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China Wants 100,000 Marines To Defend Its Expanding Global Interests

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As overseas ambitions expand, China plans 400 per cent increase to marine corps numbers, sources say
PLA will increase fighting force to 100,000 personnel, allowing for deployment in Djibouti in the Horn of Africa and Gwadar in southwest Pakistan, military insiders say

PUBLISHED : Monday, 13 March, 2017, 8:01am
UPDATED : Monday, 13 March, 2017, 9:00am



China plans to increase the size of its marine corps from about 20,000 to 100,000 personnel to protect the nation’s maritime lifelines and its growing interests overseas, military insiders and experts have said.

Some members would be stationed at ports China operates in Djibouti in the Horn of Africa and Gwadar in southwest Pakistan, they said.

The expanded corps is part of a wider push to refocus the world’s largest army away from winning a land war based on sheer numbers and towards meeting a range of security scenarios using highly specialised units. Towards that end, Chinese President Xi Jinping is reducing the size of the People’s Liberation Army by 300,000, with nearly all of the cuts coming from the land forces.

Chinese military base in Djibouti necessary to protect key trade routes linking Asia, Africa, the Middle East and Europe

Military insiders told the South China Morning Post that two brigades of special combat soldiers had already been moved to the marines, nearly doubling its size to 20,000, and more brigades would be added. “The PLA marines will be increased to 100,000, consisting of six brigades in the coming future to fulfil new missions of our country,” one source said, adding the size of the navy would also grow 15 per cent. Its current size is estimated at 235,000 personnel.




Liu Xiaojiang, a former navy political commissar, said the maritime force would take on an increasingly central role in the military.

“China is a maritime country and as we defend our maritime rights and develop our interests, the status of the navy will be more important,” Liu told reporters on the sidelines of the annual Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference in Beijing on March 5.

Traditionally, marines have mostly operated only in China’s costal areas, as their role was limited by their relatively small numbers and basic equipment, said Beijing-based naval expert Li Jie.

But a bigger corps could be deployed much farther afield as the navy takes on more challenges.

“Besides its original missions of a possible war with Taiwan, maritime defence in the East and South China seas, it’s also forseeable that the PLA Navy’s mission will expand overseas, including protection of China’s national security in the Korean peninsula, the country’s maritime lifelines, as well as offshore supply deports like in Djibouti and Gwadar port in Pakistan,” Li said.

“However, the current size of the marines and its equipment are very limited and not enough to cope with the upcoming new challenges.”


China is constructing a naval base in Djibouti to provide what it calls logistical support in one of the world’s busiest waterways. The defence ministry said in a statement last year that the facility was mostly for resupply purposes for anti-piracy, humanitarian and peacekeeping operations.

Former colonial power France and the United States also maintain sizeable bases in Djibouti, with the latter’s Camp Lemonnier home to more than 4,000 personnel. China has not said how many people its base can accommodate, although some media reports have put the figure as high as 10,000.



Gwadar port is a deep sea port next to the Strait of Hormuz, the key oil route in and out of the Persian gulf, built with Chinese funding and operated by mainland firms. Although the port is not home to any PLA installation, navy ships are expected to dock at the facility in the near future.

China is playing a crucial role in Africa’s future that will benefit all countries involved

Macau-based military observer Antony Wong Dong said an expanded marine corps could help maintain security for China’s “One Belt, One Road” initiative. The plan calls for new trade and investment links stretching from Southeast Asia to eastern Europe, and will likely see Chinese companies as well as their workers operating in high-risk areas such as Pakistan and Afghanistan

The marines were established in the 1950s in the aftermath of the civil war between China’s Communists and Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalists who fled to Taiwan. For decades, Taiwan had the second-largest marine force in the world, after the United States, but its stature began to decline in the 1990s when Beijing began pursuing claims in the South China Sea.

http://www.scmp.com/news/china/dipl...s-ambitions-expand-china-plans-400pc-increase
 
For the largest trading nation in the world with the largest number/tonnage of merchant fleet, this is a welcome, anticipated and, even, belated move.

Besides, this indicates a change of deep-seated mentality of a land power to a land-maritime continental power, which requires force projection capacity via international air and sea routes.

Of course, it is a result of a system-wide improvement/development, which takes time. For instance, China's power projection capacity cannot be thought of independent from, e.g., the development of Baidou navigation system.
 
This may also relate to the fact that China expand its economic ties with world. Well Done.
 
China is reportedly looking to dramatically increase the size of its marine corps by 400 percent to boost its global presence.

It wants 100,000 marines standing ready to defend its growing international interests, reports the South China Morning Post, citing sources inside the military. The decision to significantly expand the size of the marine corps is believed to be a part of China’s ongoing efforts to reform, restructure, and modernize the People’s Liberation Army. The aim is to facilitate the transition from a military that relies solely on its size to a fighting force consisting of highly-specialized units.

China currently has 20,000 marines. “The PLA marines will be increased to 100,000, consisting of six brigades in the coming future to fulfill the new missions of our country,” a military source told reporters, adding that the size of the navy is also expected to grow by an estimated 15 percent.

The marines have traditionally been limited to coastal operations due to their smaller numbers and basic equipment; however, a larger force will allow China to deploy its marines farther from its shores to protect interests abroad. Part of the new force could be sent to overseas ports and bases, such as Djibouti on the Horn of Africa and Gwadar in Pakistan. The Djibouti base, which is still under construction, is located more than 4,500 miles from China and marks a major step forward in China’s pursuit of greater international influence. Deploying marines to the Djibouti base would be a shift given that the facility was originally intended as a port/supply depot for the Chinese navy.

A bigger marine corps will also facilitate China’s efforts to establish itself as a global maritime power, a key aspiration China announced two years ago and has continued to promote.

“Besides its original missions of a possible war with Taiwan and maritime defense in the East and South China seas, it is also foreseeable that the PLA Navy’s mission will expand overseas, including the protection of China’s national security on the Korean peninsula, the country’s maritime lifelines, as well as offshore supply depots,” Beijing-based naval expert Li Jie told reporters. “The current size of the marines and its equipment are very limited and not enough to cope with the upcoming new challenges.”

The Chinese Marine Corps was created by China’s communist forces during the Chinese civil war to carry out amphibious assaults against islands held by the nationalists. At the end of the Korean War, China had around 110,000 marines; the marines were disbanded towards the end of the 1950s. Two decades later, the Central Military Commission re-established the marine corps, and the number of marines has continued to grow as various threats and challenges arose. The current expansion project, if China decides to follow through, is particularly ambitious and reflects China’s broad interests in greater power.

dailycaller
 
China is reportedly looking to dramatically increase the size of its marine corps by 400 percent to boost its global presence.

It wants 100,000 marines standing ready to defend its growing international interests, reports the South China Morning Post, citing sources inside the military. The decision to significantly expand the size of the marine corps is believed to be a part of China’s ongoing efforts to reform, restructure, and modernize the People’s Liberation Army. The aim is to facilitate the transition from a military that relies solely on its size to a fighting force consisting of highly-specialized units.

China currently has 20,000 marines. “The PLA marines will be increased to 100,000, consisting of six brigades in the coming future to fulfill the new missions of our country,” a military source told reporters, adding that the size of the navy is also expected to grow by an estimated 15 percent.

The marines have traditionally been limited to coastal operations due to their smaller numbers and basic equipment; however, a larger force will allow China to deploy its marines farther from its shores to protect interests abroad. Part of the new force could be sent to overseas ports and bases, such as Djibouti on the Horn of Africa and Gwadar in Pakistan. The Djibouti base, which is still under construction, is located more than 4,500 miles from China and marks a major step forward in China’s pursuit of greater international influence. Deploying marines to the Djibouti base would be a shift given that the facility was originally intended as a port/supply depot for the Chinese navy.

A bigger marine corps will also facilitate China’s efforts to establish itself as a global maritime power, a key aspiration China announced two years ago and has continued to promote.

“Besides its original missions of a possible war with Taiwan and maritime defense in the East and South China seas, it is also foreseeable that the PLA Navy’s mission will expand overseas, including the protection of China’s national security on the Korean peninsula, the country’s maritime lifelines, as well as offshore supply depots,” Beijing-based naval expert Li Jie told reporters. “The current size of the marines and its equipment are very limited and not enough to cope with the upcoming new challenges.”

The Chinese Marine Corps was created by China’s communist forces during the Chinese civil war to carry out amphibious assaults against islands held by the nationalists. At the end of the Korean War, China had around 110,000 marines; the marines were disbanded towards the end of the 1950s. Two decades later, the Central Military Commission re-established the marine corps, and the number of marines has continued to grow as various threats and challenges arose. The current expansion project, if China decides to follow through, is particularly ambitious and reflects China’s broad interests in greater power.

dailycaller

China Wants 100,000 Marines Defending Its Expanding Global Interests | The Daily Caller
http://dailycaller.com/2017/03/13/c...nes-to-defend-its-expanding-global-interests/


This media seems to not act against Donald Trump in the current gala battle between the competing camps :usflag:

@Get Ya Wig Split - Wish you may reach the 29 or so threshold soon so you may post link along with the article... just scout the vast ocean of net resources to find anything relevant and possibly unique and hopefully valuable to pass here
:enjoy:
 
From the article, it actually doing not much except changing its name, what the PLA actually is doing is simply reflag Army units into Marine.

Not quite sure what Marine Unit were to China, but the most important parts for Marine Units in the world is to engage in Amphibious Assaults and Expeditory Operation. Which means to break a new front even without a land border. A drastic Increase in Marine Size without coming with a drastic increase in Amphibious Assault capability would mean the change is not much.

Compare to the United States Marine or Royal Marine. US Marine are build around the 3 Marine Division (1st, 2nd and 3rd) with that, there were 3 Marine Expeditionary Force (MEF) which is around 80,000 in strength. However, not all 80,000 force can be forward deployed by Naval/Air Asset (Also known as Marine Air Ground Task Force) of those, 3 MEF, only 6 MEU (Marine Expeditionary Unit) are forward deployable. Act as a rapid reaction force. Only 15,000 marines form 6 MEU are able to carry out Amphibious Operation with US Navy equipment. They are including 9 LHD/LHA which can carry a whole MEU of 2,200 Marine, also with around 10 San Antonio Class LPD that can sealift a Brigade for Rapid Reaction Force deployment, the whole US Navy strength does not exceed 35,000 Amphibious Assault Capability, representing 33% of the Marine Force.

Royal Marine have a strength of 8,500 and half of them are sealift-able, Royal Navy have a full stock of 3 LPD?LPH, with the 2 QE Class Aircraft Carrier in service, that gives Royal Navy a sealift capability of around 5,000 Marines, in term of Percentage, it is about twice the capability of the US Marine.

Chinese Sealift capability is quite small. Only 4 Ocean Going LHD in any serious level of troop capacity, which represent a battalion (800) men each. Other craft are too small for being an ocean going vessel. And almost all o30 other ship is design to cross the channel and attack Taiwan. Which can bring a Company to Battalion size force.
 
China poised to expand its Marine Corps

Wang Xin - China Plus (CRI) - 2017-03-14

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China plans to expand the People's Liberation Army Marine Corps from 20,000 to 100,000 soldiers, reported South China Morning Post on March 13th. [Photo: mod.gov.cn]

China's military reform is progressing steadily and details of its plans will be released in due course, the Ministry of National Defense (MND) told the Global Times on Tuesday.

The MND remarked after officials were questioned about a recent report that said the country has plans to expand the People's Liberation Army Navy Marine Corps (PLAMC) from 20,000 to 100,000 soldiers.

bfb08d39-793a-19c6-586e-1a5b4d6e6084.jpg

The Marine Corps of China's People's Liberation Army Navy. [File photo: news.qq.com]

South China Morning Post (SCMP) reported on Tuesday that two special warfare brigades had already been incorporated into the PLAMC, raising the forces' complement of soldiers to 20,000.

Meanwhile, an anonymous person from the navy was quoted by SCMP as saying that the PLAMC will increase the number of soldiers to fulfill new missions. This source also said the People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) will also increase its personnel numbers by 15%.

As per SCMP, China is establishing a naval base in Djibouti, but as of now the number of soldiers needed to staff the base remains unknown. More than 4,000 American soldiers are stationed in Djibouti.

bf77e3b2-b728-e1d4-337b-fefb40039970.jpg

Soldiers on the Jinggangshan dock landing ship wave goodbye to the 14th Escort Taskforce of the Chinese Navy at the Gulf of Aden, Aug. 26, 2013. [Photo: Xinhua]

The report has also said that Chinese forces are likely to be stationed at Gwadar, a port in Pakistan, as a Chinese company made a large investment in facilities there and the port may be able to accommodate Chinese warships in the near future.

0c6cdeae-462e-f907-fe50-6ae2ff13e991.jpg

Gwadar Port, situated on the Arabian Sea in Balochistan province, Pakistan.[File photo: Xinhua]

In response, the MND says that facilities in Djibouti will be used to provide rest and supply support for Chinese armies which carry out convoys and patrols in the Gulf of Aden and Somalia, as part of the UN's peacekeeping and humanitarian aid.

The Gwadar port program is part of the China–Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) plan, which helps promote local development.

9b17f3ff-bc3c-8ce8-2f79-a2c2086b0cc1.jpg

A shipping container is being loaded onto a ship at Gwadar Port. [Photo: Xinhua]

Currently, the number of PLAMC soldiers and armament fall far short of those of the US, says Zhang Junshe, a researcher with the Military Academic Research Institute of the PLAN.

There are around 200,000 active soldiers in the US Marine Corps as well as another 40,000 on reserve duty, Zhang added. The US Marines, with their various amphibious assets, possess combat capabilities that are far beyond those of a medium aircraft carrier formation from any other country, said Zhang.

f2d874b5-e695-f221-4f9d-661324114163.jpg

Ships of the 14th and the 15th Escort Taskforces of the Chinese Navy fire flares during the formation breaking ceremony in the Gulf of Aden, Aug. 26, 2013. [Photo: Xinhua]

Early in 2015, China announced that three hundred thousand troops would be cut by the end of 2017. Those cuts have mostly affected soldiers from the army, indicating a strategic change for the People's Liberation Army, reported SCMP.

http://chinaplus.cri.cn/news/china/9/20170314/1475.html
 
I did think always, China already have a corps size marine Force to land one day one Taiwan? But good to know now the official statement!:woot:

Sindh has a huge population of youth unemployment, we could easily build a marines arm of corps size ;)
We need one. It's time Pakistan starts focusing on Navy along with inducting VLS equipped Frigates and Destroyers which can fire cruise missiles it's time we also increase our Marine Force massively and give them the role which USA Marines Does.
 
It will not be long PLAN marine will have their own carrier and Y-20 regiment. They can be call upon anytime and anywhere to strike on any spot on global.

You are talking as if PLAN has no expansion in pipeline? Didn't they are talking about the new LDH? Not to forget the dual use civilian and military giant submersible ship that can transport 2-3 Zubr. China just commision one today. And they already have another 2 in hand. Which means they can transport at least 2 zubr each, excluding at least 3 smaller LCAC.

But we are talking about transformation NOW, not 20 years down the road/

PLAN does not have this global reach as of now or even near future. China does not even have a proper carrier group to begin with, it would be at least 2024-2025 before China would have 3 Carrier Groups (And that is a very generous estimation) And Then you can start making ship for your Amphibious Group. (Each AAG have to be supported by a CBG) AAG alone does not have enough power to make war. Supporting role, yes, but not to make war.

You cannot use civilian ship to conduct amphibious assault, Civilian Ship needed Proper Harbor (In the field, we called it Equipped Shore) to unload people and cargo. The call for Amphibious Warfare is to gain control of Dock and Pairies from enemy hand in the begining stage of a war. If you are using Civilian ship, you may as well just bunch the Army Infantry with it.

At this stage, had China tried to expand the Marine Force to 100,000 I can't see how PLAN can sealift 20% (20,000) of those marine before 2030. Do bear in mind. US only achieve a 33% (or sealift rate with 9 AAG each with >40,000 ton) and 20 over 20,000 tons LPD/LHA) China have 4 25,000 tons Type 071A Which can carry appox 1,000 Marine. Type 072 is too small to carry any decent troop number (<800), there are currently no ship can carry Brigade level (~2200) of troop service in PLAN, and did not have any design in the pipeline. Estimate troop carrier level at this point til 2020 for PLAN is less than 8,000 troop (4 Battalions (800 men) with Type 71 and about 25 Reinforced Company (250 men) in type 072A and Type 072 III LHD)

Another problem China face is Chinese only have 1 single continuous coast line, with no Permanent Overseas Base asset, only 2 Temporary Overseas bases in Dijbouti and Gwadar. PLAN cannot support a lot of ship, Consider this, each AAG would be supported by 4 Combat ships (Desroyer or LCS), 4 Support ships (Minesweeper) and a control ship. You would need 9+ ship to form a AAG, it would be 27 ships for 3 AAG, and you also needed other shipping as well (Merchent Marine ship, aux ship, Carrier Group and so on) China have 1 coast + 2 bases, how many ship China can support? US have 2 coast lines with Permanent Bases in Hawaii, Alaska, Guam, Rota, Japan, Diego Garcia in the indian Ocean and numerous Temporary bases overseas. They have a lot of resources to support a large fleet. China don't.

It's impractical for China to have a large Marine Force now, any changes does not quite reflex actual amphibiious capacity. Hence any changes now or near future would only be in name only (ie, changing the name of an Army Unit to a Marine), it don't do much in reality.
 
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