China's military wants more teeth to counter India, US, Japan
China's Air Force Command Academy in its report last year identified the United States, Japan, Taiwan, India and Vietnam as "threats" to its military airspace until the year 2030, Japanese news agency Kyodo reported.
While the massive expansion of Chinese navy with a second aircraft carrier and a new bomber to operate from its decks attracted worldwide attention, the new study showed that the airforce has started developing a similar expansion strategy, the report said.
The study called for nine types of strategic equipment to counter the threats, which included high-speed air-launched cruise missiles, large transport planes, an airship that moves in the upper atmosphere, a next-generation fighter, unmanned attack aircraft, air-force satellites and precision-guided bombs.
It said the 2.3 million-strong People's Liberation Army (PLA), the world's largest, needs to broaden its air surveillance and attack capabilities to the western Pacific, including the areas near Japan to ensure its command.
The PLA operates with an annual budget of about USD 145 billion, over three times India's USD 40-billion budget.
The Beijing-based academy, a thinktank of an air force leadership training organisation, prepared the report in November last year.
Studies by the academy have previously served as policy guidelines, the report said.
The academy report proposes broadening the scope of surveillance from a "first island chain" linking Okinawa, Taiwan and the Philippines and one of China's defence lines in the open ocean to a "second island chain" linking the Izu Island chain, Guam and New Guinea.
The study affords a glimpse into the Chinese military's confidence in thwarting the US military, which is critical of China's controversial land-reclamation in the South China Sea.
It mentions enhancing the ability to attack US bases on Chinese side of the second archipelago line with strategic bombers and "deter US military intervention" in the event of a defence operation involving Chinese islands.
