| China may attempt 
invasion: MND
 ONGOING THREAT: The report was the first that 
has directly mentioned a direct attack, which it said could come after China 
amassed enough amphibious vehicles
 
 By Wang Pei-lin and Jake Chung / Staff reporter, with Staff 
writer
 
 Despite warming cross-strait ties, China has not relented on its military 
buildup and ¡§may attempt a direct assault on Taiwan proper¡¨ when it has amassed 
enough amphibious transport vehicles or when the situation calls for it, 
according to this year¡¦s Ministry of National Defense report on the military 
capability of the People¡¦s Liberation Army (PLA).
 
 The report, released on Friday, marked the first time that the ministry had 
mentioned the possibility of China making a direct assault on the nation in all 
the past estimates of PLA military capability.
 
 According to the report¡¦s analysis on the combat capability of the PLA and the 
threat it poses to Taiwan, the PLA as yet lacks sufficient amphibious transport 
boats in its regular army and does not have the capability to launch a general 
invasion of Taiwan.
 
 Currently, China still relies on intimidation tactics, running blockades and the 
threat of artillery or missile bombardment as possible methods of answering 
hostile cross-strait situations, the report said.
 
 However, the report said that with the continued upgrading of the PLA¡¦s military 
equipment through arms purchases and research and development, the cross-strait 
military imbalance would only accelerate.
 
 It added that the PLA¡¦s growing investment in military equipment would also 
increase the difficulty of any foreign intervention in cross-strait affairs.
 
 With China¡¦s GDP growing nearly 10 percent from 1979 to 2008, and 9.2 percent 
just in the past year, the report says that China has become the second-largest 
economy in the world, providing a robust source of funding for national defense.
 
 Since 1989, China¡¦s national defense budget has been growing at a fixed 
two-digit figure every year and its national defense budge next year is to reach 
670 billion yuan (US$105 billion), 67 billion yuan more than last year, 
equivalent to an increase of 11.2 percent, the report said.
 
 Because China¡¦s research and development, arms sales profits, arms purchases 
expenditure, national defense industry profits and its budget for the People¡¦s 
Armed Police (PAP) are excluded from its national defense budget, it is 
estimated that the amount of unlisted military expenditure is between two and 
three times the published amount, the report said.
 
 According to statistics in the report, the Chinese Military and its Second 
Artillery Corp ¡X China¡¦s strategic missile force ¡X has 2.3 million soldiers and 
China is seeking to increase their mechanization and digitization.
 
 China is also seeking to enhance coordination of its army and air force rapid 
assault capabilities and special forces combat capability, the report said, 
adding that China¡¦s navy is also looking to develop a blue-water navy based 
around aircraft carrier task forces.
 
 On its submarine forces, China¡¦s self-built manned submersible Jiaolong (µëÀs) has 
also become the only manned submersible capable of reaching a depth exceeding 
7,000m, the report said.
 
 The People¡¦s Liberation Army Air Force is also stepping up the modernization of 
its systems and integrating C4ISR ¡X Command, Control, Communications, Computers, 
Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance ¡X in the hopes of obtaining 
capability to breach and assume air superiority over the first island chain, the 
report said.
 
 The first island chain is a concept first introduced amid the Cold War. The 
first island chain starts from the Japanese archipelagos, passes through the 
Diaoyutai Islands (³¨³½¥x), Taiwan, the Philippines, Indonesia and Malaysia, and 
ends at the Malacca Strait.
 
 China¡¦s Second Artillery Corp has continued to deploy Intercontinental Ballistic 
Missiles (ICBM), and China has also achieved ¡X after the US and Russia ¡X 
technical capability of automated rendezvous and docking of spacecraft, the 
report said, adding China¡¦s cyberwarfare forces have also grown under military 
and governmental support.
 
 China¡¦s military budget is second only to the US, the report said, adding that 
the speed and scale of China¡¦s increase of its military capability poses a 
security threat.
 
 China feels the unification of both sides of the Strait under one nation is a 
historical necessity and though appropriate military contacts and the setting up 
of confidence and security-building measures to officially end the at-war status 
between Taiwan and China can be discussed under the ¡§one China¡¨ principle, 
China¡¦s military is still building up to deter ¡§Taiwanese independence,¡¨ the 
report said.
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