THE DRAGON LADIES ASSEMBLE
strategypage April 9, 2013:
China is expanding its force of female operators. Chinese SOF (special
operations forces, including commandos and troops similar to American
rangers and special forces) are a relatively recent development but have
been growing rapidly over the last decade. The latest
addition is women. Last year ground forces commanders were ordered to
find ways to recruit, train, and organize female special operations
units. The use of women in “special operations” is not entirely new in
Chinese history, but melding that tradition with modern special
operations units is.
Various army units called for volunteers and thousands responded. There are over 150,000 women in the Chinese military, most of them in the army.
Out of that group there are always some willing to try something new
and challenging. Nothing is quite as challenging as special operations.
Since women have become competitive as police snipers and on SWAT teams,
it is believed the many new female special operations units (usually
squads or platoons for recon or intelligence
gathering) are more than just for show.
While
the first Chinese special operations units were formed in the late
1980s, in the last decade China has let its SOF troops get out more,
sending them to participate in international operations and even a NATO
sponsored International Competition of Special Forces.
Chinese commandos who participated in a 2009 international special
operations competition walked away with the largest number of wins and
broke several records.
The
Chinese term for the SOF is Quantou Budui (fist units),
an allusion to martial arts where a powerful blow in the right spot can
quickly bring down a foe. Chinese SOF remains small, well equipped, and
well trained.
There
are fewer than 5,000 troops in the Chinese SOF, organized into 6th
Special Warfare Group, 8th Special Warfare Group, 12th Special Warfare
Detachment, and Naval Commando Unit.
The
15th Airborne Corps is used as a major source of
recruits. Thus Chinese soldiers know that if they want to become
commandos they have to get into an airborne unit first. China has over
20,000 second-tier special operations troops (rangers, special recon,
and raiding personnel), which is where nearly all of the new women
operators probably ended up.
At
the time of the 1991 Gulf War, the Chinese only had a few hundred
commando type troops and they were intended mainly for long range recon
missions. But after seeing what American SOF soldiers did in the
Persian Gulf, the Chinese began forming units similar to American
Rangers. By the time the 2001 war in Afghanistan came along, the Chinese
decided to develop more commandos along the lines
of American Special Forces, Delta Force, and British SAS.
For
a long time Chinese SOF units mainly trained and planned for operations
against Taiwan. This included attacks on key targets, as well as
kidnapping or killing senior military and political leaders. Some of
this would involve Chinese SOF operators who snuck on to the island as
tourists or commercial travelers beforehand.
China
now has hundreds of very experienced operators, each with over a decade
of SOF experience. China
has also been sending SOF personnel around to train troops in foreign
nations. For example, seven years ago several hundred instructors from
the Chinese special forces were in Venezuela for about six months,
training Venezuelan troops in recon techniques and counter-terrorism
tactics.
The
Chinese spoke good Spanish. The Chinese were apparently very interested
in finding out about the training techniques used by the American
Special Forces instructors (who had trained Venezuelan troops until
2003) and the Venezuelans told all they knew. Since then, a lot more of
these training/intelligence missions have been conducted, finding that
this half century old American technique is very
useful.
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Saturday, April 13, 2013
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