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China’s Preoccupation with Asymmetric War

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10.15.2009 at 01:15pm

China’s Preoccupation with Asymmetric War:

Lessons Learned from the Hezbollah-Israeli War

by Ehsan Ahrari

Download the full article: China’s Preoccupation with Asymmetric War

Chinese leaders have decided long ago that, in the wake of a conflict, their military cannot fight and win a battle against the U.S. military on a force-on-force basis. However, that reality was not going to discourage a country whose strategic culture has produced original thinkers of the caliber and reputation of Sun Tzu and Mao Zedong.

In answering this question, one has to remind onself of a few famous quotes of Sun Tzu: “All warfare is based on deception.” “If your enemy … is in superior strength, evade him…” and “Pretend to be weak, that he may grow arrogant.” One must also recall Unrestricted War, published in 1999, by two senior Chinese colonels, Qiao Liang and Wang Xiangsui. It stated that, when faced with a technologically superior enemy, it is “necessary to dare to completely upset the order of the cards in one’s hands and reorganize them in accordance with the needs of war and the interests of a nation.”

The conventional wisdom regarding China’s asymmetric war doctrine is that it is “aimed at finding key vulnerabilities in American forces.” In the post-9/11 era, that doctrine is focused not only on military-related susceptibilities, but also on other weak points. In this context, one has to keep in mind Chang Mengxiong’s concept of “assassin’s mace” (“shashou jian”). Using the analogy of acupuncture for fighting asymmetric wars, this concept argues that even a superpower like the United States has a great number of points of vulnerabilities. If the focus of asymmetric attack is on those points, then the military giant can be brought down by a “weak” power like China.

Download the full article: China’s Preoccupation with Asymmetric War

Ehsan Ahrari is Professor of Security Studies at the Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies (APCSS) in Honolulu, Hawaii. This essay was originally prepared as part of his testimony at the United States-China Economic and Security Review Commission in March 2007.

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