Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

China increases defense spending 7.2%

Now second-largest military budget has roughly doubled over past decade

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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS China on Sunday announced a 7.2% increase in its defense budget for the coming year, up slightly from last year’s 7.1% rate of increase.

That marks the eighth consecutiv­e year of single-digit percentage-point increases in what is now the world’s second-largest military budget. The 2023 figure was given as $224 billion, roughly double the figure from 2013.

Along with the world’s biggest standing army, China has the world’s largest navy and recently launched its third aircraft carrier. According to the U.S., it also has the largest aviation force in the Indo-Pacific, with more than half of its fighter planes consisting of fourth- or fifth-generation models.

China also boasts a massive stockpile of missiles, along with stealth aircraft, bombers capable of delivering nuclear weapons, advanced surface ships and nuclear-powered submarines.

The 2 million-member People’s Liberation Army is the military wing of the ruling Communist Party, commanded by a party commission led by president and party leader Xi Jinping.

In his report Sunday to the annual session of China’s rubber-stamp parliament, Premier Li Keqiang said that over the past year, “We remained committed to the Party’s absolute leadership over the people’s armed forces.”

“The people’s armed forces intensifie­d efforts to enhance their political loyalty, to strengthen themselves through reform, scientific and technologi­cal advances, and personnel training, and to practice lawbased governance,” Li said.

Li touched on what he called a number of “major achievemen­ts” in national defense and military developmen­t that have made the PLA a “more modernized and capable fighting force.”

He offered no details but cited the armed forces’ contributi­ons to border defense, maritime rights protection, counterter­rorism and stability maintenanc­e, disaster rescue and relief, the escorting of merchant ships and China’s draconian “zero-covid” strategy that entailed lockdowns, quarantine­s and other coercive measures.

“We should consolidat­e and enhance integratio­n of national strategies and strategic capabiliti­es and step up capacity-building in science, technology and industries related to national defense.” That includes promoting “mutual support between civilian sectors and the military,” he said.

China spent 1.7% of its GDP on its military in 2021, according to the World Bank, while the U.S., with its massive overseas obligation­s, spent a relatively high 3.5%.

Although no longer increasing at the double-digit annual percentage rates of past decades, China’s defense spending has remained relatively high despite skyrocketi­ng levels of government debt and an economy that grew last year at its second-lowest level in at least four decades.

Li set a growth target of “around 5%” in his address, as he announced plans for a consumer-led revival of the economy still struggling to shake off the effects of “zero-covid.”

While the government says most of the spending increases will go toward improving welfare for troops, the PLA has greatly expanded its overseas presence in recent years.

China has already establishe­d one foreign military base in the Horn of Africa nation of Djibouti and is refurbishi­ng Cambodia’s Ream Naval Base that could give it at least a semi-permanent presence on the Gulf of Thailand facing the disputed South China Sea.

The modernizat­ion effort has prompted concerns among the U.S. and its allies, particular­ly over Taiwan, the self-governing island democracy that China claims as its territory to be brought under its control by force if necessary.

That has prompted a steady flow of weapons sales to the island from the U.S., including ground systems, air defense missiles and F-16 fighters. Taiwan itself recently extended mandatory military service from four months to one year and has been revitalizi­ng its own defense industries, including building submarines for the first time.

In his remarks on Taiwan, Li said the government had followed the party’s “overall policy for the new era on resolving the Taiwan question and resolutely fought against separatism and countered interferen­ce.”

 ?? (AP/Xinhua/Cao Can) ?? Military delegates march by Tiananmen Square on Sunday, as they arrive to attend the opening session of China’s National People’s Congress (NPC) at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.
(AP/Xinhua/Cao Can) Military delegates march by Tiananmen Square on Sunday, as they arrive to attend the opening session of China’s National People’s Congress (NPC) at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.

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