China Not A Threat
China Not A Threat
China Not A Threat
PLA force projection limited for decades Ronald ORourke, Congressional Research Service, July 17, 2009, China Naval Modernization: Implications for U.S. Navy Capabilities--Background and Issues for Congress, http://opencrs.com/document/RL33153/
The PLA's force projection capabilities will remain limited over the next decade as the PLA replaces outdated aircraft and maritime vessels and adjusts operational doctrine to encompass new capabilities. These changes will require tailored logistics equipment and training which will take time and money to develop proficiency. Although foreign produced equipment and maintenance parts, as well as the civil sector, may help to fill near-term gaps, continued reliance on non-organic assets will hinder PLA capabilities to sustain large-scale operations over time. (93) A July 2008 press article on the PLAAF states: The Chinese have released photos of a Chengdu J-10 fighter refueling in flight, "so it certainly wants the world to believe that it is equipping its Air Force to project power," said Thomas Kane, author of "Chinese Grand Strategy and Maritime Power." "I keep hearing people talk about the PLAAF beyond Taiwan, but it is all fluff," [a] former U.S. defense official said.
China wants to integrate with the global community to sustain its growth Evan S. Medeiros, RAND Corporation, August 2009, Chinas International Behavior: Opportunity, Activism, and Diversification, http://www.rand.org/pubs/monographs/2009/RAND_MG850.pdf, p. 20
But, first, two overarching beliefs shade Chinas view of its current security environment. One is a widely held belief that Chinas future is inextricably (and increasingly) linked to the international community. Chinese leaders understand that Chinas current growth model combined with the acceleration of globalization have deeply connected China to the international community. Chinas success in accomplishing national revitalization depends on close and continuing interaction with global and regional powers, markets, and institutions. In the words of Chinas 2008 national defense white paper, the future and destiny of China have been increasingly closely connected with the international community. China cannot develop in isolation from the rest of the world, nor can the world enjoy prosperity and stability without China.3 Even in the wake of the global financial crisis in fall 2008 and the resulting rapid declines in Chinese growth, Hu Jintao affirmed during the December 2008 Central Economic Work Conference that the direction of global economic integration for China was correct and should continue.
China wants to avoid military conflict with the U.S. to sustain its own rise Evan S. Medeiros, RAND Corporation, August 2009, Chinas International Behavior: Opportunity, Activism, and Diversification, http://www.rand.org/pubs/monographs/2009/RAND_MG850.pdf, p. 35
Third, avoiding conflict and overt geopolitical competition with the United States is critical to Chinas effort to ensure a stable and peaceful security environment; major strategic competition or outright military conflict with the United Statesmore than with any other nationwould significantly disrupt Chinas security environment. Under severe conditions, it could lead China to shift national resources from economic development to military modernizationan outcome not desired by Chinas leaders. Chinese scholars write about the need for space and time for Chinas rise, and stable relations with the United States is critical to both. To be sure, Chinese analysts also recognize that although a stable, if not amicable, relationship with the United States is a necessary condition for its rise, it is by no means a sufficient one.
U.S. defense spending massively exceeds Chinas Ivan Eland is Senior Fellow and Director of the Center on Peace & Liberty at The Independent Institute. Dr. Eland is a graduate of Iowa State University and received an M.B.A. in applied economics and Ph.D. in national security policy from George Washington University. He has been Director of Defense Policy Studies at the Cato Institute, and he spent 15 years working for Congress on national security issues, including stints as an investigator for the House Foreign Affairs Committee and Principal Defense Analyst at the Congressional Budget Office, CATO, The independent, April 13, 2009, p. online
In addition, the gap between U.S. and Chinese defense spending remains vast. The massive U.S. defense spending is equal to almost half the total defense expenditure for the entire world. Although Chinas defense spending has increased by double digits in recent years, this increase followed a period of slack spending and starts from a much lower base level than the gargantuan U.S. defense budget. U.S. yearly spending on defense is $711 billion, whereas Chinas is only 17 percent of that at $122 billion annually.
Chinas deployments dont threaten the U.S. Ivan Eland is Senior Fellow and Director of the Center on Peace & Liberty at The Independent Institute. Dr. Eland is a graduate of Iowa State University and received an M.B.A. in applied economics and Ph.D. in national security policy from George Washington University. He has been Director of Defense Policy Studies at the Cato Institute, and he spent 15 years working for Congress on national security issues, including stints as an investigator for the House Foreign Affairs Committee and Principal Defense Analyst at the Congressional Budget Office, CATO, The independent, April 13, 2009, p. online
Furthermore, the U.S. military deploys far forward around China; Chinas general military forces do not deploy in the Western Hemisphere and do not threaten the United States. The most important finding in the Pentagons report was that China could not deploy and sustain even small military units far away from its
Planet Debate Deficit Supercommittee September 22 No China threat to U.S. interests, risks exaggerated, and the U.S. security guarantee is strong
Robert S. Ross is a professor of political science at Boston College, an associate of the John King Fairbank Center for East Asian Research at Harvard University and a fellow of the Security Studies Program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, The National Interest, September- October 2009, Here Be Dragons, http://www.nationalinterest.org/
AFTER MORE than thirty years of post-Mao economic reforms and average annual economic growth rates of approximately 10 percent, China has begun to develop a new generation of military technologies that significantly advance its strategic capabilities. The People's Liberation Army (PLA) is developing a wide range of weaponry that enables it to project power off of the Asian mainland and into new theaters, including the high seas and space. These advances underscore the potential challenge China poses to U.S. security and the importance of paying vigilant attention to the developments in the U.S.-China balance of power. Yet China does not pose a threat to America's vital security interests today, tomorrow or at any time in the near future. Neither alarm nor exaggerated assessments of contemporary China's relative capabilities and the impact of Chinese defense modernization on U.S. security interests in East Asia is needed because, despite China's military advances, it has not developed the necessary technologies to constitute a grave threat. Beijing's strategic advances do not require a major change in Washington's defense or regional security policy, or in U.S. policy toward China. Rather, ongoing American confidence in its capabilities and in the strength of its regional partnerships allows the United States to enjoy both extensive military and diplomatic cooperation with China while it consolidates its regional security interests. The China threat is simply vastly overrated . AMERICA'S VITAL security interests, including in East Asia, are all in the maritime regions. With superior maritime power, the United States can not only dominate regional sea-lanes but also guarantee a favorable balance of power that prevents the emergence of a regional hegemon. And despite China's military advances and its challenge to America's ability to project its power in the region, the United States can be confident in its ability to retain maritime dominance well into the twenty-first century. East Asia possesses plentiful offshore assets that enable the United States to maintain a robust military presence, to contend with a rising China and to maintain a favorable balance of power. The U.S. alliance with Japan and its close strategic partnership with Singapore provide Washington with key naval and air facilities essential to regional power projection. The United States also has developed strategic cooperation with Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines. Each country possesses significant port facilities that can contribute to U.S. capabilities during periods of heightened tension, whether it be over Taiwan or North Korea. The United States developed and sustained its strategic partnerships with East Asia's maritime countries and maintained the balance of power both during and after the cold war because of its overwhelming naval superiority. America's power-projection capability has assured U.S. strategic partners that they can depend on the United States to deter another great power from attacking them; and, should war ensue, that they would incur minimal costs. This American security guarantee is as robust and credible as ever. The critical factor in assessing the modernization of the PLA's military forces is thus whether China is on the verge of challenging U.S. deterrence and developing war-winning capabilities to such a degree that East Asia's maritime countries would question the value of their strategic alignment with the United States. But, though China's capabilities are increasing, in no way do they challenge U.S. supremacy. America's maritime security is based not only on its superior surface fleet, which enables it to project airpower into distant regions, but also on its subsurface ships, which provide secure "stealth" platforms for retaliatory strikes, and its advanced command, control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance and re-connaissance (C4ISR) capabilities. In each of these areas, China is far from successfully posing any kind of serious immediate challenge.
Current U.S. nuclear readiness sufficient to counter China Robert S. Ross is a professor of political science at Boston College, an associate of the John King Fairbank Center for East Asian Research at Harvard University and a fellow of the Security 6
Planet Debate Deficit Supercommittee September 22 Studies Program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, The National Interest, September- October 2009, Here Be Dragons, http://www.nationalinterest.org/
Critics of U.S.-China policy offer little in the way of an alternative. The United States is doing nearly everything Professor Friedberg argues it should do. His one novel proposal is that the United States respond to China's advancing nuclear capability by improving its strategic deep-strike air capability. But it is not plausible that China's limited nuclear arsenal and its minimal deterrent capability has so undermined U.S. retaliatory deterrent capability and nuclear stability that the B-2 stealth bomber will soon be obsolete and that the United States must spend huge sums to develop a more advanced strategic bomber that would provide marginal, if any, additional security.
Despite Chinas modernization, U.S. remains the dominant military power in East Asia Robert S. Ross is a professor of political science at Boston College, an associate of the John King Fairbank Center for East Asian Research at Harvard University and a fellow of the Security Studies Program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, The National Interest, September- October 2009, Here Be Dragons, http://www.nationalinterest.org/
Despite impressive Chinese advances, in maritime East Asia the United States retains military superiority and effective deterrence and war-fighting capacities. But just as the United States cannot base policy on an exaggerated assessment of the China threat, it cannot allow strategic complacency to undermine U.S. security. Washington must maintain those capabilities that underpin U.S. strategic part-nerships with the maritime states in China's neighborhood and a favorable regional balance of power. Respect for Beijing's strategic potential requires that U.S. defense policy continues to stress advancement of those capabilities that support American power projection in the western Pacific Ocean, even as the United States prepares for a protracted era of counterinsurgency warfare. Short-term contingencies cannot preclude attention to long-term greatpower competition. If the United States maintains its focus on the multiple sources of maritime supremacy, including carrier-based power projection, subsurface platforms and information technologies, it can continue to engage the rise of China without undermining U.S. security.
Asian allies enhancing military cooperation with the U.S. Robert S. Ross is a professor of political science at Boston College, an associate of the John King Fairbank Center for East Asian Research at Harvard University and a fellow of the Security Studies Program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, The National Interest, September- October 2009, Here Be Dragons, http://www.nationalinterest.org/
Professor Friedberg worries that the China threat will undermine American strategic partnerships in East Asia. But even a cursory examination of regional trends reveals that our maritime allies in East Asia are actually enhancing defense cooperation with the U.S. Navy and Air Force. Despite prolonged Japanese anxiety over the American commitment to its defense, U.S.-Japan defense cooperation is better today than at any time during the cold war or the 1990s, and it continues to improve. Similarly, U.S. naval cooperation with Singapore and Malaysia continues to improve, as these countries welcome the U.S. contribution to their security and regional stability. Even the Philippines, despite its resistance to cooperation with its former
10
10
11
China not trying to confront the U.S. in Asia Evan S. Medeiros, RAND Corporation, August 2009, Chinas International Behavior: Opportunity, Activism, and Diversification, http://www.rand.org/pubs/monographs/2009/RAND_MG850.pdfp. 208
This does not mean that there are not competitive aspects of Chinas foreign policy that challenge U.S. security interests. Some of Chinas international behaviors are directed at eroding U.S. influence in specific regions and in certain institutions. The most competitive aspects of Chinas foreign policy are evident in the Asia-Pacific region. China is not currently trying to push the United States out of this region. Chinese leaders recognize the dangers and likely failure of such an approach, and some recognize the stability provided by U.S. alliances. Rather, China is trying to increase its power and influence relative to the United States. A core Chinese objective is to hinder the U.S. ability to constrain China; that is, China seeks to maximize its freedom of action and leverage as means of countering perceived U.S. efforts to limit Chinese choices. China seeks political influence to increase the costs, for the United States and its allies, of constraining China. Thus, China is challenging the United States by trying to reduce its relative influence, but it does not seek to confront the United States by trying to expel it. As noted above, China is pursuing this approach by deepening economic interactions with Asian nations, joining multilateral organizations to shape regional agendas, expanding bilateral interactions to shape these nations preferences, and generally reassuring countries on its periphery about Chinas intentions and capabilities. In this sense, Chinas approach is more gravitational than confrontationalpulling nations toward China (to bind them) rather than pushing them away from the United States or each other.
11
12
12
13
13
14
China cant effectively utilize UAVs Robert S. Ross is a professor of political science at Boston College, an associate of the John King Fairbank Center for East Asian Research at Harvard University and a fellow of the Security Studies Program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, The National Interest, September- October 2009, Here Be Dragons, http://www.nationalinterest.org/
China has been carrying out extensive research into unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). Chinese UAVs could provide the PLA with an advanced reconnaissance and weapons-delivery capability. But the Chinese military lacks a secure platform for launching the UAVs. Chinese surface vessels would not be a secure UAV platform; they would be as vulnerable to a U.S. attack as a Chinese aircraft carrier. Chinese land-based UAVs would lack the range to target distant U.S. ships. Moreover, the UAV's surveillance technologies would all suffer from the same vulnerabilities as the ASBM surveillance technologies. Without the full array of secure C4ISR capabilities and a secure maritime capability, UAVs cannot significantly contribute to China's effort to challenge U.S. maritime superiority.
14
15
15
16
16
17
Lack of patrols means Chinese subs are only for coastal defense Ronald ORourke, Congressional Research Service, July 17, 2009, China Naval Modernization: Implications for U.S. Navy Capabilities--Background and Issues for Congress, http://opencrs.com/document/RL33153/
Yet for the Chinese submarine force overall, six patrols do not provide very much operational experience for more than 50 submarines and their crews. If China did plan a more extended reach for its submarine force, one might expect the patrol rate to continue to increase in the next couple of years. Only the future will tell. But the operational experience from the 55 patrols conducted by the entire submarine force between 1981 and the end of 2007 suggests that China's submarine force--at least for now--remains a coastal defense force. (45)
17
18
18
19
19
20
itself in a confrontational set of policies that emphasize defense cooperation and zero-sum interactions. This objective may receive greater expression in the future if U.S.-China relations become more competitive, if Chinas regional influence grows, and if Beijing sees itself as less dependent on stable relations with Washington.
Chinas partnerships are not designed to counterbalance the U.S. Evan S. Medeiros, RAND Corporation, August 2009, Chinas International Behavior: Opportunity, Activism, and Diversification, http://www.rand.org/pubs/monographs/2009/RAND_MG850.pdf, p. 87
To varying degrees, China
has used its strategic partnerships with major powers, such as with Russia, France, and the EU, to broaden its economic relationships, to foster the development of other power centers in global politics, and to seek support for its vision of a multipolar global order. These major power partnerships do not amount to building an anti-U.S. coalition to balance against U.S. power. However, these partnerships allow China greater
options and help it to foster an environment that could be used to constrain U.S. unilateral actions, especially if that power is directed at Chinese interests.30 There is no overtly anti-U.S. element in such Chinese diplomacy , but Chinas discomfort with perceived U.S. unilateralism is one of the drivers of its strategic partnerships. These themes and motivations were readily apparent in the 2003 EU-China Joint Statement, which founded that strategic partnership during a period of trans-Atlantic tension, as well as in the Russia-China Joint Communiqu and the SCOs summit statement in July 2005. Chinas strategic partnerships with these major powers are bounded by two considerations that limit their potential to be potent mechanisms for balancing U.S. power. First, Chinas
interests with all of these major powers, especially Russia and India, both converge and divergeon different issues and to different degrees. There is no single, dominant political or strategic logic to any of these strategic partnerships that could serve as the basis for collectively and consistently countervailing U.S. power. Indeed, most of Chinas strategic partners are not interested in creating a de facto coalition to balance U.S. powe r, with the possible exception of Russia. These nations have numerous interests in positive relations with the United States . Also,
although there are many cooperative dimensions to Chinas strategic partnerships, they are also fraught with tensions on both economic and security questions. For example, Russia and China may have common interests related to constraining U.S.
influence globally and in Central Asia, but they diverge on economic issues and security questions revolving around access to Central Asian energy supplies and Chinese influence in Russias Far East .31
Also, for China, Russia has shown itself to be an unreliable partner in the past. Chinas unwillingness in summer 2008 to endorse the Russian position on the independence of the Georgian enclaves exemplifies the limits of the Sino-Russian strategic partnership. A second major consideration is that, historically, China has not favored or relied on alliances (or even strong bilateral partnerships) in its diplomacy. Chinas historic disposition in favor of independence and against relying on alliances calls into question the extent to which it can or will rely on them now. Although China has formed alliances in the past (e.g., the ChinaSoviet Union alliance of the 1950s), it was never entirely comfortable with them. Beijing prefers, instead, greater autonomy to maximize its leverage and maneuverability.32 This enduring predisposition is evident in the intensifying concerns among Chinese elites about the economic and security vulnerabilities that have resulted from Chinas global interdependence and the globalization of national security challenges.33 Chinas historical predispositions were further confirmed in 2001 when Russia shifted away from its emerging anti-U.S. cooperation with China and turned back toward greater rapprochement with the United States, even before 9/11. Specifically, Russia abandoned China in their joint opposition to U.S. missile defense policies. These events, thus, suggest a third possible constraint on the scope of
Chinas strategic partnerships: Most major powers have more interests at stake in their relations with the United States than with China. Some states may not be willing to jeopardize their ties with the United States to coordinate with China in an effort, implicit or explicit, to constrain the United States.
20
21
21
22
22
23
An invasion of Taiwan would overwhelm Chinas military capabilities Ronald ORourke, Congressional Research Service, July 17, 2009, China Naval Modernization: Implications for U.S. Navy Capabilities--Background and Issues for Congress, http://opencrs.com/document/RL33153/
Large-scale amphibious invasion is one of the most complicated and logistics-intensive, and therefore difficult, military maneuvers. Success depends upon air and sea supremacy in the vicinity of the operation, rapid buildup of supplies and sustainment on shore, and an uninterrupted flow of support thereafter. An invasion of Taiwan would strain the capabilities of China's untested armed forces and would almost certainly invite international intervention. These stresses, combined with the combat attrition of China's forces, the complex tasks of urban warfare and counterinsurgency--assuming a successful landing and breakout--make an amphibious invasion of Taiwan a significant political and military risk for China's leaders. Modest targeted investments by Taiwan to harden infrastructure and strengthen defensive capabilities could have measurable effects on decreasing Beijing's ability to achieve its objectives.
23
24
China wont engage in arms control with the U.S. Christopher P. Twomey co-directs the Center for Contemporary Conflict and is an assistant professor in the Department of National Security Affairs, both at the Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, California, Arms Control Today, January 2009 - February 2009, p. 17
There is no simple solution for this set of problems. The differences in national interests held by Beijing and Washington are not likely to be materially affected by Barack Obama's inauguration as president. That said, the unilateralist and anti-institutional approach to arms control that characterized the Bush admin-istration is likely to wane. The Chinese are not currently interested in discussing traditional bilateral arms control agreements for two reasons: doing so suggests an equating of the contemporary Chinese-U.S. relationship with the Cold War standoff between the Soviet Union and the United States and the U.S. arsenal remains much larger than China's. Yet, it is wrong to expect such views to hold in perpetuity. Beijing's emphasis on ambiguity about its arsenal, which is incompatible with serious ne-gotiations over arms control, is not a cultural predisposition toward "strategic deception" any more than was the Soviet Union's early Cold War emphasis on secrecy. Instead, these are rational strategies when nuclear arsenals are small. Intrusive verification eventually became conceivable even to hard-line Soviet leaders. Certainly, economic exhaustion contributed to that change, but so too did fundamental changes in Soviet threat perceptions.4 Although the former seems unlikely in China in the near term, the latter is something that might be fomented. The further development of those U.S.-Russian arms control discussions will have critical implications for China. If follow-on agreements to START and SORT include further quantitative reductions, as is likely, they will again move the U.S. arsenal toward an important rhetorical threshold that China has used to justify its own stance on bilateral arms control. This poses risks and opportunities. The opportunity to bring the other nuclear powers to the table, even informally, as the Russian-U.S. discussions progress would be a useful vehicle to elicit China's interest in serious moves in this area. The risk of enticing China to engage in an arsenal buildup to U.S. levels is not one that should be overstated. At the geostrategic level as well as in operational doctrine as it is understood, China's approach to nuclear strategy has emphasized elements that would be inconsistent with a large buildup: coun-ter-value rather than counter-force or war-fighting doctrines, a historical to-lerance of much lower arsenal sizes given a perception of the limited utility of nuclear forces, and, explicitly, avoidance of a strategic arms race. The United States can actively reduce these risks further. Deepening engagement on nuclear and nuclear-related strategic issues would be constructive in this regard. Bilateral confidence measures between China and the United States could be discussed, particularly in the area of declaratory policy. The Chinese have often asked why the United States is unwilling to offer a no-first-use pledge. A blanket no-first-use pledge might undermine U.S. credibility in other regions. Yet, a pledge narrowly confined to the Chinese-U.S. arena would seem to have fewer costs. What benefits would the United States garner from such a pledge from Beijing? Similarly, would Beijing view posi- tively a definitive statement that the United States accepts the existence of a Chinese secure second-strike capability? For what might the United States hope in return? These questions remain unanswered.
24
25
Various Counterplans
CP Transparency measures
Jeffrey Lewis, New America Foundation, Nonproliferation Review, July 2009, p. 197-209
Chinese leaders continue to seek such assurances, as evidenced by the continuing interest in securing a bilateral no-first-use pledge from the United States. He Yafei, in the 2008 bilateral talks with Rood, again expressed China's interest in having the United States pledge not to use nuclear weapons first against China. (China sought such an assurance in the 1990s, resulting in the so-called non-targeting agreement signed by President Bill Clinton and President Jiang Zemin.) Chinese leaders, in return, might propose additional transparency measures to assure the United States that China seeks only a minimal deterrent and will not attempt to move toward numerical parity with the United States as it continues to reduce the number of operationally deployed strategic nuclear warheads. This would contribute to what Chinese officials have called mutual strategic trust. There are those in the United States who would believe U.S. security is best maintained by acquiring the ability to negate China's deterrent through technological superiority and to dissuade competition through overwhelming numerical advantage. An alternative view, however, is that keeping China's modernization within the confines of minimum deterrence and a doctrine of no-first-use is manifestly in the interest of the United States and requires a political commitment that reflects the simple reality that no U.S. president is likely to attempt a disarming first strike against another nuclear-armed power. No matter which view one takes, China's possession of the minimum means of reprisaland how that deterrent evolvesis now the central issue for the future of both countries' nuclear forces. At best, an effort by Washington to engage China more deeply on disarmament issues will require bureaucracies in both Washington and Beijing to more thoroughly consider the ramifications for stability of their respective strategic force modernizations. At the very least, opening such a dialogue can reduce the possibility of accidents, miscalculations, or misunderstandings.
Extensive human authentication prevents unauthorized use Larry Wortzel, Strategic Studies Institute, 2007, Chinas Nuclear Forces: Operations, Training, Doctrine, Command, Control, and Campaign Planning, https://www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil/pdffiles/PUB776.pdf
Second Artillery, Hu Jintao spoke to an assemblage of people that included Xiang Shouzhi, first commander of the organization, and a number of previous leaders. Hu was present in the combined capacity of President of China, Chairman of the Chinese Communist Party, and Chairman of the Communist Party CMC. 96 In Jiefangjun Bao, articles have referred to the PLAN headquarters as the Navys tongshuaibu, and to the CMC as the tongshuaibu.97 Thus, while it is possible that the reference to a valid firing order means that it comes from the commander of the Second Artillery, the consensus among American scholars who follow the PLA closely is that in the context of nuclear and missile-firing orders, tongshuaibu refers to the CMC. This is the highest and most centralized level of military leadership in the Chinese Communist Party. 98 In the photo of Hu Jintao that appeared in Jiefangjun Bao depicting his 40th Anniversary speech to the leaders of the Second Artillery, Hu was wearing a PLA uniform without insignia or rank. Moreover, to confirm that the tongshuaibu is the CMC, in another account of Hu Jintaos speech published by Xinhua News Service, Hu is quoted as saying The Second Artillery Corps is a Second Artillery command orders are centralized, encoded and protected, and require human authentication. PLA military writers eschew completely automated command and control systems. There is a very strong emphasis on the need for a man in the loop even in modern, information age warfare. One writer specializing in command and control issues makes the point that no matter how advanced a computer is used in a command and control system, it will never substitute for the strength and utility of the human brain.100 The implications of this insistence on a man in the loop for nuclear firing orders is that the PLA will likely reject calls for automated protective action links in its doctrine.
26
Larry Wortzel, Strategic Studies Institute, 2007, Chinas Nuclear Forces: Operations, Training, Doctrine, Command, Control, and Campaign Planning, https://www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil/pdffiles/PUB776.pdf
This is important to follow because the CMC of the Chinese Communist Party ultimately has the finger on Chinas nuclear trigger, and technologically oriented civilians today, not former leaders of the PLA, control the CMC.
China may miscalculate U.S. good will, triggering war Larry Wortzel, Strategic Studies Institute, 2007, Chinas Nuclear Forces: Operations, Training, Doctrine, Command, Control, and Campaign Planning, https://www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil/pdffiles/PUB776.pdf
Examining the doctrinal text, Zhanyi Lilun Xuexi Zhinan (A Guide to the Study of Campaign Theory) provided more information on Chinas nuclear doctrine, force deployment, command and control, and survivability measures than has been available in the past. Combining the examination of authoritative doctrinal text with materials from the Chinese press and those obtained through the Open Source Center helped to confirm the authenticity of the doctrinal text and provided supporting evidence for judgments about the nature of Chinas strategic rocket forces, their organization, readiness levels, and their control. Another critical factor in the nuclear threat equation faced in the United States is the calculation by the CMC that China is able to absorb nuclear strikes with less catastrophic effects that the United States. This judgment is a function of Chinas historical military culture, geography, and an intentional state-directed policy of civil defense and risk distribution.111 For the United States, this means that Chinese leaders may miscalculate American will a and mistakenly take risky actions.
The decision by Beijing Larry Wortzel, Strategic Studies Institute, 2007, Chinas Nuclear Forces: Operations, Training, Doctrine, Command, Control, and Campaign Planning, https://www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil/pdffiles/PUB776.pdf
Internal debate in China over NFU policy Finally, the debate inside China over the viability of its no first use policy is real. At present, older veterans of the Foreign Ministry and the PLA insist that the policy stay unchanged. However, younger scholars, soldiers, and diplomats will keep up the pressure to pull back from this policy, which requires continued attention and strategic dialogue with Chinas policy community.
26