然看不懂,想必是极好的。
说二炮还在骑马巡逻导弹基地, 都快黑出翔了
在2003年4月,中国海军决定将一大组最好的潜艇操作人才集中在同一艘潜艇上进行试验,这一试验的目的是为了加强海军的协同能力。结果?离开码头仅仅数小时,035III明级潜艇由于缺氧,导致全体人员牺牲。中国海军一直没有从这次灾难中完全恢复,中华人民共和国仍然是联合国安理会常任理事国中唯一一个从未实施一次有效的战略导弹核潜艇战备巡逻的国家。

中国也是联合国五大国中唯一一个从未建造并运作航空母舰的国家。在2012年9月,中国高调宣布其从乌克兰购入的半成品航母在经过翻新后正式服役。服役典礼上,HJT主席和所有最高级别的领导人都到场露面。在那以后很快,这艘大舰回到了船厂进行进一步的大修,初步怀疑是遇到了动力故障。对中国建造蓝水海军的雄心而言,这不是一个好兆头。至少这说明中国海军目前仍然是一只尚未掌握上个世纪的航母科技的现代海军。

实际上,今天的解放军仍然在进行远距离机动测试,以验证新一代高铁能够以多快的速度运输部署坦克和枪炮之类的装备。通过铁路运输部署军队和装备在全球空运时代听起来有些过时,实际上这类行动早在第一次世界大战时就已实战应用。
不只是差强人意的常规军力,就连中国最具威力的战略导弹部队-第二炮兵仍然采用地面机动的方式在中国广袤的内地进行战备巡逻。为什么?因为二炮没有任何直升机。中国同样缺乏现代化的固定翼战术飞机。因此中国空军一直在使用1950年代的苏联设计制造的飞机机体,例如图16作为轰炸机(最初设计)、战场侦察飞机、电子战飞机、目标指示飞机和空中加油机。类似的,中国空军使用苏联设计的安12军用运输机执行电子情报搜集任务、反潜艇任务、对地侦查任务以及空中早期预警任务。

对照北京庞大的军事现代化计划,缺乏像样的硬件是有些令人惊讶,但是"软件"(训练和战备)的建设状态是惊人的。2012年夏天,解放军总部机关实施一次军事演习,要求指挥官进入地下掩体进行复杂条件下,贴近实战的为期15天的作战模拟演习。在演习的第九天,文工团必须进入军事演习重地,慰问参演的官兵。
总结:一、pla装备落后 二、pla是党的狗腿子....这是作者说的,楼主表示与本人无关
难道美国佬潜艇上死的人少?
wangxiaohrbeu1 发表于 2014-2-2 21:40
在2003年4月,中国海军决定将一大组最好的潜艇操作人才集中在同一艘潜艇上进行试验,这一试验的目的是为了 ...
你翻译的?