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    Chinese succession highlights military's role

    BEIJING (AP) — Maneuvering over China's leadership succession is providing an opportunity for the powerful military to exert greater influence over decision-making, potentially dragging the government into a more confrontational stance with its neighbors and the U.S.

    The military has gained prominence in public life at a time when China's economic and diplomatic entanglement with the rest of the world is growing. Some generals and military strategists are fixtures in popular, often nationalistic media, usually calling for a harder line against other countries. The armed forces have engaged in much publicized missions to protect Chinese nationals in Libya and other foreign countries.

    Whether this higher profile translates into increased influence in policy-making is being watched as the political leadership enters a fraught succession. The Central Committee, comprised of nearly 400 Communist Party elite drawn from government and the military, closes an annual policy meeting Tuesday, ostensibly focused on cultural issues. Behind the scenes powerbrokers are networking over who will replace President Hu Jintao and many top members in his leadership when they begin stepping down a year from now.

    The People's Liberation Army once dominated the leadership and ran everything from factories to farms as the country tried to limit the damage from Mao Zedong's radical Cultural Revolution in the early 1970s. Ever since the leadership needed the military to crush the Tiananmen Square democracy movement in 1989, the party rewarded it with double-digit percentage budget increases nearly every year. This year's defense budget — at about $91.5 billion — is second only to the U.S. military's.

    As a result, the 2.3 million-member military's professionalism and capabilities have grown, giving it a larger say in foreign and defense policies. With many Chinese feeling proud about China's rising power and using the Internet to express it, Chinese leaders can ill afford to exude weakness on foreign and defense issues.

    "Certainly, the military's position has been much strengthened by rising nationalism and increased resources," said Joseph Cheng, head of the Contemporary China Research Center at the City University of Hong Kong.

    Military commanders make up about 18 percent of the Central Committee. The PLA also enjoys disproportionately large representation in bodies such as the National People's Congress, China's rubber stamp parliament responsible for vetting the budget and government performance.

    President Hu, nine years into his 10-year-term as party head, spent his first years trying to court the military, promoting favored commanders to the 11-member Central Military Commission that has ultimate control over the PLA. Vice President Xi Jinping, almost certain to replace Hu in a deal struck with other party leaders in 2007, is thought by some analysts to have stronger ties with the PLA. Early in his career, he served as secretary to a veteran PLA general, Geng Biao.

    Mostly the PLA has seemed intent on using its political clout to secure additional resources and make sure that the leadership sticks to key goals — like preventing Taiwan, a democratic island claimed by Beijing, from outright rejecting future reunification.

    "The PLA's need to advance its own bureaucratic interests makes the Chinese military, collectively and on an individual basis, an influential power broker that may carry enormous weight in Chinese politics generally and especially in CCP leadership transitions," Chinese politics expert Cheng Li wrote in a recent paper for the U.S. Brookings Institution.

    Yet having now secured so many resources and with the political leadership consumed by the succession, it's unclear whether the commanders are trying to push the political leadership into a more adventurous foreign policy.

    China has upped the ante in its rivalry with Vietnam, the Philippines and others over claims to territory in the South China Sea, while taking a hardline against Japan and refusing to demand that communist ally North Korea return to nuclear disarmament talks. Tensions with the U.S. military soared last year over arms sales to Taiwan and confrontations between Chinese ships and U.S. Navy vessels conducting ocean survey work.

    While the generals and admirals who sit on the commission generally keep their views on politics private, a far more vocal class of officers, many of them with strong family connections to past and present leaders, has emerged.

    They include Liu Yuan, the son of a revolutionary founding father, Liu Shaoqi, who has delivered speeches and essays pushing a form of militant Chinese nationalism that rejects Western notions of political openness and civil liberties.

    Senior colonel and National Defense University professor Liu Mingfu, in a 2009 book, called for Beijing to upend the current U.S.-dominated international order and replace Washington at the top of the pecking order — contrary to China's stated position.

    "If the China of the 21st century cannot become world No. 1, cannot become the most powerful country in the world, then it will be a country that has been left behind and eliminated," Liu wrote, adding that the fight for resources and influence will become ever more acute.

    Even moderates like Vice Foreign Minister Cui Tiankai heed nationalistic media. Last week he singled out the Global Times editorial page as praiseworthy precisely because it published such hardline views.

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    31 comments

    • Chuang  •  7 months ago
      USA is trying to shackle a rising giant in its own backyard. The USA knows that if China continues growing miltarily and economically, it may not be possible to keep the growing giant shackled. I hope US stance will not lead to a showdown with China. The rest of the Asian countries are merely pawns in the power game between the 2 superpowers.
      • Jack 7 months ago
        Chuang,
        The Asian countries have not choice but to venture with the US of A, or else they will be swallow by China soon or later.
        So, don't worry, they are forming allies for the upcoming event show down with Chinca and Russia, WW-3 dude! Stock up your foods and water.
    • ASU  •  7 months ago
      With the Nobel Peace Prize President, US is invading Iraq, Afghan, Pakistan, Libya, Uganda, that is commiting war crimes in 5 countries, and trying to find an excuse to invade Iran, Syria, and is stirring up dozens of countries neighboring South China Sea. No other country in the world's military can come close to the aggressiveness of US's, and no other country in the world is making the world so NOT at peace. I'd like to see other countries stand up against such bullier.
    • Shuckapeafarms  •  7 months ago
      If we concentrated more on our own national affairs and stop policing the world, the whole planet would be a safer place top be! No one likes a BULLY!!!
    • Godfrey  •  7 months ago
      "potentially dragging the government into a more confrontational stance with its neighbors and the U.S."

      An amusing notion from the MOST CONFRONTATIONAL nation on the planet. We can't seem to go a decade without some form of military adventure, have the world's largest military budget, gear our economy toward being the largest arms dealer in the world, and have spread our bases to every corner of the globe in trying to enforce a foreign policy that subsists of little more than "do what we want or we'll kill you". This is NOT another instance of a pot accusing a kettle. This is more like a lump of coal calling a snowflake black.
    • HH  •  7 months ago
      same thing in US is called patriotism, and nationalism in China. More and more fear and hate mongering. I wonder what US government wants. Are they preparing their people for a war with China? Just like they prepared them for Iraq war? of course Americans will fall for it again and again.
    • bud  •  7 months ago
      Three of the PLA top generals say there is no other position than the number one position in the world for China. In the past the world has picked the nation they thought of as number one. The US did not confront the world to become number one we helped defeat the Axis powers during WWII and then helped the Axis powers to rebuild after their destruction in this conflict. The US, also with the help of its Allies, helped to remove the Japanese from Chinese soil and to set the Chinese free to go on their on path even though it was not the chosen path the Allies had hoped for. The Chinese would never had been able to acquire the freedom from the Japanese to travel this path if not for the Allies giving them this freedom from Japan. Now these same Chinese generals only wish to confront the US and it allies so they can claim, not have given to them, the number 1 position in the world. Maybe time has come for the Chinese but they choose the wrong path to get there. When these generals choose the path, just as the Japanese did, their path will lead to the destruction of the Chinese hopes and the total loss of all the grandeur they had seen in their future. All they will hold then will be the ashes of a long lost dream.
    • Tony  •  7 months ago
      Stop exporting out jobs over to china and start building again here, we're spend our hard earned money on worthless junk that is manufactured there, how else are they able to build their army! Stupid Government!
    • hungn  •  7 months ago
      i think,we should stop all bad drug user,and collect wefare,it will stop military of china to u. s.
      they use that money for food
    • smilininpoo  •  7 months ago
      roflmao
    • Highway to Yaeweh  •  7 months ago
      "potentially dragging the government into a more confrontational stance with its neighbors and the U.S."

      it seems that the US is more confrontational than China. Who is holding live fire drills close to shores of China...who is courting China's neighbor to be rivals against China...building a ring of bases around china...
      yet somehow the media seems to like stating it is China who is being aggressive...
      • paul 7 months ago
        "who is courting China's neighbor to be rivals against China" you know the republic of china has never liked the peoples republic of china (what with all of the shooting and killing and such) we just sell them weapons to protect themselves. but don't worry the PRC still has friends like north Korea and Sudan and Libia oh wait he got overthrown well at least you still have Pakistan
      • Highway to Yaeweh 7 months ago
        AP "Taiwan president mulls peace treaty with China"

        "you know the republic of china has never liked the peoples republic of china "

        Haahaha....is that the impression you got from watching the evening news from your suburban basement.

        Almost all of the Taiwanese and Chinese don't care for all that nonsense. As long the current situation between the doesn't change.

        So tell me what give you the inkling on how the Taiwanese and Chinese feel about each other.

        I can tell you that many in not most Taiwanese still have relatives on the mainland. So your blind comment of "you know the republic of china has never liked the peoples republic of china " seems like were drawn to that conclusion by the always factual mainstream media and your bias inclinations towards the ccp to begin with.
    • Xiao  •  7 months ago
      If trade was based on fair play, China will overtake US very soon in economy. US threats others with arms, and can pay debts by printing paper dollars. It also controls WTO and WB to serve its purpose. I don't know how long will all these last.
      • Jeremiah T 7 months ago
        If trade was based on fair play China would lose. They keep extremely high tariffs on foriegn products and keep the currency low to keep exports cheap. Along with that China can't produce technically difficult products or projects without the help of foriegn companies. Most of the infrastructure in China is the result of borrowed technology from joint ventures with foriegn firms or stolen technology. The Chinese economy is built on cheap labor but with the economy growing that will end and factories will move to more lucrative markets. In the absence of technically safisticated products the economy will flounder. For the WTO (and actually the WB is dominated by Europe) China will never gain a controling share because no country recognizes China has a market economy.
    • Jeremiah T  •  7 months ago
      If people really think China will come to be the dominate power they really don't understand the Asian dynamic, econimcs or international relations. Chinese notions of international law, bilateral ties, and regional ambitions have been universally rejected. Most recently Iran, N Korea and myanmar (all long time allies) have slowed down and even stopped joint projects with China. The rest of the region has pushed hard to improve ties with the US has a buffer against China's increasingly aggressive policies (with the exception of Pakistan). And while the central gov. holds a surplus of cash almost every province and city is deep in debt. and expecting the central gov. to bail them out. The problem will become more acute in the near future as property values fall and manufacturing jobs decline. It remains decades behind in technical advances and has yet to establish a single international brand (can you name a single Chinese brand name product?). It's military remains untested and unproven with a less than satisfactory track record (they have never won a war). I'm sure China will find itself a prominant member of the international community in the future but its aggressive foriegn policies, inability to create innovative products and internal dynamics will keep it in check for the forseeable future.
    • The Guffaw Conspiracy  •  7 months ago
      Say what you will about the Chinese, they do make a mean lead martini.
    • Dave  •  7 months ago
      "Left Behind and Eliminated".... Works for me!
    • Hounddoggin  •  7 months ago
      Every time we buy something made in China it is supporting their military.
    • John  •  7 months ago
      The only reason we won WWII was because we could produce more weapons than the axis, we don't have that production any more, it moved to RED China, they win.
    • John  •  7 months ago
      TOMTOM is a certified wumao
    • TL  •  7 months ago
      ALL American needs to watch out the Chinese. Wake up, beware.
    • flood  •  7 months ago
      The chinese have a plan and are working their plan , US , EU, UK have no plan and are waiting for some one to deliver them , meanwhile they attack weak resouce rich countries and try to influence their foreign policy through puppet govts. China on other hand seems to be more professional and benign.
    • Jack  •  7 months ago
      Everything China gains is to use against us the USA. I would put a psycho chowchow to sleep before it can even bite me, seriously. Before it can get loose going on a world rampage, hammer it, nail it, and disrupt its formation.

      Astalavista chowchow!

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