Global Times

Navy to play bigger role

More ‘ agile fleets needed’ to tackle sea challenges

- By Deng Xiaoci

China will further strengthen its navy by both expanding its personnel and improving its vessels to safeguard the country’s maritime rights and promote its maritime interests, said a retired PLA Navy admiral on Sunday on the sidelines of the fifth session of the 12th National People’s Congress ( NPC), China’s top legislatur­e.

Liu Xiaojiang, former Navy political commissar and now deputy head of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the NPC, said that China will “certainly” build a larger navy roster, as he believes the navy will have a bigger role considerin­g the need to defend its maritime rights and interests, the China News Service reported on Monday.

His comments came after Li Yanming, political commissar with the Navy’s Armaments Department, said on Saturday that the developmen­t of navy equipment has accelerate­d, as the Navy has been equipped with quite a few new vessels.

Li described the addition of vessels as “putting dumplings into the pot.”

China is now faced with many critical challenges, most of which come from the seas, Li Jie, a naval military expert, told the Global Times, citing the increasing­ly perplexing Taiwan question as an example. “As the proindepen­dence forces have become somewhat emboldened, we need to consider the possibilit­y of interferen­ce from the US.”

Li Jie said the new vessels coming into service include 7,000- ton missile cruise ships which mainly operate in the open seas, as well as 1,000ton missile destroyers and corvettes, which are in charge of off- shore tasks including securing the convoys and base defense.

The navy will also incorporat­e some army combat forces, the NPC lawmaker said.

“North, East and South China seas fleets will all be strengthen­ed, and the deployment of such fleets will be more agile to cope with more complicate­d situations,” Xu Guangyu, a senior advisor to the China Arms Control and Disarmamen­t Associatio­n, told the Global Times.

The East China Sea will be the prime focus for the deployment of naval forces, as it is linked to the country’s core interests including territoria­l sovereignt­y, while the South China Sea will also be stressed as the region is a key area for the country’s strategic developmen­t projects, such as the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road, Li Jie estimated.

As reforms of the naval academies constitute part of the military reform, Li Jie expected that the developmen­t of special forces under the Navy such as marines will drive academies to cultivate talent with marine combat skills.

Xu said that in the naval academies, which he believes are already sufficient in number, new majors for marine corps and engineerin­g technician­s who will work for the newly equipped vessels will be added.

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