Gulf News

‘Chinese bombers eyeing US strikes’

Pentagon report claims China is growing its military, economic and diplomatic clout

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Chinese bombers are likely training for strikes against US and allied targets in the Pacific, according to a new Pentagon report that also details how Beijing is transformi­ng its ground forces to “fight and win.”

The annual report to Congress, released Thursday, highlights China’s growing military, economic and diplomatic clout and how Beijing is leveraging this to rapidly build its internatio­nal footprint and establish regional dominance.

In the case of China’s air power, the report states that Chinese bombers are developing capabiliti­es to hit targets as far from China as possible. “Over the last three years, the PLA (People’s Liberation Army) has rapidly expanded its overwater bomber operating areas, gaining experience in critical maritime regions and likely training for strikes against US and allied targets,” the document states, noting how China is pushing its operations into the Pacific.

In August 2017, six Chinese H-6K bombers flew through the Miyako Strait in the southwest Japanese islands, and then for the first time turned north to fly east of Okinawa, where 47,000 US troops are based.

The PLA may demonstrat­e the “capability to strike US and allied forces and military bases in the western Pacific Ocean, including Guam,” the report says.

Largest ground force

China is engaged in a decades-long build-up and modernisat­ion of its oncebackwa­rd armed forces, and military leaders have set a goal of fielding a world-class military by 2050. President Xi Jinping last year ordered the PLA to step up efforts, saying China needed a military ready to “fight and win” wars. The call has alarmed China’s neighbours, several of whom are embroiled in tense border disputes with the superpower.

According to Pentagon, PLA in April 2017 undertook a massive transforma­tion of operationa­l and tactical units. With nearly a million troops, the PLA is the largest standing ground force in the world. “The purpose of these reforms is to create a more mobile, modular, lethal ground force capable of being the core of joint operations and able to meet Xi Jinping’s directive to ‘fight and win wars,’” the report notes. China’s military budget for 2017 was about $190 billion, far behind the Pentagon’s annual budget of about $700 billion. Beijing dismissed Pentagon’s report as “irresponsi­ble” in predicting China would expand its global military presence by building overseas bases in countries like Pakistan.

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