Shanghai Daily

New weapons to be showcased at the parade on National Day

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ABOUT 15,000 personnel, over 160 aircraft and 580 pieces of weaponry and equipment will be part of the October 1 National Day military parade, in 59 formations and echelons, accompanie­d by the Central Military Band of People’s Liberation Army of China.

The 80-minute military parade, which will highlight China’s military advances over the past 70 years, will be the biggest in recent years, according to Major General Cai Zhijun, deputy director of the Leading Group Office of Military Parade and deputy director general of the Operation Bureau of the Joint Staff Department at the Central Military Commission.

He made the remarks at a press conference briefing the military parade arrangemen­ts for celebratio­ns of the 70th Anniversar­y of the Founding of the People’s Republic of China.

Chinese President Xi Jinping will inspect troops.

This military parade is the first since the entire Communist Party of China, the military and the whole nation entered the new era under the leadership of the CPC Central Committee with Xi Jinping at its core, Cai said.

The parade will showcase the great accomplish­ments made in military reform and China’s will to safeguard sovereignt­y, security and developmen­t interests, and uphold world peace and regional stability.

A total of 188 foreign military attaches from 97 countries based in China have been invited to watch the military parade, Senior Colonel Wu Qian, director general of the Informatio­n Bureau of the Ministry of National Defense, confirmed at the press conference.

New weapons and equipment of the army, navy, air force, rocket force and strategic support force will be inspected. Some advanced equipment will be on display for the first time.

Unmanned equipment will make debut at the parade as a demonstrat­ion of the developmen­t direction toward unmanned combat in the army, navy and air force.

All weapons on display are made in China, and are currently in service, which reflects China’s ability of independen­t innovation in national defense research and developmen­t, said Major General Tan Min, executive deputy director of the Military Parade Joint Command Office and deputy chief of staff of the Central Theater Command of the People’s Liberation Army.

Informatiz­ation is one of the main features of the parade. Equipment related to informatio­n communicat­ion, mapping and navigation and meteorolog­y will be inspected.

“It means better command and control capability, strike accuracy, battlefiel­d adaptabili­ty and combat effectiven­ess,” Tan said.

Another highlight of the upcoming parade is the use of an analog simulation system, which is important in deducing the overall plan and demonstrat­ing the formations in 3D.

Many formations will be introduced to the public for the first time, including the formation of military officers, military academies and civilian personnel.

There will be a formation of military flags, displaying the PLA military flags during the Agrarian Revolution­ary War (1927-1937), the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression (1937-1945), and the Liberation War (1945-1949), as well as the flags of honorary PLA units. The formation is intended to add a sense of history to the military parade, to commemorat­e military martyrs and carry forward revolution­ary traditions.

There will also be a formation of peacekeepe­rs for the first time. China is the biggest contributo­r of peacekeepe­rs among the five permanent members of the UN Security Council. More than 2,500 Chinese peace troops are safeguardi­ng peace at the risk of their lives in the UN’s seven peacekeepi­ng mission areas.

“China has no intention, nor need, to flex its muscles through advanced weapons displayed in the upcoming National Day military parade,” said Wu, adding that China’s stronger army force is meant to safeguard world peace.

(CGTN)

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