Darth Wong wrote:Does the Chinese military even have the ability to deploy large forces overseas?
In a word, no. In fact the CPLA lacks the amphibious lift (the Navy is part of the Army) to put more than a brigade ashore anywhere. They have a nice new LPD that just got commissioned but their lift capability is still almost non-existant. That's why I get very tired when I hear the usual culprits spouting forth about "the Chinese Threat" on one hand and "the invincible CPLA/Asian Way of War" on the other.
The Chinese Army has a veneer of modern mechanized capability but its paper-thin. The bulk of their army is still leg infantry divisions that march to battle
Even the veneer of mechanized capability isn't very convincing. Recently, the Chinese Army has been trying to reorganize itself so that its existing single-type battalions have been changed into combined-arms battle groups. For example, a tank battalion might be reorganized with one of its tank companies replaced by a mechanized infantry company and have a detachment, say a section, of artillery added. The initial trial results were a disaster, the officers simply were not trained to handle forces outside their area of speciality and didn;t know what to do with them. In the above example, the tank battalion commander might well have tried to do his job with his two tank companies and just leave the infantry and artillery components behind. What it has ended up as is the division trying to directly control 12 - 14 battalions over a wide front and the whole C4ISR network fell apart.
If that's happening with the chosen units the CPLA use for its glossy public face, can you imagine what the situation is like in the rank and file units?
In fact, in some ways, the CPLA is very much like the baldrick armies; they're a mass of footsloggers. The CPLA may find its modern units useful if they can solve the command problems with them but their infantry are terribly vulnerable to harpy attacks. So, the best role for teh CPLA is probably to stay put and defend the home base. The big contribution the CPLA can make is supplying ammunition and equipment to nations using Russian-caliber weapons. The Chinese have a production capacity that pretty much dwarfs everybody else.
Aircraft (the Air Force is part of teh army as well) are a different matter. The sheer number of fighters (albeit old ones) the Chinese can put up is a valuable anti-harpy defense. So we can expect to see a lot of Chinese fighters appearing once teh bases to handle them are built, For reasons that will become apparent in the next part, that's important.