Ocnus.Net
China’s New Mechanized Infantry Division
By Martin Andrew, China Brief 17/5/07
May 17, 2007 - 11:40:54 AM
The
role of Xinjiang and Tibet as both suppliers and conduits of resources
necessary for China’s continued economic growth has resulted in a reevaluation
of both regions’ importance. Xinjiang, with its domestic oil fields in the
Tarin Basin and its role as a hub for oil and gas pipelines arriving from
Central Asia, has become China’s main source of non-seaborne petroleum (China
Daily, February 26, 2004). Tibet, on the other hand, possesses large amounts of
zircon, chromium, rutile, magnesium and titanium that are needed by China’s
heavy industries [1]. Large amounts of cobalt and copper also lie astride the
Qinghai-Tibet Railway. The strategic value of these regions and their resources
has resulted in the increased deployment of China's offensive mechanized forces
to these regions in order to prepare for any contingencies that might threaten
its interests.
Coinciding with these deployments has been an evolution in the content of the
doctrinal discussions among People’s Liberation Army (PLA) strategists. The 1980s
focus on "informationized warfare" has since shifted toward the
concepts of "peishu" and "zhichi." Peishu, translated as
"attaching troops to a subordinate unit," is the concept of creating
independent battle groups within a division or seamlessly augmenting a division
with heavier forces. Zhichi or "to support" is the idea that a
battlefield logistics unit should be capable of supplying and supporting forces
deep inside enemy territory. Such operational doctrine in the PLA is firmly
designed for broad sweeping operations as envisaged by the Soviet operational
art theorists who had taught the original PLA generals in the 1920s and 30s.
Adopting a New Structure for the Modern Battlefield
The PLA has moved toward the creation of an armor-heavy corps akin to the
Soviet Operational Maneuver Groups of the 1980s. The cost of such formations
are enormous, however, and the PLA has started on a smaller-scale with a
lighter force for deployment in Xinjiang and Shenyang that can be augmented
with more powerful forces using the building block approach [2]. This permits
units within and from outside of the division to be seamlessly added to augment
the division’s firepower or logistics capabilities. In recent years, mechanized
infantry divisions under the Beijing and Shenyang Military Region (MR) Commands
have conducted exercises, developing the use of units as "building
blocks" to create battle groups with greatly improved operational
logistics. Furthermore, along with units in Xinjiang, these forces were used to
develop the PLA’s new high altitude and urban warfare doctrines.
China’s new mechanized infantry division, developed from these trials, was
recently unveiled and has been described as being two generations ahead of
current mechanized infantry divisions. Organized and equipped to fight as
independent battle groups specifically on mountainous and urban terrain, its
equipment is lighter in weight and firepower than the PLA's armored and tank
divisions tasked to defend the nation. Its theaters of operation include
Xinjiang and Tibet where the division’s lighter vehicles and support weapons
can operate in areas where the communications infrastructure is described as
underdeveloped at best.
The structure of the armored and infantry divisions follow the standard PLA
triangular organization, consisting of three infantry or armored platoons to a
company, three companies to a battalion, three battalions to a brigade and
three brigades to a division. The division is comprised of three mechanized
infantry brigades, one tank brigade, one artillery brigade, one air defense
brigade, one helicopter wing and a logistics unit directly subordinate to the
corps. The division headquarters is composed of an engineer battalion, an
electronic warfare battalion, a chemical defense battalion, the division
headquarters itself (which is company sized), air defense units and a guard
company for headquarters protection. The division’s artillery, intelligence and
aviation structure are taken from the U.S. Army’s experimental Division 86 [3].
The major difference in the new structure as opposed to previous configurations
is that there are now four Type 86 infantry fighting vehicles (IFVs) in each
platoon instead of three. This provides the platoon command with its own
vehicle, allowing, for the first time, elements such as a forward observer or
engineering teams to be attached to the platoon. This enables the platoon to be
the lowest tactical unit whereas before, this was at the company level. There
are a total of 351 Type 86 IFVs in each division that are supported by an
artillery brigade of 72 122mm self-propelled guns and a tank battalion of 99
main battle tanks. Type 89 armored command vehicles are liberally provided
throughout the division down to the company level to provide command and control
capabilities.
The Type 86 IFV, a copy of the Russian BMP-1, has been modified so that the
existing 73mm low velocity gun turret is now replaced with the new Chinese
one-man "universal turret" containing a 30mm chain gun [4]. The 30mm
turret increases the vehicle’s anti-armor capability by 2.5 times and
significantly increases its survivability, with the removal of over 35kg of
easily ignitable high explosives [5]. A standard BMP-1, when penetrated by a
shaped charge, invariably blew apart at the weld seams [6]. The new 30mm turret
also has greater depression and elevation to enable individual windows and
mountainsides to be engaged. No new armor has been added, however, meaning that
the Type 86 is still vulnerable to high-powered 7.62mm rounds on its sides as
well as anti-armor rockets [7].
The other combat tracked vehicles in the division, other than the tanks, are
based on the indigenous Type 85/89 armored fighting vehicles. The support
company of the battalion consists of one 100mm mortar company with 10 vehicles,
with one mortar per vehicle and a single fire control vehicle; an automatic
grenade launcher (AGL) platoon with two vehicles, each equipped with two AGLs;
one anti-tank platoon of two vehicles sharing three anti-tank guided missile
systems. There are 18 Model 85 series armored vehicles in each brigade
providing 54 anti-tank guided missile systems in the division. There is an air
defense platoon of three vehicles with four missiles per vehicle for a total of
twelve. A division has 27 air defense vehicles and has 108 man-portable
air-defense systems (MANPADS) available for air defense at any time. They come
under the operational control of the air defense brigade.
In line with the lighter vehicles, the divisional air defense brigade is composed
of one battalion of 24 towed 57mm anti-aircraft guns and one battalion of 18
towed twin 37mm anti-aircraft guns. An air defense platoon of six Model 95
self-propelled anti-aircraft guns and one light surface-to-air missile launcher
are attached to the artillery brigade. A new addition to the division is a
helicopter wing with one squadron of six Z-9G attack helicopters and one
transport squadron of six Mi-17 helicopters. These are lighter units that are
likely to be augmented for operations. Logistics are provided by corps assets
that are attached to the battle groups as required.
The vehicles and weapons in the new mechanized division are lighter than those
in other PLA mechanized units, reducing their logistical footprint and
providing tactical mobility, allowing for more roads and bridges to be used
during operations. Lighter units are also more easily refueled and resupplied.
On the few good roads in the rural regions of Xinjiang and Tibet, the ability
to operate for extended periods is an invaluable advantage. Presently, only
wheeled armored fighting vehicles operate in Tibet; tracked IFVs armed with
30mm automatic cannons and heavier support weapons would greatly assist these
forces in the event of a widespread insurgency or an attack by Indian forces.
Heavier forces that might be utilized to augment the new division have also
been developed. Support units drawn from the Beijing MR Command, including the
Sixth Armored Division, have a structure similar to that of the mechanized
infantry division. Its company structure is the same as the tank brigade in the
new mechanized infantry division. There are two tanks at the battalion
headquarters whereas in the mechanized infantry battalion tank brigade there
are none. There are therefore 35 Type 88B or Type 99 main battle tanks per
battalion and 105 main battle tanks per brigade.
Supporting artillery brigades are equipped with 72 152mm Model 83
self-propelled guns and the new PLZ45 155mm self -propelled gun that is being
introduced into PLA service. The latter is capable of firing the Chinese built
version of the Russian KBP laser guided round. The air defense brigade has a
battalion of 24 57mm towed anti-aircraft guns and one mobile surface-to-air
missile launcher. Anti-armor capability can be augmented by an anti-tank
regiment, which is more of a small battalion in size, and contains six PTZ89
120mm self-propelled guns and 18 Red Arrow 8 anti-tank guided missile
launchers. These are light enough to supplement the mechanized division in
isolated areas.
The PLA’s new mechanized infantry division is undoubtedly well suited for
operations in Xinjiang and Tibet, given the lighter footprint of the vehicles
as well as the simpler logistics requirements as opposed to those of heavier
armored units. Moreover, given its building block capabilities, the PLA would
be able to tailor such a force based upon the needs of the operations. In
contingencies that require heavier forces, such as a coup in Astana that
threatens to disrupt energy supplies or the ascendancy of a regional government
friendly to the Uyghurs, China would be able to quickly enter into the
respective region and secure its critical strategic interests.
Notes
1. Erling Hoh, "Tibet on the Right Track?" Far Eastern Economic
Review, Vol. 167, No. 41, October 14, 2004, p. 58; Bin Zhu; Kidd, William S.F.;
Rowley, David, B. & Currie, Brian S. "Age of Initiation of the
India-Asia Collision in the East-Central Himalayas," Journal of Geology,
Vol. 112, No. 4, July 2004, pp. 417- 434.
2. "Chinese Increased Mechanized Infantry Offensive Capability Model"
[Zhongguo zengqiang jixiehua bubing shi gonglji nengli], Tank and Armored
Vehicle [Tanke zhangjia cheliang], November 2006, Number 249, p. 12-15.
3. For a discussion of the U.S. Army’s Division 86 structure, see Richard W
Kedzior, Endurance and Evolution: The U.S. Army Division in the Twentieth
Century, Rand Publications, Santa Monica, 2000, p. 37.
4. ‘Zhongguo zengqiang jixiehua bubing shi gonglji nengli’, op.cit., p. 19.
5. Mikhail Baryatinskiy, "The Protectress of the Infantry," M-Khobbi,
5/2005, Issue 63, p. 18-19.
6. Aleksandr Babakin, "The Tanks and BMPs Burned in the Hills of
Dagestan," Neavisimoye Obozreniye, March 12-18, 2004, p. 8.
7. Viktor Mil’ginov, ‘BMP-2’, M-Khobi, 3-2003, p. 23.
Source: Ocnus.net 2007