BEIJING, May 26 (Xinhua) — The Information Office of the State Council on Tuesday published a white paper on China’s military strategy.
Following is the full text:
China’s Military Strategy
The State Council Information Office of the People’s Republic of China
May 2015, Beijing
Contents
Preface
I. National Security Situation
II. Missions and Strategic Tasks of China’s Armed Forces
III. Strategic Guideline of Active Defense
IV. Building and Development of China’s Armed Forces
V. Preparation for Military Struggle
VI. Military and Security Cooperation
Preface
The world today is undergoing unprecedented changes, and China is at a critical stage of reform and development. In their endeavor to realize the Chinese Dream of great national rejuvenation, the Chinese people aspire to join hands with the rest of the world to maintain peace, pursue development and share prosperity.
China’s destiny is vitally interrelated with that of the world as a whole. A prosperous and stable world would provide China with opportunities, while China’s peaceful development also offers an opportunity for the whole world. China will unswervingly follow the path of peaceful development, pursue an independent foreign policy of peace and a national defense policy that is defensive in nature, oppose hegemonism and power politics in all forms, and will never seek hegemony or expansion. China’s armed forces will remain a staunch force in maintaining world peace.
Building a strong national defense and powerful armed forces is a strategic task of China’s modernization drive and a security guarantee for China’s peaceful development. Subordinate to and serving the national strategic goal, China’s military strategy is an overarching guidance for blueprinting and directing the building and employment of the country’s armed forces. At this new historical starting point, China’s armed forces will adapt themselves to new changes in the national security environment, firmly follow the goal of the Communist Party of China (CPC) to build a strong military for the new situation, implement the military strategic guideline of active defense in the new situation, accelerate the modernization of national defense and armed forces, resolutely safeguard China’s sovereignty, security and development interests, and provide a strong guarantee for achieving the national strategic goal of the “two centenaries” and for realizing the Chinese Dream of achieving the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation.
I. National Security Situation
In today’s world, the global trends toward multi-polarity and economic globalization are intensifying, and an information society is rapidly coming into being. Countries are increasingly bound together in a community of shared destiny. Peace, development, cooperation and mutual benefit have become an irresistible tide of the times.
Profound changes are taking place in the international situation, as manifested in the historic changes in the balance of power, global governance structure, Asia-Pacific geostrategic landscape, and international competition in the economic, scientific and technological, and military fields. The forces for world peace are on the rise, so are the factors against war. In the foreseeable future, a world war is unlikely, and the international situation is expected to remain generally peaceful. There are, however, new threats from hegemonism, power politics and neo-interventionism. International competition for the redistribution of power, rights and interests is tending to intensify. Terrorist activities are growing increasingly worrisome. Hotspot issues, such as ethnic, religious, border and territorial disputes, are complex and volatile. Small-scale wars, conflicts and crises are recurrent in some regions. Therefore, the world still faces both immediate and potential threats of local wars.
With a generally favorable external environment, China will remain in an important period of strategic opportunities for its development, a period in which much can be achieved. China’s comprehensive national strength, core competitiveness and risk-resistance capacity are notably increasing, and China enjoys growing international standing and influence. Domestically, the Chinese people’s standard of living has remarkably improved, and Chinese society remains stable. China, as a large developing country, still faces multiple and complex security threats, as well as increasing external impediments and challenges. Subsistence and development security concerns, as well as traditional and non-traditional security threats are interwoven. Therefore, China has an arduous task to safeguard its national unification, territorial integrity and development interests.
As the world economic and strategic center of gravity is shifting ever more rapidly to the Asia-Pacific region, the US carries on its “rebalancing” strategy and enhances its military presence and its military alliances in this region. Japan is sparing no effort to dodge the post-war mechanism, overhauling its military and security policies. Such development has caused grave concerns among other countries in the region. On the issues concerning China’s territorial sovereignty and maritime rights and interests, some of its offshore neighbors take provocative actions and reinforce their military presence on China’s reefs and islands that they have illegally occupied. Some external countries are also busy meddling in South China Sea affairs; a tiny few maintain constant close-in air and sea surveillance and reconnaissance against China. It is thus a long-standing task for China to safeguard its maritime rights and interests. Certain disputes over land territory are still smoldering. The Korean Peninsula and Northeast Asia are shrouded in instability and uncertainty. Regional terrorism, separatism and extremism are rampant. All these have a negative impact on the security and stability along China’s periphery.
The Taiwan issue bears on China’s reunification and long-term development, and reunification is an inevitable trend in the course of national rejuvenation. In recent years, cross-Taiwan Straits relations have sustained a sound momentum of peaceful development, but the root cause of instability has not yet been removed, and the “Taiwan independence” separatist forces and their activities are still the biggest threat to the peaceful development of cross-Straits relations. Further, China faces a formidable task to maintain political security and social stability. Separatist forces for “East Turkistan independence” and “Tibet independence” have inflicted serious damage, particularly with escalating violent terrorist activities by “East Turkistan independence” forces. Besides, anti-China forces have never given up their attempt to instigate a “color revolution” in this country. Consequently, China faces more challenges in terms of national security and social stability. With the growth of China’s national interests, its national security is more vulnerable to international and regional turmoil, terrorism, piracy, serious natural disasters and epidemics, and the security of overseas interests concerning energy and resources, strategic sea lines of communication (SLOCs), as well as institutions, personnel and assets abroad, has become an imminent issue.
The world revolution in military affairs (RMA) is proceeding to a new stage. Long-range, precise, smart, stealthy and unmanned weapons and equipment are becoming increasingly sophisticated. Outer space and cyber space have become new commanding heights in strategic competition among all parties. The form of war is accelerating its evolution to informationization. World major powers are actively adjusting their national security strategies and defense policies, and speeding up their military transformation and force restructuring. The aforementioned revolutionary changes in military technologies and the form of war have not only had a significant impact on the international political and military landscapes, but also posed new and severe challenges to China’s military security
II. Missions and Strategic Tasks of China’s Armed Forces
China’s national strategic goal is to complete the building of a moderately prosperous society in all respects by 2021 when the CPC celebrates its centenary; and the building of a modern socialist country that is prosperous, strong, democratic, culturally advanced and harmonious by 2049 when the People’s Republic of China (PRC) marks its centenary. It is a Chinese Dream of achieving the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation. The Chinese Dream is to make the country strong. China’s armed forces take their dream of making the military strong as part of the Chinese Dream. Without a strong military, a country can be neither safe nor strong. In the new historical period, aiming at the CPC’s goal of building a strong military in the new situation, China’s armed forces will unswervingly adhere to the principle of the CPC’s absolute leadership, uphold combat effectiveness as the sole and fundamental standard, carry on their glorious traditions, and work to build themselves into a people’s military that follows the CPC’s commands, can fight and win, and boasts a fine style of work.
In the new circumstances, the national security issues facing China encompass far more subjects, extend over a greater range, and cover a longer time span than at any time in the country’s history. Internally and externally, the factors at play are more complex than ever before. Therefore, it is necessary to uphold a holistic view of national security, balance internal and external security, homeland and citizen security, traditional and non-traditional security, subsistence and development security, and China’s own security and the common security of the world.
To realize China’s national strategic goal and implement the holistic view of national security, new requirements have been raised for innovative development of China’s military strategy and the accomplishment of military missions and tasks. In response to the new requirement of safeguarding national security and development interests, China’s armed forces will work harder to create a favorable strategic posture with more emphasis on the employment of military forces and means, and provide a solid security guarantee for the country’s peaceful development. In response to the new requirement arising from the changing security situation, the armed forces will constantly innovate strategic guidance and operational thoughts so as to ensure the capabilities of fighting and winning. In response to the new requirement arising from the worldwide RMA, the armed forces will pay close attention to the challenges in new security domains, and work hard to seize the strategic initiative in military competition. In response to the new requirement coming from the country’s growing strategic interests, the armed forces will actively participate in both regional and international security cooperation and effectively secure China’s overseas interests. And in response to the new requirement arising from China’s all-round and deepening reform, the armed forces will continue to follow the path of civil-military integration (CMI), actively participate in the country’s economic and social construction, and firmly maintain social stability, so as to remain a staunch force for upholding the CPC’s ruling position and a reliable force for developing socialism with Chinese characteristics.
China’s armed forces will effectively perform their missions in the new historical period, resolutely uphold the leadership of the CPC and the socialist system with Chinese characteristics, safeguard China’s sovereignty, security and development interests, safeguard the important period of strategic opportunities for China’s development, maintain regional and world peace, and strive to provide a strong guarantee for completing the building of a moderately prosperous society in all respects and achieving the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation.
China’s armed forces mainly shoulder the following strategic tasks:
— To deal with a wide range of emergencies and military threats, and effectively safeguard the sovereignty and security of China’s territorial land, air and sea;
— To resolutely safeguard the unification of the motherland;
— To safeguard China’s security and interests in new domains;
— To safeguard the security of China’s overseas interests;
— To maintain strategic deterrence and carry out nuclear counterattack;
— To participate in regional and international security cooperation and maintain regional and world peace;
— To strengthen efforts in operations against infiltration, separatism and terrorism so as to maintain China’s political security and social stability; and
— To perform such tasks as emergency rescue and disaster relief, rights and interests protection, guard duties, and support for national economic and social development.
III. Strategic Guideline of Active Defense
The strategic concept of active defense is the essence of the CPC’s military strategic thought. From the long-term practice of revolutionary wars, the people’s armed forces have developed a complete set of strategic concepts of active defense, which boils down to: adherence to the unity of strategic defense and operational and tactical offense; adherence to the principles of defense, self-defense and post-emptive strike; and adherence to the stance that “We will not attack unless we are attacked, but we will surely counterattack if attacked.”
Shortly after the founding of the PRC in 1949, the Central Military Commission (CMC) established the military strategic guideline of active defense, and later, in line with the developments and changes in the national security situation, had made a number of major revisions of it. In 1993 the military strategic guideline of the new era was formulated, which took winning local wars in conditions of modern technology, particularly high technology, as the basic point in making preparation for military struggle (PMS). In 2004, the guideline was further substantiated, and the basic point for PMS was modified to winning local wars under conditions of informationization.
China’s socialist nature, fundamental national interests and the objective requirement of taking the path of peaceful development all demand that China unswervingly adhere to and enrich the strategic concept of active defense. Guided by national security and development strategies, and required by the situation and their tasks in the new historical period, China’s armed forces will continue to implement the military strategic guideline of active defense and enhance military strategic guidance as the times so require. They will further broaden strategic vision, update strategic thinking and make strategic guidance more forward-looking. A holistic approach will be taken to balance war preparation and war prevention, rights protection and stability maintenance, deterrence and warfighting, and operations in wartime and employment of military forces in peacetime. They will lay stress on farsighted planning and management to create a favorable posture, comprehensively manage crises, and resolutely deter and win wars.
To implement the military strategic guideline of active defense in the new situation, China’s armed forces will adjust the basic point for PMS. In line with the evolving form of war and national security situation, the basic point for PMS will be placed on winning informationized local wars, highlighting maritime military struggle and maritime PMS. The armed forces will work to effectively control major crises, properly handle possible chain reactions, and firmly safeguard the country’s territorial sovereignty, integrity and security.
To implement the military strategic guideline of active defense in the new situation, China’s armed forces will innovate basic operational doctrines. In response to security threats from different directions and in line with their current capabilities, the armed forces will adhere to the principles of flexibility, mobility and self-dependence so that “you fight your way and I fight my way.” Integrated combat forces will be employed to prevail in system-vs-system operations featuring information dominance, precision strikes and joint operations.
To implement the military strategic guideline of active defense in the new situation, China’s armed forces will optimize the military strategic layout. In view of China’s geostrategic environment, the security threats it faces and the strategic tasks they shoulder, the armed forces will make overall planning for strategic deployment and military disposition, in order to clearly divide areas of responsibility for their troops, and enable them to support each other and act as an organic whole. Threats from such new security domains as outer space and cyber space will be dealt with to maintain the common security of the world community. China’s armed forces will strengthen international security cooperation in areas crucially related to China’s overseas interests, to ensure the security of such interests.
To implement the military strategic guideline of active defense in the new situation, China’s armed forces will uphold the following principles:
— To be subordinate to and in the service of the national strategic goal, implement the holistic view of national security, strengthen PMS, prevent crises, deter and win wars;
— To foster a strategic posture favorable to China’s peaceful development, adhere to the national defense policy that is defensive in nature, persevere in close coordination of political, military, economic and diplomatic work, and positively cope with comprehensive security threats the country possibly encounters;
— To strike a balance between rights protection and stability maintenance, and make overall planning for both, safeguard national territorial sovereignty and maritime rights and interests, and maintain security and stability along China’s periphery;
— To endeavor to seize the strategic initiative in military struggle, proactively plan for military struggle in all directions and domains, and grasp the opportunities to accelerate military building, reform and development;
— To employ strategies and tactics featuring flexibility and mobility, give full play to the overall effectiveness of joint operations, concentrate superior forces, and make integrated use of all operational means and methods;
— To make serious preparations to cope with the most complex and difficult scenarios, uphold bottom-line thinking, and do a solid job in all aspects so as to ensure proper responses to such scenarios with ease at any time and in any circumstances;
— To bring into full play the unique political advantages of the people’s armed forces, uphold the CPC’s absolute leadership over the military, accentuate the cultivation of fighting spirit, enforce strict discipline, improve the professionalism and strength of the troops, build closer relations between the government and the military as well as between the people and the military, and boost the morale of officers and men;
— To give full play to the overall power of the concept of people’s war, persist in employing it as an ace weapon to triumph over the enemy, enrich the contents, ways and means of the concept of people’s war, and press forward with the shift of the focus of war mobilization from human resources to science and technology; and
— To actively expand military and security cooperation, deepen military relations with major powers, neighboring countries and other developing countries, and promote the establishment of a regional framework for security and cooperation.
IV. Building and Development of China’s Armed Forces
In the implementation of the military strategic guideline in the new situation, China’s armed forces must closely center around the CPC’s goal of building a strong military, respond to the state’s core security needs, aim at building an informationized military and winning informationized wars, deepen the reform of national defense and the armed forces in an all-round way, build a modern system of military forces with Chinese characteristics, and constantly enhance their capabilities for addressing various security threats and accomplishing diversified military tasks.
Development of the Services and Arms of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) and the People’s Armed Police Force (PAPF)
In line with the strategic requirement of mobile operations and multi-dimensional offense and defense, the PLA Army (PLAA) will continue to reorient from theater defense to trans-theater mobility. In the process of building small, multi-functional and modular units, the PLAA will adapt itself to tasks in different regions, develop the capacity of its combat forces for different purposes, and construct a combat force structure for joint operations. The PLAA will elevate its capabilities for precise, multi-dimensional, trans-theater, multi-functional and sustainable operations.
In line with the strategic requirement of offshore waters defense and open seas protection, the PLA Navy (PLAN) will gradually shift its focus from “offshore waters defense” to the combination of “offshore waters defense” with “open seas protection,” and build a combined, multi-functional and efficient marine combat force structure. The PLAN will enhance its capabilities for strategic deterrence and counterattack, maritime maneuvers, joint operations at sea, comprehensive defense and comprehensive support.
In line with the strategic requirement of building air-space capabilities and conducting offensive and defensive operations, the PLA Air Force (PLAAF) will endeavor to shift its focus from territorial air defense to both defense and offense, and build an air-space defense force structure that can meet the requirements of informationized operations. The PLAAF will boost its capabilities for strategic early warning, air strike, air and missile defense, information countermeasures, airborne operations, strategic projection and comprehensive support.
In line with the strategic requirement of being lean and effective and possessing both nuclear and conventional missiles, the PLA Second Artillery Force (PLASAF) will strive to transform itself in the direction of informationization, press forward with independent innovations in weaponry and equipment by reliance on science and technology, enhance the safety, reliability and effectiveness of missile systems, and improve the force structure featuring a combination of both nuclear and conventional capabilities. The PLASAF will strengthen its capabilities for strategic deterrence and nuclear counterattack, and medium- and long-range precision strikes.
In line with the strategic requirement of performing multiple functions and effectively maintaining social stability, the PAPF will continue to develop its forces for guard and security, contingency response, stability maintenance, counter-terrorism operations, emergency rescue and disaster relief, emergency support and air support, and work to improve a force structure which highlights guard duty, contingency response, counter-terrorism and stability maintenance. The PAPF will enhance its capabilities for performing diversified tasks centering on guard duty and contingency response in informationized conditions.
Force Development in Critical Security Domains
The seas and oceans bear on the enduring peace, lasting stability and sustainable development of China. The traditional mentality that land outweighs sea must be abandoned, and great importance has to be attached to managing the seas and oceans and protecting maritime rights and interests. It is necessary for China to develop a modern maritime military force structure commensurate with its national security and development interests, safeguard its national sovereignty and maritime rights and interests, protect the security of strategic SLOCs and overseas interests, and participate in international maritime cooperation, so as to provide strategic support for building itself into a maritime power.
Outer space has become a commanding height in international strategic competition. Countries concerned are developing their space forces and instruments, and the first signs of weaponization of outer space have appeared. China has all along advocated the peaceful use of outer space, opposed the weaponization of and arms race in outer space, and taken an active part in international space cooperation. China will keep abreast of the dynamics of outer space, deal with security threats and challenges in that domain, and secure its space assets to serve its national economic and social development, and maintain outer space security.
Cyberspace has become a new pillar of economic and social development, and a new domain of national security. As international strategic competition in cyberspace has been turning increasingly fiercer, quite a few countries are developing their cyber military forces. Being one of the major victims of hacker attacks, China is confronted with grave security threats to its cyber infrastructure. As cyberspace weighs more in military security, China will expedite the development of a cyber force, and enhance its capabilities of cyberspace situation awareness, cyber defense, support for the country’s endeavors in cyberspace and participation in international cyber cooperation, so as to stem major cyber crises, ensure national network and information security, and maintain national security and social stability.
The nuclear force is a strategic cornerstone for safeguarding national sovereignty and security. China has always pursued the policy of no first use of nuclear weapons and adhered to a self-defensive nuclear strategy that is defensive in nature. China will unconditionally not use or threaten to use nuclear weapons against non-nuclear-weapon states or in nuclear-weapon-free zones, and will never enter into a nuclear arms race with any other country. China has always kept its nuclear capabilities at the minimum level required for maintaining its national security. China will optimize its nuclear force structure, improve strategic early warning, command and control, missile penetration, rapid reaction, and survivability and protection, and deter other countries from using or threatening to use nuclear weapons against China.
Military Force Building Measures
Strengthening ideological and political work. China’s armed forces always treat ideological and political building as the first priority, and have endeavored to reinforce and improve their political work in the new situation. They will continue to practice and carry forward the Core Socialist Values, cultivate the Core Values of Contemporary Revolutionary Service Personnel, and carry forward their glorious traditions and fine styles. Moreover, the armed forces will uphold a series of fundamental principles for and institutions of the CPC’s absolute leadership over the military, enhance the creativity, cohesion and combat effectiveness of their CPC organizations at all levels, make great efforts to cultivate a new generation of revolutionary service personnel of noble soul, competence, courage, uprightness and virtue, and ensure that the armed forces will resolutely follow the commands of the CPC Central Committee and the CMC at all times and under all conditions, and consistently retain the nature and purpose of the people’s armed forces.
Pushing ahead with logistics modernization. China’s armed forces will deepen logistics reform in relevant policies, institutions and support forces, and optimize strategic logistics deployment. They will innovate the modes of support, develop new support means, augment war reserves, integrate logistics information systems, improve rules and standards, and meticulously organize supply and support, so as to build a logistics system that can provide support for fighting and winning modern wars, serve the modernization of the armed forces, and transform towards informationization.
Developing advanced weaponry and equipment. Persevering in information dominance, systems building, independent innovation, sustainable development, overall planning, and emphasis on priorities, China’s armed forces will speed up to upgrade weaponry and equipment, and work to develop a weaponry and equipment system which can effectively respond to informationized warfare and help fulfill the missions and tasks.
Cultivating new-type military personnel. China’s armed forces will continue with the strategic project for personnel training and perfect the system for military human resources. They will deepen the reform of military educational institutions and improve the triad training system for new-type military personnel – institutional education, unit training and military professional education, so as to pool more talented people and cultivate more personnel who can meet the demands of informationized warfare.
Intensifying efforts in running the armed forces with strict discipline and in accordance with the law. Aiming at strengthening the revolutionization, modernization and regularization of the armed forces in all respects, China will innovate and develop theories and practice in relation to running the armed forces in accordance with the law, establish a well-knit military law system with Chinese characteristics, so as to elevate the level of rule by law of national defense and armed forces building.
Innovating military theories. Under the guidance of the CPC’s innovative theories, China’s armed forces will intensify their studies of military operations, probe into the mechanisms of winning modern wars, innovate strategies and tactics featuring mobility and flexibility, and develop theories on military building in the new situation, so as to bring into place a system of advanced military theories commensurate with the requirement of winning future wars.
Improving strategic management. It is necessary to optimize the functions and institutions of the CMC and the general headquarters/departments, improve the leadership and management system of the services and arms, and adhere to demand-based planning and plan-based resource allocation. China’s armed forces will set up a system and a working mechanism for overall and coordinated programming and planning. They will also intensify overall supervision and management of strategic resources, strengthen the in-process supervision and risk control of major projects, improve mechanisms for strategic assessment, and set up and improve relevant assessment systems and complementary standards and codes.
In-depth Development of Civil-Military Integration (CMI)
Following the guiding principle of integrating military with civilian purposes and combining military efforts with civilian support, China will forge further ahead with CMI by constantly bettering the mechanisms, diversifying the forms, expanding the scope and elevating the level of the integration, so as to endeavor to bring into place an all-element, multi-domain and cost-efficient pattern of CMI.
Accelerating CMI in key sectors. With stronger policy support, China will work to establish uniform military and civilian standards for infrastructure, key technological areas and major industries, explore the ways and means for training military personnel in civilian educational institutions, developing weaponry and equipment by national defense industries, and outsourcing logistics support to civilian support systems. China encourages joint building and utilization of military and civilian infrastructure, joint exploration of the sea, outer space and air, and shared use of such resources as surveying and mapping, navigation, meteorology and frequency spectra. Accordingly, military and civilian resources can be more compatible, complementary and mutually accessible.
Building a mechanism for operating CMI. At the state level, it is necessary to establish a mechanism for CMI development, featuring unified leadership, military-civilian coordination, abutment of military and civilian needs, and resource sharing. Furthermore, it is necessary to improve the management responsibilities of relevant military and civilian institutions, improve the general standards for both the military and the civilian sectors, make studies on the establishment of a policy system in which the government makes the investment, offers tax incentives and financial support, and expedites legislation promoting military-civilian coordinated development, so as to form a pattern featuring overall military-civilian planning and coordinated development. It is also necessary to push forward with the shared utilization of military capabilities and those of other sectors, and establish a mechanism for joint civil-military response to major crises and emergencies.
Improving the systems and mechanisms of national defense mobilization. China will enhance education in national defense and boost the awareness of the general public in relation to national defense. It will continue to strengthen the building of the reserve force, optimize its structure, and increase its proportion in the PLAN, PLAAF and PLASAF as well as in combat support forces. The ways to organize and employ reserve forces will be more diversified. China will devote more efforts to science and technology in national defense mobilization, be more readily prepared for the requisition of information resources, and build specialized support forces. China aims to build a national defense mobilization system that can meet the requirements of winning informationized wars and responding to both emergencies and wars.
V. Preparation for Military Struggle
Preparation for military struggle (PMS) is a basic military practice and an important guarantee for safeguarding peace, containing crises and winning wars. To expand and intensify PMS, China’s armed forces must meet the requirement of being capable of fighting and winning, focus on solving major problems and difficulties, and do solid work and make relentless efforts in practical preparations, in order to enhance their overall capabilities for deterrence and warfighting.
Enhancing capabilities for system-vs-system operations based on information systems. China’s armed forces will quicken their steps to transform the generating mode of combat effectiveness, work to use information systems to integrate a wide range of operational forces, modules and elements into overall operational capacity, and gradually establish an integrated joint operational system in which all elements are seamlessly linked and various operational platforms perform independently and in coordination. China’s armed forces will endeavor to address the pressing problems constraining the capabilities for system-vs-system operations. They will make further exploration and more efficient utilization of information resources, strengthen the building of the systems of reconnaissance, early-warning and command and control, develop medium- and long-range precision strike capabilities, and improve the comprehensive support systems. In accordance with the requirement of being authoritative, streamlined, agile and efficient, they will strive to establish and improve the CMC command organ and theater-level command systems for joint operations.
Pushing ahead with PMS in all directions and domains. Due to its complex geostrategic environment, China faces various threats and challenges in all its strategic directions and security domains. Therefore, PMS must be carried out in a well-planned, prioritized, comprehensive and coordinated way, so as to maintain the balance and stability of the overall strategic situation. China’s armed forces will make overall planning for PMS in both traditional and new security domains, and get ready to safeguard national sovereignty and security, protect the country’s maritime rights and interests, and deal with armed conflicts and emergencies. To adapt to the upgrading of weaponry and equipment as well as changes of operational patterns, China’s armed forces will further optimize battlefield disposition and strengthen strategic prepositioning.
Maintaining constant combat readiness. China’s armed forces will continue to improve its routine combat readiness, maintain a posture of high alertness, and conscientiously organize border, coastal and air defense patrols and guard duties. The PLAA will improve its combat readiness system with inter-connected strategic directions, combined arms and systematized operational support, so as to ensure agile maneuvers and effective response. The PLAN will continue to organize and perform regular combat readiness patrols and maintain a military presence in relevant sea areas. The PLAAF will continue to observe the principles of applicability in peacetime and wartime, all-dimensional response and full territorial reach, and maintain vigilant and efficient combat readiness. The PLASAF will continue to keep an appropriate level of vigilance in peacetime. By observing the principles of combining peacetime and wartime demands, maintaining all time vigilance and being action-ready, it will prefect the integrated, functional, agile and efficient operational duty system.
Enhancing realistic military training. The PLA will continue to attach strategic importance to combat training in realistic conditions, and strictly temper the troops according to the Outline of Military Training and Evaluation (OMTE). It will constantly innovate operational and training methods, improve military training criteria and regulations, and work to build large-scale comprehensive training bases in an effort to provide real-combat environments for training. The PLA will continue to conduct live-setting training, IT-based simulated training, and face-on-face confrontation training in line with real-combat criteria, and strengthen command post training and joint and combined training. It will intensify training in complex electro-magnetic environments, complex and unfamiliar terrains, and complex weather conditions. It will also set up a training supervision and inspection system, so as to incorporate real-combat requirements into training.
Preparing for military operations other than war (MOOTWs). As a necessary requirement for China’s armed forces to fulfill their responsibilities and missions in the new period as well as an important approach to enhancing their operational capabilities, the armed forces will continue to conduct such MOOTWs as emergency rescue and disaster relief, counter-terrorism and stability maintenance, rights and interests protection, guard duty, international peacekeeping, and international humanitarian assistance and disaster relief (HADR). They will work to incorporate MOOTW capacity building into military modernization and PMS, and pay special attention to establishing emergency command mechanisms, building emergency forces, training professionals, supporting task-specific equipment, and formulating relevant policies and regulations. Military emergency-response command systems will be tuned into state emergency management mechanisms. China’s armed forces will persist in unified organization and command, scientific employment of forces, rapid and efficient actions, and strict observation of related policies and regulations.
VI. Military and Security Cooperation
Pursuing a security concept featuring common, comprehensive, cooperative and sustainable security, China’s armed forces will continue to develop military-to-military relations that are non-aligned, non-confrontational and not directed against any third party. They will strive to establish fair and effective collective security mechanisms and military confidence-building measures (CBMs), expand military and security cooperation, and create a security environment favorable to China’s peaceful development.
Developing all-round military-to-military relations. China’s armed forces will further their exchanges and cooperation with the Russian military within the framework of the comprehensive strategic partnership of coordination between China and Russia, and foster a comprehensive, diverse and sustainable framework to promote military relations in more fields and at more levels. China’s armed forces will continue to foster a new model of military relationship with the US armed forces that conforms to the new model of major-country relations between the two countries, strengthen defense dialogues, exchanges and cooperation, and improve the CBM mechanism for the notification of major military activities as well as the rules of behavior for safety of air and maritime encounters, so as to strengthen mutual trust, prevent risks and manage crises. In the spirit of neighborhood diplomacy of friendship, sincerity, reciprocity and inclusiveness, China’s armed forces will further develop relations with their counterparts in neighboring countries. Also, they will work to raise the level of military relations with European counterparts, continue the traditional friendly military ties with their African, Latin American and Southern Pacific counterparts. China’s armed forces will work to further defense and security cooperation in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), and continue to participate in multilateral dialogues and cooperation mechanisms such as the ASEAN Defense Ministers’ Meeting Plus (ADMM+), ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF), Shangri-La Dialogue (SLD), Jakarta International Defence Dialogue (JIDD) and Western Pacific Naval Symposium (WPNS). The Chinese military will continue to host multilateral events like the Xiangshan Forum, striving to establish a new framework for security and cooperation conducive to peace, stability and prosperity in the Asia-Pacific region.
Pushing ahead with pragmatic military cooperation. On the basis of mutual respect, equality, mutual benefit and all-win cooperation, China’s armed forces will continue to carry out pragmatic cooperation with their counterparts in various countries of the world. In response to the changing situation, China’s armed forces will constantly explore new fields, new contents and new models of cooperation with other militaries, so as to jointly deal with a diverse range of security threats and challenges. Extensive dialogues and exchanges will be conducted with foreign militaries on defense policy, services and arms building, institutional education, logistics and other subjects to promote mutual understanding, mutual trust and mutual learning. The Chinese military will also strengthen cooperation with related countries in personnel training, material assistance, equipment and technology, so as to strengthen mutual support and enhance respective defensive capabilities. Bilateral and multilateral joint exercises and training, involving various services and arms, will be conducted at multiple levels and in various domains to enhance joint operational capabilities. The Chinese military will work to extend the subjects of such training and exercises from non-traditional to traditional security areas. It will actively participate in international maritime security dialogues and cooperation, and jointly deal with traditional and non-traditional maritime security threats.
Fulfilling international responsibilities and obligations. China’s armed forces will continue to participate in UN peacekeeping missions, strictly observe the mandates of the UN Security Council, maintain its commitment to the peaceful settlement of conflicts, promote development and reconstruction, and safeguard regional peace and security. China’s armed forces will continue to take an active part in international disaster rescue and humanitarian assistance, dispatch professional rescue teams to disaster-stricken areas for relief and disaster reduction, provide relief materials and medical aid, and strengthen international exchanges in the fields of rescue and disaster reduction. Through the aforementioned operations, the armed forces can also enhance their own capabilities and expertise. Faithfully fulfilling China’s international obligations, the country’s armed forces will continue to carry out escort missions in the Gulf of Aden and other sea areas as required, enhance exchanges and cooperation with naval task forces of other countries, and jointly secure international SLOCs. China’s armed forces will engage in extensive regional and international security affairs, and promote the establishment of the mechanisms of emergency notification, military risk precaution, crisis management and conflict control. With the growth of national strength, China’s armed forces will gradually intensify their participation in such operations as international peacekeeping and humanitarian assistance, and do their utmost to shoulder more international responsibilities and obligations, provide more public security goods, and contribute more to world peace and common development.
Hey China; do you want us to come over and do to you what we did over here in America to make her shine and be beautiful?
Bad for the Jews, Bad for America..
Our modesty is breathtaking…
I was wonder how the Chinese central bank was going to be taken over…
The Jews cannot take over China as they have the West, hence their leading role in pushing for confrontation with China. They will get the goyim to do the dirty work, of course. And hence their prodigious efforts to ensure their continued massive over-representation in Ivy League colleges, and the continuing under-representation of east and south Asians, despite their excellent credentials. Once Jewish over-representation reflected their eminence in entrance scores, but for some time it has reflected that intense nepotism that is so characteristic of their social behaviour.
The PBOC central bank is not connected to the FED. It is possibly the only central bank that is not just part of the the US dominated system.
The Chinese have studied carefully all the capitalist hooks and traps and have managed to keep themselves fairly independent.
Now with their AIIB, Silk Road Fund, and participation in BRICS NDB, they have muscle in structure as well as deep pocket wealth.
The Chinese are a studious, meticulous people who move slowly as they learn and then rapidly when they move.
“Your words in God’s ear”! We use to say in Germany… Meaning: may God give, that it happens this way.
I’m quite not sure how much independent the Chinese banking system is.
China isn’t developing in a vacuum or free space. China is developing in a FRAME, which was granted her.
The Elite has the knowledge where exactly nations will rise. They know hundreds of years in advance (at least), where new “potential” will emerge. Germany for example: they knew about the potential, they knew about the time-frame. So they helped Germany to ascend, they “managed” Germany’s domestication and since WW I, they are using every drop of German blood and money of course for their agenda.
When we talk about The Elite, don’t make the mistake and think of them as ordinary people, just with much more money, connections and power. To use an allegory: think of them as a “gardener” in relation to plants (us). Think of them as a pet-trainer for pets (us). I hint you to a whole different level of consciousness, with completely superior abilities and knowledge in certain fields.
If you dismiss this to easy as Sci-Fi, you’re not ready for the look “outside the box”…
That article is funny its basic premise is that there is such a thing as Jewish Exceptionalism. I don’t really go in for all the Israel/Zionism/Jewish stuff (not saying its correct or inccorect, just sitting on the fence) but that is pretty overt and striking.
The whole things seems almost like a Freudian slip.
Is there US Exceptionalism ?
Sorry,
I missed the part where the doctrine mentions, Jews, Israel and Zionism (J, I & Z). Where does it mention that? Are you inferring this? What parts of the doctrine did you specifically believe were “subtle” or indirect references to J,I & Z?
I’m a noob, so I’m not trying to sarcastic or anything, just trying to understand how you were able to glean a J,I & Z angle to this military doctrine. Please explain.
Thank you.
“oppose hegemonism and power politics in all forms, and will never seek hegemony or expansion.”
Nothing like being blunt and to the point.
While the hegemons attention was fully on Russia, China has accomplished a lot.
With the vassals jumping ship to the AIIB, the hegemons attention has turned squarely onto China.
Ashton Carters speech to the McCain institute shortly after the vassals jumped ship.
http://www.defense.gov/Speeches/Speech.aspx?SpeechID=1929
Containing China, railguns, TPP, ect ect,
So stability, democracy and economic progress in the Asian Pacific were all created by the United States, eh?
I’m an American — wonder why I missed all that . . .
Here’s a good write up for the reasons why the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade was bombed during the NATO bombing of serbia:
http://chinamatters.blogspot.com/2015/05/how-it-all-began-belgrade-embassy.html
Regarding South China Sea, the islands, and the 9 dash line.
In the information warfare even the couple of Chinese news sites I read do not make there position real clear.
Just looking up wikipedia it seem China has had sovereignty over the area since around 1200AD apart from a few years when Japan took control.
It seems the Taipei treaty was for China to regain sovereignty of several island groups from Japan yet the wording of the treaty apparently is that Japan cedes sovereignty, but without stating that is ceding sovereignty to China.
I guess the part I am not clear on is if China is concentrating on the island groups and their territorial waters as sovereign territory, or the full area within the 9 dash line, and if the dash line is a negotiable boundary.
The 9-dash line defines the territorial claim. The Chinese will cede passage of all ships through the South China Sea, and is trying to work bi-lateral (nation-to nation) agreements on oil and gas and fishing rights. They are trying to do that through ASEAN with no participation of the US.
Don’t overlook the 9-dash line was KMT invention (1947) before 1949 when New China was founded by Mao. The Chinese took it up later as a nice thing to claim since oil and gas are plentiful under the seabed.
This all heated up in 2009 when China went to the UN with the map and 9-dash line as their territorial claim.
Philippines and Vietnam flipped out and the US has used the excuse that it will give China control of navigation through the area/zone. China has never indicated any thing like that. In fact, they are the biggest user of the sea with 80% of the commercial traffic in and through.
China has stiff-armed any attempt to impose on them international or hegemonic decisions regarding their claim while they try to do the bi-lateral negotiations.
Somehow, with President Xi’s dream maritime project (Maritime Silk Road) the Chinese must soon come to solutions that satisfy its neighbors. Shared wealth without giving up sovereignty in the zone may be the nature of the deals they make to settle this.
China has taken an adamant position because the US insists on maintaining naval hegemony in the Asian seas, the Western near Pacific, the Straits of Malacca and the Indian Ocean.
China is basically saying that the South China Sea is not a US lake. Just as they maintain the East China Sea and Yellow Sea are not US-Japan lakes. Up there, they also have a ADIZ and may institute one in the South China Sea when they have enough fighter jets on those runways they are building. Their little aircraft carrier is not fit for duty for such a task.
It will get worked out. Economics rules. Xi has his plans and the Maritime Silk Road must have peace and tranquility for it to be successful.
Soon, Russian and Indian military vessels will also be down there on regular passage. What once was under the thumb of the US Navy is changing, even if the insane Abe imperialists stick their nose into the matter.
Thanks Larchmonter, your reply is much appreciated.
Several weeks after the MH17 shoot down I read an article in New Straits Times. Possibly something said by Xi (sorry, can’t find the link so just off memory) that china had to change its military strategy/outlook. The part that I remember was information warfare.
At the present china is lacking badly here. Just looking at wikpedia it appears China has a very good claim to the island groups and the SCS.
China need to get this information into the western MSM if possible but at least the English language news sites. Their history and current diplomatic efforts.
In hindsight it appears China should have garrisoned all islands immediately after WWII and held off all comers.
They had other problems then. Among others, the fact that these islands can’t be garrisoned as they’re more or less a foot below sea level, just atolls really. That’s why they have to build them up into actually protruding islands. Instead of garrison, it will be fighter planes. Unsinkable aircraft carrier. That is what USA doesn’t like about them.
They were devastated after the war and had to fight the civil war against a US-backed Chiang Kai-shek and the KMT. The Communists barely won that war. They had no navy and 1 billion people to feed.
It wasn’t until the the 1990’s that they began to think of expansion of their claims.
They had grabbed the Paracel Islands during the Vietnam war. Then everyone knew oil was under the seabed. (The real reason for the Vietnam War.)
Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei started grabbing islands in the Spratlys Chain, rightful claims of their own. So, China flexed its muscles and decided it had a recent historical claim by the KMT China map. They also have very ancient maps which indicate it was their domain hundreds of years ago when they were the strongest navy in the world (15th Century, before Columbus by 90 years).
That same claim would have been upheld if Mao had lost and China was a vassal of the US. Since it isn’t a weak, poor, dependent nation any more, the conflict situation is on. China has insisted it won’t back down from the territorial claim. Thus, they need muscle on the sea and in the air to maintain it.
The old Chinese emperors believed that they were masters of the world and had claims on all their neighboring countries. That doesn’t give them any rights.
As for those islands: anyone can make maps. But the Chinese government at that time wasn’t interested in visiting those islands, let alone control them.
Oil and gas and fishing for food for massive populations alters your outlook.
China has fourteen contiguous neighbours, and has settled all border disputes with thirteen, all save India. The islands in the East and South China Seas are claimed by numerous parties and there are disputes between all the parties, but we only ever hear about China in the racist Western MSM. As to the Diaoyu Islands, they are unambiguously Chinese, and Abe’s treacherous behaviour is simply what you would expect from an hereditary fascist stooge of Uncle Satan. What’s more, the Ryukyus, where the Okinawans suffer under US occupation with the usual regime of land theft, pollution, Yankee arrogance and rape, was only formally annexed by the Japanese in 1879.
No one settled the islands then.The people there (that came regularly) were fishermen.And those were from many countries,but mostly China.Hence the old maps and claims from many centuries ago.I do think it would be best for China and the other countries to share any potential wealth from those islands.But as far as legal claims go,China’s case is very strong.
Once again they make clear they get it and are fully on board with the new paradigm. Life can be so much easier when we’re going with the ever building consciousness, rather than trying to prop up old, corrupt mental corpses.
Just as japan aspired to empire by emulating the strategies of European Imperialists of the 19th century, China aspires to establish its empire by emulating the strategy of the United States in the 20th century. To cut to the chase: “If you are not with China, you are against China.”
To me, it is not unreasonable for China to believe that the whole world should recognize that China is pre-eminent; and that the new world order, according to China’s vision for it, would make the world in general a better place. Hasn’t the United States -and before them, the United Kingdom- held a similar world view?
But keep in mind that there is nothing noble nor enlightened in such a world view. Hegemony, ethno-supremacy -or whatever political movement there may be, in which one entity aspires to control and lord over the aspirations of others- stifles the human spirit and demeans some while elevating others. Natural human instinct will drive people around the world to resist.
China should not be surprised if other nations align themselves against it.
China seems to be in the business of building trade ties rather than empire. For a long time they have had a policy of non interference in other countries politics and deal with whoever is in power/government at the time.
China gives every indication of continuing in this way.
It is evident that some of those, who have commented here, have much to learn about the Communist Chinese party and how China, under the Communist party, works.
China, under the Communists (who have acquired many of the traits that the pigs in “The Animal Farm” acquired), have been ruthless in their mistreatment of their own ethnic Chinese, and have been that much worse to the Tibetans, Uighurs, and Turkic minorities. Their treatment of Moslems, Christians, and Buddhists has been just as bad. In this regard, they mirror the attitudes and ambitions of Lenin and Stalin and could not be more different from Putin. Their guiding principles for government are nothing like that of modern Russia.
China -the Middle Kingdom- is the center of the world. All others are subordinate to China. The harshness of this ethnic supremacy is not evident now in the “new domains”, which China is exploiting as it builds its global presence. Over time, China’s overbearing overlordship of its vassals will become more evident.
Because Russia and China both recognize that the United States represents the greatest existential threat to their survival (Russia) and to their ambitions (China), Russia has sought a strategic alliance with China. But, in the long run, Russia will become the (very) junior partner in this relationship. In the long run, Russia needs to bond with Germany in a strategic alliance that could offset the power and ambitions of both China and the United States.
The “Project for a New Asian Century” (PNAC) is under construction and underway.
Racist swill. The Chinese conduct their affairs with mutual respect for other countries, precisely unlike the West with its bullying supremacism. But your is a good example of the racist and chauvinist panic of Westerners at the dread thought that a pack of ‘mere Asiatics’ might rise to global economic dominance.
Arthur Brina
China aspires to establish its empire by emulating the strategy of the United States in the 20th century. To cut to the chase: “If you are not with China, you are against China.”
The only evidence you supply for that western anti-China propaganda line is evidence of your own prejudice.
India is very concerned about “the string of pearls” of Chinese bases that have been built across the Indian Ocean, from Myanmar and Bangladesh to Pakistan to Djibouti. The ASEAN Countries are shocked and helpless as China claims the South China Sea as it were an inland sea all for their own benefit. These are not because of “trade deals”.
Publications which are known to represent the views of powerful interests within the Chinese Communist party have laid out the case that China has territorial claims upon a wide swathe of Southeast Asia and even to parts of Africa. Zimbabwe is now a vassal state.
China needs aircraft carriers to establish and preserve its power in the Indian Ocean. They don’t need them for the China Seas. And when the industrial complex in Pakistan is complete, China can support its naval and air presence in the Indian Ocean without reliance upon the Malacca Straits.
“The String of Pearls theory is a geopolitical theory regarding potential Chinese intentions in the Indian Ocean region.[1] It refers to the network of Chinese military and commercial facilities and relationships along its sea lines of communication, which extend from the Chinese mainland to Port Sudan. The sea lines run through several major maritime choke points such as the Strait of Mandeb, the Strait of Malacca, the Strait of Hormuz and the Lombok Strait, as well as other strategic maritime centers in Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, the Maldives and Somalia. The term as a geopolitical concept was first used in an internal United States Department of Defense report titled “Energy Futures in Asia”.[2] The term has never been used by official Chinese government sources, but is often used in the Indian media”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/String_of_Pearls_(Indian_Ocean)
It seems “String of pearls” is a term coined by the US Department of Offence.
You carefully avoid the 1000-pound empire in your geopolitical “analysis” of China. Namely, the United States of America.
China wants to prevent the United States and its many crime partners and vassals from exercising a chokehold on Chinese energy supplies and trade from the Horn of Africa to the Indian Ocean to the Straits of Malacca. That is why it is trying to project power in these regions.
It’s not a secret that, under the guise of its phony War on Terrorism and other pretexts like the Proliferation Security Initative (PSI) or humanitarian intervention, the America Axis has deployed its forces in these key geostrategic areas of the world in order to control them. This has been imperial America doctrine since Alfred Thayer Mahan.
Your mischaracterization of China thus, not suprisingly, obscures how it is a *counter-response* to America’s thinly disguised attempts to strangle China’s economic lifeline, if need be.
Deep down, most Westerners–including self-styled peace activists, anti-imperialists, progressives, etc.–possess a inbred ablilty to project their own countries’ imperial nature onto whomever is their “enemy” du jour.
This is a PATHOLOGICAL feature of Western “civilization” that is displayed by not only Euro-American power elites but also by the average man as well
Perhaps, future anthopologists will study Westerners will the same bemused revulsion that we today study the putative savagery of prehistoric caveman. ;-)
As well as being masters of psychological projection, Westerners are imbued with almost bottomless race hatred and sectarianism, hence the horrors of European exterminations of the indigenous in the New Worlds, the mass murders in Congo, India and China, the vicious exploitation of non-Westerners under European colonialism, and the entire ‘Clash of Civilizations’ project to wage aggressive war against all non-Western cultures. The rise of China has the racist elites in the West and the worst dregs of Western societies, brainwashed for centuries to see themselves as racially and culturally superior to all non-Westerners, rigid with fear and loathing. War with China is absolutely certain. The USA will try pushing China into a corner, as they did with Japan in the 1930s and 40s, but if that doesn’t work, or internal subversion ‘bring China down’, the AirSea Battle doctrine of a sneak first-strike nuclear attack will have to do.
Really, such lurid lies make your character pretty plain. Chinese territorial claims to wide swaths of South-East Asia and areas of Africa is a Big Lie, one that I’ve never seen in the daily sewer of Sinophobic filth that spews out of the Western MSM propaganda system. A really Big Lie, no doubt partly driven by the racist hatred that lies behind so much Western Sinophobia.
“And when the industrial complex in Pakistan is complete”
China offered to deal with India first.To build a port facility and industrial park in India. India refused and then they offered it to Pakistan.If India is upset over it,they should only blame themselves for refusing the deal.
Western racist supremacists and acolytes of the Exceptional US Empire fear China and Russia getting together and leading the non-Western world in resistance to the West. The use of racist hate and fear-mongering to try and drive a wedge between Russia and China is growing by the day.
yo, there is a Chinese saying the fits you very well:
A scoundrel will always assume others think the same way as he does….
I just see history repeating itself.
An optometrist will help.
Every civilization needs structure. Family groups, towns/communities, countries.
Apart from agriculture and manufacturing, virtually all civilizations have involved trade and some form of currency rather than barter.
Empires come and go but trade is a constant. China seems to be working towards a world order based on trade rather than empire.
Regimes in countries will come and go but the trade will be a constant.
Further actions by the US to surround China
http://bit.ly/1EtWrHr
I didn’t have time to read the document so I created a word cloud instead
http://oi62.tinypic.com/bi3yq9.jpg
A bit short as shorthand, but interesting. Reads as a bit of a threat actually.
Try this for China tags:
http://www.chinaversusa.com
Deep resource to pursuit.
Here is a Q&A on what China is doing and why in the South China Sea Nansha (Spratly) Islands
http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/923802.shtml
Thanks.
Interesting to compare the respective wording about China and the US. On the latter risks, crises, notifications, etc, and seeking to enforce “a new model of military relationship” between two major countries (instead of the US playing at top dog), while with Russia it’s all about making an already “comprehensive strategic partnership” even more comprehensive and sustainable, i.e., water-tight, with no gap for the hegemon to drive its wedges.
the problem with US is that they bomb and strangle with sanctions every country which has own path to prosperity and which is different from US capitalist model guarded by US military. They want all from world. No less. And they will not allow anyone to be independent in economic model. For example, that is why N.Korea wants nukes, and they were advanced socialist country showing that it is possible to be rich in different way until US morons and criminals started to choke N. Korea with sanctions and mutate country to this unrecognizable condition. US ruined EVERY country that tryed to apply own, independent, specific model of prosperity. For now is peace because they are recalibrating foreign policy and strategic forces, but US will not let China or/and Russia to be equal partner. So, i think, war will break definitely.
Ashton Carter: Chinese Aggression Provokes US Engagement in Asia Pacific
One word: gay.
Looks like it is game on now. Australia is being cranked up to go to war with its largest trading partner.
http://www.smh.com.au/national/china-puts-weapons-on-its-new-artificial-islands-20150527-ghaxa8.html
http://www.smh.com.au/world/south-china-sea-dispute-china-warned-that-us-will-remain-no-1-in-asia-pacific-20150528-ghbcns.html
I see preemptive asymmetrical havoc on the short-term horizon, culminating in nuclear winter for the chaser. Those who foolishly believe the elite will behave in their rational interests and avoid crossing the precipice are deluded. Beneath the thin veneer of civilisation’s constraints, lies the tortured, mangled, and monstrous essence of mankind; a hidden death wish awaiting fulfillment. The apocalypse draws ever nearer.
http://www.geenstijl.nl/archives/images/suicide_note.pdf#page1543