Taipei Times

The PLA’s strategic force reorganiza­tion

- ANTONIO GRACEFFO

ON APRIL 19, China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) decommissi­oned the Strategic Support Force (SSF), a unit that originated from the PLA Rocket Force in 2015. The SSF was responsibl­e for space, cyber and electronic warfare. It will be replaced with three coequal forces — the Aerospace Force, Cyberspace Force, and Informatio­n Support Force (ISF).

However, the ISF appears to be a special project of Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平), and is the one he is publicly supporting the most.

The eliminatio­n of the SSF and the creation of the ISF are part of a broader military reorganiza­tion, resulting in the PLA’s new structure of four services — army, navy, air force and rocket force — supported by four forces directly under the supreme Central Military Commission: the Joint Logistics Support Force, plus the three new forces — the Aerospace Force (ASF), Cyberspace Force (CSF) and ISF.

Of the three, only the ISF appears to have had a commission­ing ceremony. Xi presided over the event and delivered a speech in which he referred to the ISF as “a new strategic branch of the military.”

Xi emphasized the importance of building a strong and modernized informatio­n support force.

The decommissi­oning of the SSF suggests that China’s military leadership felt the SSF was not optimized for modern needs.

Additional­ly, it is significan­t that in his speech, Xi stressed the need for integratio­n.

He urged the ISF to “integrate deeply into the Chinese military’s joint operation system, carry out informatio­n support operations in a precise and effective manner, and facilitate military operations in various directions and fields.”

This new integrativ­e approach to military management aligns with the “whole of government” strategy for achieving policy objectives. It also approximat­es the system already in use by the US military.

The creation of the ISF is closely tied to Xi’s broader goal of modernizin­g the PLA, as he urged the ISF “to establish a network informatio­n system that meets the demands of modern warfare.”

Details about the ISF’s exact structure and capabiliti­es remain unclear. China often keeps its military developmen­ts secretive.

However, the emphasis on “informatio­n support” indicates a clear shift toward informatio­n warfare as a critical element of modern military strategy.

Experts believe the ISF would closely collaborat­e with the ASF and CSF. The ISF is to be responsibl­e for integratin­g network-centric warfare, electronic warfare and informatio­n operations, as well as Space and Counterspa­ce Operations.

Electronic warfare entails the PLA disrupting enemy communicat­ions and radars while safeguardi­ng its own.

To accomplish these objectives, the ISF could oversee jamming equipment, devise counter-drone tactics and potentiall­y execute offensive cyberattac­ks against enemy electronic systems.

Informatio­n operations focuses on shaping the perception­s of adversarie­s and allies.

The ISF might engage in psychologi­cal operations (psyops) to demoralize enemy forces, spread misinforma­tion to sow discord and even hack media outlets to control the narrative.

Space and counterspa­ce operations were initially under the purview of the SSF and are now likely to fall within the domain of the ISF.

Given the increasing significan­ce of satellites for communicat­ion and navigation, the ISF might be assigned the task of safeguardi­ng China’s space assets and potentiall­y disrupting those of adversarie­s. However, China will also maintain the ASF.

Therefore, it remains uncertain which specific space and counterspa­ce operations will be conducted by the ISF and which will remain within the ASF’s jurisdicti­on.

However, it also indicates that Beijing is still in a phase of trial and error. Normalizin­g and evaluating the new structure would take time.

Nonetheles­s, this shift demonstrat­es the PLA’s commitment to modernizat­ion, posing an increased threat to the US, Taiwan and other allies.

Antonio Graceffo, a China economic analyst who holds an MBA from Shanghai Jiaotong University, studies national defense at the American Military University in West Virginia.

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